A strange song that had me in groovy stitches the first time I heard it, "Peanut Duck" veers from a simple R&B/pop shuffle with gruff (drunken?) vocals to a barnyard freakout as Marsha Gee riffs on the word "quack" and introduces a new dance craze. Reportedly, the track was recorded in the mid-sixties but discovered on an acetate in the late seventies (essentially trashed before making it to the final vinyl pressing stage) and released on a compilation of novelty songs in the early eighties. Where then did the picture/record sleeve below come from? I don't know. I do know that I first heard it on the four-disc box set One Kiss Leads to Another: Girl Group Sounds Lost & Found and fell in love with it's cool backing track and uncomfortably sexual vocal track almost immediately.

Joke songs aren't necessarily my thing, but this lady sounds like she's dead serious. And while it is plenty funny, it's also completely irresistible. The piano roots the track as the guitar chimes in time with the drums. It's rhythmic enough to incite movement and if you follow Gee's instructions, you too will be doing the "Peanut Duck" in no time!
2 comments:
I'm intrigued. The cover art alone caught my attention. How did you stumble across this track?
Just a random compilation. I'll play it for you next time I see you.
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