"Shaddap You Face" is a
novelty song written and performed by
Joe Dolce (released under the name Joe Dolce Music Theatre) about a rebellious Italian boy. Released in late 1980, it set a number of sales and longevity records.
It was released by
Mike Brady's record label
Full Moon Records.[3] By February 1981, the single had sold over 290,000 units in Australia, surpassing Brady's own "
Up There Cazaly" to become Australia's best-selling single ever.[4]
Writing
Dolce, who is Italian-American, said he wrote "Shaddap You Face" based on memories of his childhood, when his family members would speak in broken English.[5]
Sales
"Shaddap You Face" went to number one for eight weeks on the Australia
Kent Music Report in 1980.[6] It reached number one on the
UK Singles Chart on 21 February 1981 and stayed there for three weeks until 8 March 1981, keeping
Ultravox's single "
Vienna" out of the top spot throughout.[7] The song became the 15th biggest hit of 1981 in the UK.[8]
"Shaddap You Face" was also number one in 11 other countries. There have been over 50 different foreign language cover versions, and hundreds more published informally on YouTube with new versions of the song being recorded and uploaded every year.
In the US, the song peaked at number 53 in 1981 on the
Billboard Hot 100, number 43 on the Cash Box Top 100,[9] and number 24 on Record World. However, it was regularly played on the
Dr. Demento show to the point of being number six on the year-end Funny 25 that year. In the Canadian province of
Quebec, "Shaddap You Face" reached number one for twelve weeks.[10]
Other versions
Lou Monte released a cover of the song in 1981.[11] Other notable cover versions have been done by
KRS-One (hip-hop),[12]EMF (British),[13]Andrew Sachs (
Manuel in the
British television sitcomFawlty Towers), Werner Böhm, alias: Gottlieb Wendehals (German, title: "Mensch, ärger dich nicht"),[14] Sheila (French, titled: "Et ne la ramène pas"),[15] Dingetje (Dutch, titled: "Houtochdiekop"),[16] De Strangers (dialect from Antwerp, Belgium, titled: "Agget Mor Fret"),[17]Volker Rosin und die Lollypops (German, titled: "Hörst du nicht die Kuh – Muh!"),
Franco Franchi with the duo Franco e Ciccio (Italian, title: "Alì Alì Alè"),[18] an Aboriginal language version by Gnarnyarrhe Waitairie, a Papua New Guinean version by the Breeze Band (title: "Pasim Pes Bilong Yu" –
Tok Pisin version),[19] and a spoken word interpretation by
Samuel L. Jackson.[20]
A Czech interpretation written by Zdeněk Borovec, "Já na bráchu blues", performed by
Helena Vondráčková and
Jiří Korn, was a hit in Czechoslovakia in 1981.[21]
The
National Folk Festival in
Canberra featured 'The Inspired Shaddap You Face Contest' in April 2006. Festival artists were invited to perform their interpretations of the classic song. The Cygnet Folk Festival in Tasmania featured the second 'Inspired Shaddap You Face Contest' in the following year. Joe Dolce was invited to be the MC at both events.
"Bite Your Bum", a parody of "Shaddap You Face", was made in 1981 by Australian artists Peter Plus with Bazz and Pilko (
Barry Ion and Tony Pilkington). It reached No. 32 in New Zealand.[52]
Another parody was composed in 1990 for a
McCain pizza slices television commercial in the United Kingdom.[citation needed]