Music Blog

She’ll Only Come Out At Night

Today’s theme at Song Lyric Sunday is all about songs
that feature the saxophone

Hall & Oates saxophone player, Charles DeChant

There’s only one musical duo who can say they are the number one selling duo in music history. That twosome is Daryl Hall and John Oates.

Beginning as two devoted disciples of earlier soul greats, Hall & Oates are today soul survivors in their own right. They have become such a musical influence on future generations of popular artists that they are the most sampled performers today and their impact can be heard everywhere from boy band harmonies to rap-rock fusion.

Signed to Atlantic in the early 1970s, Hall & Oates had a noteworthy start to their career. Their 1973 album, Abandoned Luncheonette yielded the Top 10 single, “She’s Gone,” which also went to #1 on the R&B charts. The duo recorded one more album with Atlantic, War Babies (produced by Todd Rundgren) before they signed to RCA. Their tenure at RCA would catapult Daryl and John to international superstardom.

From the mid-’70s to the mid-’80s, they would score six #1 singles from six multi-platinum albums. The era would also produce an additional 8 Top 10 singles. By 1984, the Recording Industry Association of America (R.I.A.A.) recognized Daryl Hall and John Oates as the number one selling duo of all time, a record they still hold today.

In 1985 singer Paul Young covered the Daryl-written Voices album track “Every Time You Go Away,” scoring a #1 hit and helping to establish the song as a modern standard. That same year, Daryl and John participated in the historic “We Are the World” session, reopened the legendary Apollo Theatre in the company of their heroes David Ruffin & Eddie Kendricks of the Temptations, and closed the globally broadcast Live Aid show in Philadelphia.

Across the succeeding decades, Daryl and John have continued to record and tour both individually and together, while their self-composed songs have evolved from current hits to timeless classics. In 2003, Daryl Hall and John Oates were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame, followed by their 2014 induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Demonstrating the duo’s massive popularity across decades, generations and listening formats, in 2020 Daryl and John celebrated a milestone 1 billion streams of “You Make My Dreams (Come True).” Ubiquitous in films, commercials and playlists, the song encapsulates the essential and enduring appeal of Daryl Hall & John Oates.

Unfortunately, Hall and Oates are in the middle of a legal battle. Daryl Hall has filed a lawsuit stemming from Oates’ attempt to sell off his share of their joint venture, Whole Oats Enterprises LLP, which would violate the terms of a business agreement the duo had forged. The move quickly prompted a judge to temporarily block the sale while legal proceedings and a previously initiated arbitration continue.

One thing cannot be denied, despite their legal troubles: their music makes people feel good …. always has, always will.

The song I have chosen today which features a saxophone prominently throughout is their 1982 mega-hit, “Maneater”, a song about a very seductive woman who uses men to satisfy her expensive tastes. Much like the line “Her mind is Tiffany twisted” in the Eagles song “Hotel California”, the lyrics to “Maneater” use a luxury brand to develop the character as she is described as “a she-cat tamed by the purr of a Jaguar”, referring to the car.

The song was a showcase for Hall & Oates’ sax player Charles “Mr. Casual” DeChant who appears in the video during his solo. The song spent four weeks at #1 in the US, making it the biggest US hit of the 80s to feature a sax solo.

This is one of several Hall & Oates songs that Daryl Hall’s long-time girlfriend Sara Allen had a hand in writing. According to Hall, his original lyric had some additional words in the chorus after “she’s a maneater”. Allen convinced him to end the line there, which Hall says made the song come together.

“Maneater” was used on the soundtrack to the Julia Roberts/Richard Gere movie “Runaway Bride”, the story of a woman with the reputation for jilting her fiancés at the altar.

Maneater” is featured on Hall & Oates’ 11th studio album “H2O”.  It reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart on December 18, 1982. It remained in the top spot for four weeks, longer than any of the duo’s five other number-one hits.

This is “Maneater” by Daryl Hall and John Oates, featuring Charles DeChant on saxophone.

Lyrics

She’ll only come out at night
The lean and hungry type
Nothing is new
I’ve seen her here before
Watching and waiting
Ooh, she’s sitting with you
But her eyes are on the door

So many have paid to see
What you think you’re getting for free
The woman is wild
A she-cat tamed by the purr of a Jaguar
Money’s the matter
If you’re in it for love
You ain’t gonna get too far

Oh-oh, here she comes
Watch out, boy, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes
She’s a man-eater
Oh-oh, here she comes
Watch out, boy, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes
She’s a man-eater, oh-oh

I wouldn’t if I were you
I know what she can do
She’s deadly, man
And she could really rip your world apart
Mind over matter
Ooh, the beauty is there
But a beast is in the heart

Oh-oh, here she comes
Watch out, boy, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes
She’s a man-eater
Oh-oh, here she comes
Watch out, boy, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes
She’s a man-eater, oh-oh

Hey!

Ooh!

Oh-oh, here she comes (here she comes)
Watch out, boy, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes (watch out)
She’s a man-eater
Oh-oh, here she comes (she’s a man-eater)
Ooh, she’ll chew you up
Oh-oh, here she comes (here she comes)
She’s a man-eater

Oh-oh, here she comes (watch out)
She’ll only come out at night, ooh
Oh-oh, here she comes (here she comes)
She’s a man-eater, oh-oh
Oh-oh, here she comes (she’s a man-eater)
The woman is wild, ooh
Oh-oh, here she comes (here she comes)
Watch out, boy, watch out, boy

Oh-oh, here she comes
Oh, watch out, watch out, watch out, watch out
Oh-oh, here she comes (watch out)
Yeah-yeah, she’s a man-eater
Oh-oh, here she comes (she’s a man-eater)
She’s watching and waiting, ooh
Oh-oh, here she comes
Oh, she’s a man-eater

Source: Musixmatch
Songwriters: Daryl Hall / Sara Allen / John Oates
Maneater lyrics © Unichappell Music Inc., Hot Cha Music Co., Geomantic Music, Hot Cha Music Co

Big thanks to Jim for hosting another great Song Lyric Sunday and to Willow for coming up with a terrific theme.

Thanks for stopping by. See you on the flip side. 😎

NAR©2024

All text, graphics and videos are copyright for The Sicilian Storyteller, The Elephant’s Trunk and The Rhythm Section and is not for use by anyone without permission. NAR©2017-present.

37 thoughts on “She’ll Only Come Out At Night”

  1. Excellent choice of song for this dynamic duo, Nancy. It is a sad state of affairs, this legal battle. Mostly sad that Oates would attempt this in the first place.

    Liked by 1 person

          1. How lovely! I haven’t been to a concert in forever and won’t likely for a good while more – unless it’s in a smaller venue. There is a fabulous theatre on the next corner from where I work. I went to see a few show that I loved. Only bummer was the third one was a standing only show. There is the slightest incline so my toes by the end were toast. Never again. I am too old for that shit. Gimme a chair!

            Liked by 1 person

            1. Exactly why we’re going to THIS show. It’s the Mohegan Sun Arena so no worries about not having a seat and we will hopefully win big while we’re there! 🎰

              Our last concert was Clapton in a small venue about 30 yrs ago. I remember we took our sons who were teenagers. Daryl will be our last.

              Liked by 1 person

              1. Last big concert I went to was Genesis and that’s because a friend of my late husband GAVE me the tickets. Refused to let me pay. The time before was with Mick, we went to see Rod Stewart – and that’s coz a friend sold us two tickets for the price of one as he realised he was booked to go to the Dominican Republic. I just cannot justify paying $200+++ for a ticket to see a rock concert.

                Liked by 1 person

                1. Nope, I can’t either. Daryl Hall wasn’t cheap but we got a great rate doing a room/show package deal. Ringo is going to be there in September and we thought about going to see him. Yeah …. no! Tickets were $1500+. Not a chance. I’m sure Ringo doesn’t need our 3K!! 😳 😂

                  Liked by 1 person

                  1. $1500! I know someone who went to see Bruce Springsteen and paid 2 grand for one ticket. I am sorry, but there is no act worth that much. That’s just crazy. And good for you on your hot date!

                    Liked by 1 person

  2. Love this song, and for a funny reason. When we had cats we gave them theme songs, and this was Weena’s song. But instead of ‘man eater’ we sang ‘moth eater’ because she’d go crazy on any moth she saw and definitely eat them. haha 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

      1. “Maneater” was my first choice until I realized that I had just featured that song this past February when the theme was to feature a song from a duo. Sonthst when I thought of the Men At War song.

        Liked by 1 person

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