Private Eyes (song)


"Private Eyes" is a 1981 single by Daryl Hall & John Oates and the title track from their album of that year. The song was number one on the Billboard Hot 100 charts for two weeks, from November 7 through November 20, 1981. This single was the band's third of six number one hits, and their second number one hit of the 1980s. It was succeeded in the number one position by Olivia Newton-John's "Physical," which was ironically succeeded by another single from Hall and Oates, "I Can't Go for That ".

Background and writing

The tune for Private Eyes was written by Warren Pash and Janna Allen, with arrangement and chords by Daryl Hall. In an interview with American Songwriter, Daryl Hall states: "That's a real Janna Allen song. Janna, and I, and Warren Pash wrote that. Warren and Janna wrote most of the song, and I took it and changed it around – changed the chords. Sandy and I wrote the lyrics. It's a real family song, the Allen sisters and me."
The single carries a similar rhythm to the duo's number one hit from earlier that year, "Kiss On My List," with the difference being a handclap chorus that has made the song an audience-participation favorite at live Hall and Oates shows. It was one of the duo's first songs to appear in heavy rotation on MTV.

Music video

The music video featured the band dressed as stereotypical film-noir style, trenchcoat-wearing private detectives, and was the first to feature the backup band of guitarist G. E. Smith, bassist Tom "T-Bone" Wolk, drummer Mickey Curry, and saxophonist/keyboardist Charles DeChant.

Personnel

The song is performed by Ken Marino, portraying private investigator Vinnie Van Lowe, in the Veronica Mars episode "Kanes and Abel's."
The Disney Channel ran a DTV music video of the song, set mostly to clips from the Goofy cartoon short How to Be a Detective.
It was made available to download on January 10, 2012, for play in Rock Band 3.
American author Andrew Harmon used the song as the basis for his 2014 short story "Room 401".
It has been adapted as the title theme song for the TV series .
This song has been used on Season 9 of .

Covers

In 2016, Dear Rouge covered the song for the TV series Private Eyes as its theme song. Also in 2016, Lenachka covered the song.

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Chart Rank
US Billboard Hot 10044