Tiger Feet
by Mud

Album: Mud Rock (1974)
Charted: 1
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • In the annals of glam rock, a genre not exactly renowned for its lyrical subtlety, "Tiger Feet" by Mud stands out as a particularly perplexing example. Released in 1974, the sugary confection of a song is armed with an ear-catching melody and a beat guaranteed to get your head bobbing like a malfunctioning bobblehead.

    But then there are the lyrics. Instead of the usual glam tropes of glitter, platforms, and questionable gender roles, the song fixates on a woman's, well, "tiger feet." Now, metaphors can be a tricky business, and while one might attempt to decipher this as a veiled comment on the lady's fierce dancing style or perhaps a taste for particularly ferocious footwear, the truth is altogether more prosaic, bordering on the absurd.

    The songwriting duo behind the song, Nicky Chinn and Mike Chapman, were serial hitmakers in the 1970s, having penned glam anthems like Sweet's "Ballroom Blitz" and Suzi Quatro's "Devil Gate Drive." Apparently, inspiration struck Chapman in the most domestic of settings: wallpapering his house. As the story goes, while meticulously aligning the stripes, he muttered, "That's neat, that's neat, that's neat," and glancing down, noticed some stripes of wallpaint splattered on his mate's feet. Eureka! A rhyme was born.
  • The song started in a demo studio in Denmark Street. "We were in Central Sound and had finished a session," Nicky Chinn recalled to Uncut magazine. "We had some studio time left and it was just the two of us. Mike picked up a guitar and started strumming. Out came 'Tiger Feet.' It was obvious immediately that we had something. We then took it to my flat in Hill Street in Mayfair to finish it off. It was written with Mud in mind."

    He added: "Songs these days have to make a bit more sense. So much of glam rock didn't make sense. Tiger Feet doesn't make sense, but it paints a great picture. It's a party picture. Does it make sense, probably not? But it sounds great. Glam needed to sound and look great with driving rhythms."
  • When Mike Chapman first played "Tiger Feet" to the band on an acoustic guitar, Mud singer Les Gray thought it was a terrible song. "It was just 'That's right, that's right, that's right,' but by the time we had worked out the arrangement, it was very strong," he recalled in 1000 UK #1 Hits by Jon Kutner and Spencer Leigh. "That riff at the start has a jazzy feel to it. It was played on a fuzz guitar but a trad band could play it. When we did it on stage, the reaction was incredible."
  • Mike Chapman insisted on tracking the drums, which got quite complicated. "He wanted masses of guitars, probably about 30 tracks," remembered lead guitarist Rob Davis. "He wanted it to sound fat and rocky and have a bit more credibility than a Bay City Rollers record where the guitars are a bit wimpy."
  • "Tiger Feet" spent a month perched atop the UK chart and reached #1 in the Netherlands. It surpassed 700,000 copies in the UK alone, making it the best-selling single in Britain in 1974.
  • Mud's energetic live shows often featured them wearing tiger-patterned slippers while performing "Tiger Feet" for added visual flair.
  • "Tiger Feet" was the first of three chart-topping singles for Mud, paving the way for the melancholic "Lonely This Christmas" and the cover of Buddy Holly's "Oh Boy!."
  • "Tiger Feet" was used in these movies:

    Soulboy (2010)
    School For Seduction (2004)
    Resurrection Man (1998)
    In The Name Of The Father (1993)

    And these TV shows:

    The Crown ("Cri de Coeur" - 2019)
    Nighty Night ("Episode #1:2" - 2004)
    EastEnders ("Episode #1.1608" - 1998)
  • Mud broke up in 1980 but Rob Davis went on to have songwriting success in the 1990s and 2000s, penning vocal arrangements for dance hits, including Kylie Minogue's "Can't Get You Out Of My Head," Fragma's "Toca's Miracle" and Spiller's "Groovejet (If This Ain't Love)."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Philip Cody

Philip CodySongwriter Interviews

A talented lyricist, Philip helped revive Neil Sedaka's career with the words to "Laughter In The Rain" and "Bad Blood."

Michael Franti

Michael FrantiSongwriter Interviews

Franti tells the story behind his hit "Say Hey (I Love You)" and explains why yoga is an integral part of his lifestyle and his Soulshine tour.

Graham Parker

Graham ParkerSongwriter Interviews

When Judd Apatow needed under-appreciated rockers for his Knocked Up sequel, he immediately thought of Parker, who just happened to be getting his band The Rumour back together.

Dennis DeYoung

Dennis DeYoungSongwriter Interviews

Dennis DeYoung explains why "Mr. Roboto" is the defining Styx song, and what the "gathering of angels" represents in "Come Sail Away."

Chris Frantz of Talking Heads

Chris Frantz of Talking HeadsSongwriter Interviews

Talking Heads drummer Chris Frantz on where the term "new wave" originated, the story of "Naive Melody," and why they never recorded another cover song after "Take Me To The River."

Dar Williams

Dar WilliamsSongwriter Interviews

A popular contemporary folk singer, Williams still remembers the sticky note that changed her life in college.