Dreadlock Holiday

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"Dreadlock Holiday"
Single by 10cc
from the album Bloody Tourists
Released July 1978[1]
Genre Reggae[1]
Length 4:31
Label Mercury[1]
Writer(s) Eric Stewart
Graham Gouldman[1]
Producer(s) 10cc[1]
10cc singles chronology
"People in Love"
(1977)
"Dreadlock Holiday"
(1978)
"For You and I"
(1978)

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Some of the experiences that are mentioned are true, and some of them are ... fairly true!

Graham Gouldman, The Songwriters Circle, BBC2, 1999.

"Dreadlock Holiday" is a reggae song by 10cc. It was written by Eric Stewart and Graham Gouldman and was the lead single from the band's 1978 album, Bloody Tourists.[2] Lead vocals were performed by Graham Gouldman.

It became the group's third and final number one hit in the UK Singles Chart, and final top 10 hit, spending a single week at the top in September 1978.[3] The single also topped the charts in New Zealand, reached Number 2 in Ireland and Australia, and peaked at number 44 on the US Billboard Hot 100.

Composition

The lyrics relate the experiences of a white man lost in Jamaica. His first encounter with the locals is of being confronted in the street by an unpleasant dreadlocked man who wants the white man's silver bracelet. The next encounter is when he is beside the pool of his hotel drinking a piña colada; a dark-voiced woman offers him drugs. These experiences were based on real events that happened to Moody Blues vocalist Justin Hayward and Eric Stewart in Barbados which Stewart changed to Jamaica.

The reference to cricket in the first chorus, reggae in the second, and Jamaica in the third, reflects the victim trying to avoid conflict by convincing the antagonist that they share common interests.

Cover versions and usage in media

The song was later covered by Boney M on their 1985 album Eye Dance — it had been planned as the third single in January 1986 but was cancelled, by Top Deck (in 1987) and by Polish singer Reni Jusis (in 1999).

The 2000 Guy Ritchie movie Snatch featured the song [4]

In 2002, Intenso Project sampled the track in their hit "Luv Da Sunshine".

The 2010 David Fincher movie The Social Network featured the song being played by a college band.[5]

The song has been used as the theme music for cricket programming in the UK on Sky Sports.[6]

References

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  4. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0208092/soundtrack
  5. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1285016/soundtrack
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External links

Preceded by UK number one single
23 September 1978
Succeeded by
"Summer Nights" by John Travolta & Olivia Newton-John