"Come On Do the Jerk" (Tamla 54109) was a 1964 song recorded by R&B group the Miracles on Motown Records' Tamla label subsidiary. It was co-written by Miracles members Pete Moore, Bobby Rogers and Smokey Robinson and drummer Donald Whited. A single-only release, it did not appear on any original Miracles studio album, and was the group's last single release of 1964.[1] Robinson and fellow Miracle Bobby Rogers were the song's producers. The flip side, "Baby Don't You Go",[2] was also a popular regional hit but was not released on CD until The 35th Anniversary Collection in 1994. Both sides of this single received new stereo mixes for the 2002 compilation Ooo Baby Baby: The Anthology.
"Come On Do the Jerk" charted at No.50 on the BillboardHot 100 and at No. 22 on the Cash Box R&B chart.(Billboard had temporarily suspended its R&B chart at this time).
Background
An instructional dance number, this song was one of several based on the jerk, a very popular 1960s "dance craze".[3]
Described by Miracles lead singer Smokey Robinson as the intended follow-up to the group's 1963 million-selling smash "Mickey's Monkey" the previous year, "Come On Do the Jerk" was actually recorded in a similar tempo. As the song begins, longtime Miracles drummer Donald "Spike" Whited and Miracles member, guitarist Marv Tarplin begin the song, while Smokey, as the song's narrator, offers the invitation:
Come on everybody, gather 'round
get hip to the new sensation
There's a brand new dance coming to your town
and it's sweepin' across the nation
Come on do the jerk
The other Miracles, Ronnie White, Claudette Robinson, Pete Moore, and Bobby Rogers, echo Smokey's lead, with chants of the song's title, in classic call and response style.
Then, midway through, Smokey's role changes... from narrator to dance instructor, as he instructs the listener on the Jerk's simple dance steps:
The Miracles themselves performed Come On Do the Jerk on a telecast of the syndicated Detroit – based teen dance party show Teen Town .[6] The song appears on several Miracles "Greatest Hits" collections, having first appeared on their album, Greatest Hits Vol.2
Recording group The T-Bones also recorded an instrumental cover version of The Miracles' "Come On Do the Jerk" on their 1965 LP entitled "Doin' the Jerk".[8]