Shakermaker


"Shakermaker" is the second single by the English rock band Oasis, written by lead guitarist Noel Gallagher. The song was first released as a single on 13 June 1994 and later released on Oasis' debut album Definitely Maybe. The single peaked at number eleven in the UK. It has been certified Silver by the British Phonographic Industry.

Lyrics

Noel Gallagher states that the lyrics are taken from the world around him. For example, a Shaker Maker was a popular toy in the 1970s, the character of "Mr Soft" was taken from a Trebor Soft Mints commercial, which featured Cockney Rebel's song "Mr. Soft", "Mr. Clean" is a song by The Jam, one of Gallagher's favourite bands, Mr Benn is a British children's cartoon and the entire last verse - "Mr Sifter sold me songs / When I was just 16 / Now he stops at traffic lights / But only when they're green" - was written in a taxi on the way to the recording studio to record the song. Apparently, Liam Gallagher was pestering Noel to finish the song. At this point, the taxi stopped at the traffic lights outside "Sifters", named after people 'sifting' through records and run by Peter Howard since 1977. Noel penned the lyric and it became part of the song. Noel used to frequent the store to buy old records before Oasis started releasing albums.

Music

The song illustrates Noel Gallagher's habit of borrowing from the past: the chords are a simple twelve-bar blues progression raised to a flat-VII ). The melody for the verse was originally taken from "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing " by Roger Cook, Roger Greenaway, Bill Backer and Billy Davis. An Oasis tribute band called No Way Sis released a cover version of "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" in the style of "Shakermaker", emphasising the similarity between the two songs. This cover reached #27 on the UK Singles Chart in December 1996. Oasis were sued over this similarity and were forced to change their composition.

B-sides

The song was released with three B-sides: "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?", sung by Noel Gallagher, which is instrumentally similar to "Married with Children" from Definitely Maybe and features nostalgic lyrics and two-part backing vocals by Liam; "Alive", a rough demo of an early rocker, and a live version of "Bring It on Down".

Personnel

  1. "Shakermaker" - 5:08
  2. "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?" - 2:41
  3. "Alive" - 3:56
  4. "Bring It on Down" - 4:17
  1. "Shakermaker" - 5:08
  2. "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?" - 2:41
  1. "Shakermaker" - 5:08
  2. "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?" - 2:41
  3. "Alive" - 3:56
  1. "Shakermaker" - 5:08
  2. "D'Yer Wanna Be a Spaceman?" - 2:41
  1. "Shakermaker" - 5:11
  2. "D'Yer Wanna Be A Spaceman?" - 2:41
  3. "Alive" - 3:57
  4. "Bring It On Down" - 4:18
  5. "I Will Believe" - 3:48
  6. "Cloudburst" - 5:19

    Music video

The music video was shot in Burnage, Manchester just outside the Gallaghers' childhood home. The field they are playing football in is Didsbury Toc H Sports Ground in Ford Lane, Didsbury in South Manchester.
The album Liam shows to the camera is Paul McCartney's 1973 album Red Rose Speedway. The music video garnered 1.8 million views on YouTube.