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Pac-Man Fever (song)

1981 single by Buckner & Garcia


Summary

1981 single by Buckner & Garcia

FieldValue
namePac-Man Fever
coverPac-Man Fever by Buckner and Garcia 1981 US vinyl A-side.jpg
captionA-side label of U.S. vinyl single
typesingle
artistBuckner & Garcia
albumPac-Man Fever
B-side"Pac-Man Fever" (Instrumental)
releasedDecember 1981
recorded1981
length3:48
5:51 (extended 12-inch version)
labelColumbia/CBS
18-02673 (7-inch single)
44-02762 (12-inch single)
writerJerry Buckner
Gary Garcia
producerBuckner & Garcia

| B-side = "Pac-Man Fever" (Instrumental)

  • Pop rock
  • novelty 5:51 (extended 12-inch version) 18-02673 (7-inch single) 44-02762 (12-inch single) Gary Garcia

"Pac-Man Fever" is a 1981 novelty song by Buckner & Garcia. Capitalizing on the video game craze of the early 1980s, the song, referencing the arcade game Pac-Man, peaked at number 9 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States in March 1982.

That same month, it was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America for over one million units shipped to retailers; the single sold 1.2 million copies by the end of 1982, and 2.5 million copies in total as of 2008. VH1 ranked it at number 98 on their list of 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s.

A follow-up release in May 1982, "Do the Donkey Kong" (another novelty song referencing Nintendo's Donkey Kong) just missed the Billboard chart, ranking number 103.

This song was featured in the South Park episode "Splatty Tomato" as well as the Family Guy episode "The D in Apartment 23," both aired in 2017.

This song was also referenced in The Simpsons episode "A Tale of Two Springfields."

Composition

Sheet music for the song shows common time with a moderate tempo of 138 beats per minute, in the key of F major.

Background

Buckner and Garcia were in the Atlanta area in 1981, recording TV jingles and other low-profile studio work. They were eating at a restaurant down the road in Marietta, and they saw other diners swarming around a brand new Pac-Man machine. The duo had never heard of the game before, but they waited their turn and played it too, and ended up playing for two hours straight. After that, they decided to write a novelty song about the game. Their manager shopped the song at radio stations nationwide, but no one wanted to play it. However, when they shopped it locally, WSTR (FM) in Atlanta decided to play it for fun on their show one morning. The station was bombarded with calls from listeners who begged to hear it again and again. This got the attention of CBS Records as well as other stations across the country, and the single hit #9 on the US Billboard charts in 1982.

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Chart (1982)Peak
positionCanada RPM Top SinglesU.S. Cashbox Top 100
9
7

Year-end charts

Chart (1982)Rank
US Top Pop Singles (Billboard)42
US Cash Box Top 10047
US American Top 4058
Canada92

Certifications

Re-recorded album

In 1998, the duo was asked to record an unplugged version of "Pac-Man Fever" exclusively for the syndicated radio show Retro Rewind. In 1999, a re-recorded version of the album was released independently by Buckner and Garcia, which was released commercially through K-Tel in 2002. However, Buckner and Garcia could not obtain the original master recordings from Sony Music Entertainment, so the duo was forced to record new performances of the songs and recreate a lot of the sound effects either digitally or musically.

In honor of the release of the 2015 film Pixels, Jerry Buckner, and Danny Jones with Jace Hall, took the vocals from Gary Garcia's master recording, and created a new version called "Pac-Man Fever Eat Em' Up".

References

References

  1. (1982-04-05). "Pac-Man Fever".
  2. link. (2015-09-04 . RIAA.com. Retrieved 2009-11-01.)
  3. (September 2004). "Ode to Joystick". SPIN Media.
  4. Turow, Joseph. (2008). "Media Today: An Introduction to Mass Communication". Taylor & Francis.
  5. "[SCRIBD]".
  6. Wiser, Carl. (September 7, 2016). "Jerry Buckner Tells the "Pac-Man Fever" Story : Songwriter Interviews".
  7. "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada".
  8. (18 July 2007). "Cash Box Top Singles - 1982".
  9. (December 25, 1982). "Talent in Action : Top Pop Singles".
  10. (26 October 2014). "Cash Box YE Pop Singles - 1982".
  11. "American Top 40".
  12. "Item Display - RPM - Library and Archives Canada".
  13. Barsanti, Sam. (16 February 2017). ""Weird Al" Yankovic shares his unreleased Beatles parody about Pac-Man".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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