Without thinking about the dance they called "Bump," I considered the song's popularity could well have been because people interpreted "bump" to mean doing another "line" or nostril-full of cocaine. That was the slang of the day (the '80s,) and more often than not, the person with the stash would leave a line of it on the back of the toilet seat in the nightclub's public restroom so the next attendant could "get a bump." Ah, those were the days, huh?
@mitchpooj3 ...except that this song was released in 1975 and not in the 1980s. I am sure that the "Lady Bump" referred to doing "The Bump" which was a popular dance at that time where dancers would bump their hips together. I do not think it referred to using cocaine.
@mitchpooj3 ...except that this song was released in 1975 and not in the 1980s. I am sure that the "Lady Bump" referred to doing "The Bump" which was a popular dance at that time where dancers would bump their hips together. I do not think it referred to using cocaine.
Without thinking about the dance they called "Bump," I considered the song's popularity could well have been because people interpreted "bump" to mean doing another "line" or nostril-full of cocaine. That was the slang of the day (the '80s,) and more often than not, the person with the stash would leave a line of it on the back of the toilet seat in the nightclub's public restroom so the next attendant could "get a bump." Ah, those were the days, huh?
@mitchpooj3 ...except that this song was released in 1975 and not in the 1980s. I am sure that the "Lady Bump" referred to doing "The Bump" which was a popular dance at that time where dancers would bump their hips together. I do not think it referred to using cocaine.
@mitchpooj3 ...except that this song was released in 1975 and not in the 1980s. I am sure that the "Lady Bump" referred to doing "The Bump" which was a popular dance at that time where dancers would bump their hips together. I do not think it referred to using cocaine.