Follow TV Tropes

Following

History Music / PrivateDancer

Go To

OR

Added: 272

Changed: 9

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


* FormulaBreakingEpisode: Thanks to it being a repurposed Music/DireStraits song penned during the sessions for ''Music/LoveOverGold'', the TitleTrack eschews the rest of the album's synth-driven sound and contemporary production values in favor of atmospheric roots rock.



* SpecialGuest: Music/DireStraits, Music/JeffBeck, and Music/KingCrimson & Music/{{Camel}} saxophonist Mel Collins all play on the TitleTrack. In the case of Dire Straits, their presence was due to the fact that the original recordings for the song were owned by Vertigo Records, who refused to license it out to Creator/CapitolRecords, requiring them to re-record the instrumental backing from the ground up.

to:

* SpecialGuest: Music/DireStraits, Music/JeffBeck, and Music/KingCrimson & Music/{{Camel}} saxophonist Mel Collins all play on the TitleTrack. In the case of Dire Straits, their presence was due to the fact that the original recordings for the song were owned by Vertigo Records, Creator/VertigoRecords, who refused to license it out to Creator/CapitolRecords, requiring them to re-record the instrumental backing from the ground up.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None




Added DiffLines:

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None





-->--'''"What's Love Got to Do with It?"'''

to:

-->--'''"What's -->-- '''"What's Love Got to Do with It?"'''

Added: 462

Changed: 788

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


[[AC:Side One]]




[[AC:Side Two]]
[numlist:6]



# "Help!" (4:30)

to:

# "Help!" "Music/{{Help}}"[[note]]originally by Music/TheBeatles[[/note]] (4:30)




to:

[/numlist]



* BalladOfASexWorker: The song "Private Dancer" is about a woman who "dances for money" with desperate men, rather than has sex with them.

to:

* AlternateAlbumCover: The album had two different covers, one for each of the two editions of the album. The US edition depicts Turner reclining atop a box draped in cloth. The international edition, meanwhile, depicts Turner posing on a folding chair with a black cat at her feet. The international cover was also featured as the US edition's inner sleeve photo, while the international edition's own inner sleeve features a new photo depicting Turner curled on the floor and grinning at the camera against a blue backdrop.
* BalladOfASexWorker: The song "Private Dancer" is about a woman who "dances for money" with desperate men, rather than has have sex with them.



** Obviously, "Help!" by Music/TheBeatles in the International edition

to:

** Obviously, "Help!" by Music/TheBeatles in the International editionedition.



* LegFocus: Turner shows off her gorgeous legs on the album's [[https://www.tina-turner.nl/privatedancer.php the front and back cover]].

to:

* LegFocus: Turner shows off her gorgeous The international cover prominently features Turner's legs on in the center of the frame, while the back cover depicts only her legs.
* ReCut: The international edition of the album features a heavily revised tracklist that rearranged much of the running order and adds a CoverVersion of Music/TheBeatles' "Help!" The two versions of the album ended up being distributed in all regions thanks to
the album's [[https://www.tina-turner.nl/privatedancer.php the front and back cover]].success.

Added: 353

Changed: 138

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


# "1984" (3:09)

to:

# "1984" [[Music/DiamondDogs "1984"]][[note]]originally by Music/DavidBowie[[/note]] (3:09)



# "1984" (3:09)

to:

# "1984" [[Music/DiamondDogs "1984"]][[note]]originally by Music/DavidBowie[[/note]] (3:09)


Added DiffLines:

** [[Music/DiamondDogs "1984"]] was originally written and recorded by Music/DavidBowie.


Added DiffLines:

* WholePlotReference: "1984" is based on the Creator/GeorgeOrwell novel [[Literature/NineteenEightyFour of the same name]]. Music/DavidBowie originally penned the song for a musical adaptation of the book, which fell through when Orwell's estate rejected his offer.

Added: 136

Changed: 28

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
The previous image was of the Private Dancer single. Replaced it with the Private Dancer album cover.


[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tina_turner_private_dancer.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:''I'm your private dancer, a dancer for money\\

to:

[[quoteright:300:https://static.[[quoteright:350:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tina_turner_private_dancer.org/pmwiki/pub/images/private_dancer_album_cover.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:''I'm [[caption-width-right:350:''I'm your private dancer, a dancer for money\\


Added DiffLines:

* LegFocus: Turner shows off her gorgeous legs on the album's [[https://www.tina-turner.nl/privatedancer.php the front and back cover]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* BalladOfASexWorker: The song "Private Dancer" is about a woman who "dances for money" with desperate men, rather than has sex with them.

Added: 413

Changed: 393

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** "Private Dancer" was originally written by Mark Knopfler, who intended for his band, Music/DireStraits, to record it. But he figured out the lyrics weren't really meant for a man to sing.
* EpicRocking: The TitleTrack

to:

** "Private Dancer" was originally written and recorded by Music/DireStraits during the sessions for ''Music/LoveOverGold'', and was at one point meant to be included on that album. However, frontman Mark Knopfler, who intended for his band, Music/DireStraits, Knopfler came to record it. But he figured out believe that the lyrics weren't really meant for a man to sing.
sing, and thus gave it to Tina Turner.
* EpicRocking: The TitleTrackTitleTrack clocks in at just over seven minutes, a carryover from songwriter [[Music/DireStraits Mark Knopfler]]'s trademark {{prog|ressiveRock}}-{{blues|Rock}} style.



* SpecialGuest: Music/DireStraits, Music/JeffBeck, and Music/KingCrimson & Music/{{Camel}} saxophonist Mel Collins all play on the TitleTrack. In the case of Dire Straits, their presence was due to the fact that the original recordings for the song were owned by Vertigo Records, who refused to license it out to Creator/CapitolRecords, requiring them to re-record the instrumental backing from the ground up.



It scares me to feel this way''

to:

It scares me to feel this way''way''
----
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Five songs were released to support the album: "What's Love Got to Do with It", "Better Be Good To Me", the TitleTrack, "I Can't Stand the Rain", and "Show Some Respect. In addition, "Let's Stay Together" was included on the album. An international edition added a cover of "Help!" from Music/TheBeatles. She would score three Top Ten hits on the Billboard Hot 100, with "What's Love Got to Do with It" reaching #1. She also got three more Top 40 hits on the UK Pop chart.

to:

Five songs were released to support the album: "What's Love Got to Do with It", "Better Be Good To Me", the TitleTrack, "I Can't Stand the Rain", and "Show Some Respect.Respect". In addition, "Let's Stay Together" was included on the album. An international edition added a cover of "Help!" from Music/TheBeatles. She would score three Top Ten hits on the Billboard Hot 100, with "What's Love Got to Do with It" reaching #1. She also got three more Top 40 hits on the UK Pop chart.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


In 2020, ''Private Dancer'' was selected for preservation in the Library of Congress' UsefulNotes/NationalRecordingRegistry.

to:

In 2020, 2019, ''Private Dancer'' was selected for preservation in the Library of Congress' UsefulNotes/NationalRecordingRegistry.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


In 2020, ''Private Dancer'' was added to the National Recording Registry of the United States Library of Congress for preservation.

to:

In 2020, ''Private Dancer'' was added to selected for preservation in the National Recording Registry of the United States Library of Congress for preservation.
Congress' UsefulNotes/NationalRecordingRegistry.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


"What's Love Got to Do with It" would win Record of the Year and Song of the Year at the 27th Grammy Awards; the album was nominated for Album of the Year.

to:

"What's Love Got to Do with It" would win Record of the Year and Song of the Year at the 27th Grammy Awards; the album was nominated for Album of the Year.
Year, yielding Tina two of the jewels in the Grammy Triple Crown for 1984.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

* CoverVersion:
** Obviously, "Help!" by Music/TheBeatles in the International edition
** "Private Dancer" was originally written by Mark Knopfler, who intended for his band, Music/DireStraits, to record it. But he figured out the lyrics weren't really meant for a man to sing.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


!!Tracklist (International edition)
# "I Might Have Been Queen" (4:10)
# "What's Love Got to Do with It" (3:48)
# "Show Some Respect" (3:18)
# "I Can't Stand the Rain" (3:41)
# "Private Dancer" (7:11)
# "Let's Stay Together" (5:16)
# "Better Be Good to Me" (5:11)
# "Steel Claw" (3:48)
# "Help!" (4:30)
# "1984" (3:09)



* EpicRocking: The TitleTrack



* TitleTrack: "Private Dancer"

to:

* TitleTrack: "Private Dancer"Dancer"
* WhatIsThisThingYouCallLove: In the last verse of "What's Love Got to Do with It", the singer admits they're catching feelings after spending the song to that point denying any connection between love and sex:
-->''I've been taking on a new direction\\
But I have to say\\
I've been thinking about my own protection\\
It scares me to feel this way''
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


And the result was nothing short of a revelation.

to:

And the result was nothing short of a revelation.
spectacular.



Tina make a considerable dent in the already dense Pop music market of TheEighties. ''Private Dancer'' held its #3 peak on the Billboard 200 album chart for ''ten consecutive weeks'', and was in the Top Ten for ''nine months''. In the United Kingdom, it reached #2 on the Official Charts Company album chart. It would be high on the year-end charts in both countries in 1984, 1985, ''and'' 1986, peaking with the year-end Billboard 200 for 1985 at #5. It was certified quintuple-Platinum by the RIAA, and triple-Platinum by the BPI.

to:

Tina make made a considerable dent in the already dense Pop music market of TheEighties. ''Private Dancer'' held its #3 peak on the Billboard 200 album chart for ''ten consecutive weeks'', and was in the Top Ten for ''nine months''. In the United Kingdom, it reached #2 on the Official Charts Company album chart. It would be high on the year-end charts in both countries in 1984, 1985, ''and'' 1986, peaking with the year-end Billboard 200 for 1985 at #5. It was certified quintuple-Platinum by the RIAA, and triple-Platinum by the BPI.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

In 2020, ''Private Dancer'' was added to the National Recording Registry of the United States Library of Congress for preservation.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The album was well-received, with its mix of rock ballads and her classic R&B sound. Robert Christgau, grading the album an A-, hailed her "seamless authority" over the production, and her ability to express "middlebrow angst of contemporary professional songwriting" with honesty. Today, [=AllMusic=] gives the album 4.5 out of 5 stars.

to:

The album was well-received, with its mix of rock ballads and her classic R&B sound. Robert Christgau, grading the album an A-, hailed her "seamless authority" over the production, and her ability to express the "middlebrow angst of contemporary professional songwriting" with honesty. Today, [=AllMusic=] gives the album 4.5 out of 5 stars.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/tina_turner_private_dancer.jpg]]
[[caption-width-right:300:''I'm your private dancer, a dancer for money\\
And any old music will do'']]
->''You must understand though the touch of your hand\\
Makes my pulse react\\
That it's only the thrill of boy meeting girl\\
Opposites attract\\
\\
It's physical\\
Only logical\\
You must try to ignore that it means more than that''
-->--'''"What's Love Got to Do with It?"'''

''Private Dancer'' is the fifth studio album recorded by American RAndB singer Music/TinaTurner. It was released through Creator/CapitolRecords on May 29, 1984.

Despite four failed album releases in the 1970s following her divorce from Ike Turner, Tina was determined to succeed on her own. She earned some fame with a pair of residencies at a then-new rock club in New York City, The Ritz. In 1983, she was signed to Capitol by A&R John Carter, and decided to take her solo career in a new direction.

A cover of Music/AlGreen's "Let's Stay Together", released as a non-album single in 1983, got big on the airwaves on both sides of the pond, hitting #6 on the UK Pop chart and #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart (even #26 on the Billboard Hot 100). This would lead Capitol to commission an album. And she had two weeks to record it.

Several producers were involved, with Carter himself producing the TitleTrack. Despite the number of cooks in the kitchen, Tina kept firm control of a chaotic production.

And the result was nothing short of a revelation.

The album was well-received, with its mix of rock ballads and her classic R&B sound. Robert Christgau, grading the album an A-, hailed her "seamless authority" over the production, and her ability to express "middlebrow angst of contemporary professional songwriting" with honesty. Today, [=AllMusic=] gives the album 4.5 out of 5 stars.

Tina make a considerable dent in the already dense Pop music market of TheEighties. ''Private Dancer'' held its #3 peak on the Billboard 200 album chart for ''ten consecutive weeks'', and was in the Top Ten for ''nine months''. In the United Kingdom, it reached #2 on the Official Charts Company album chart. It would be high on the year-end charts in both countries in 1984, 1985, ''and'' 1986, peaking with the year-end Billboard 200 for 1985 at #5. It was certified quintuple-Platinum by the RIAA, and triple-Platinum by the BPI.

Five songs were released to support the album: "What's Love Got to Do with It", "Better Be Good To Me", the TitleTrack, "I Can't Stand the Rain", and "Show Some Respect. In addition, "Let's Stay Together" was included on the album. An international edition added a cover of "Help!" from Music/TheBeatles. She would score three Top Ten hits on the Billboard Hot 100, with "What's Love Got to Do with It" reaching #1. She also got three more Top 40 hits on the UK Pop chart.

"What's Love Got to Do with It" would win Record of the Year and Song of the Year at the 27th Grammy Awards; the album was nominated for Album of the Year.

The album was remastered in 1997 by Creator/{{EMI}}. It includes four additional songs and three remixes. A 30th Anniversary edition was released by Parlophone Records in 2015. It has the original album, with a second disc including the additions of the 1997 remaster plus more unreleased songs and live tracks.

!!Tracklist (US edition)
[[AC:Side One]]
# "I Might Have Been Queen" (4:10)
# "What's Love Got to Do with It" (3:48)
# "Show Some Respect" (3:18)
# "I Can't Stand the Rain" (3:41)
# "Better Be Good to Me" (5:11)

[[AC:Side Two]]
[numlist:6]
# "Let's Stay Together" (5:16)
# "1984" (3:09)
# "Steel Claw" (3:48)
# "Private Dancer" (7:11)
[/numlist]

!!"A prisoner of your love, entangled in your tropes":
* EthicalSlut: "What's Love Got to Do with It"
* TitleTrack: "Private Dancer"

Top