Oh
Yeah
Oh
Clean shirt, new shoes
And I don't know
Where I am goin' to
Silk suit, black tie (black tie)
I don't need a reason why
They come runnin'
Just as fast as they can
'Cause every girl crazy
'Bout a sharp dressed man
Gold watch, diamond ring
I ain't missin' not a single thing
And cufflinks, stick pin
When I step out
I'm gonna do you in
They come runnin'
Just as fast as they can
'Cause every girl crazy
'Bout a sharp dressed man
Uh huh
Top coat, top hat
Well I don't worry
'Cause my wallet's fat
Black shades, white gloves
Lookin' sharp
And lookin' for love
They come runnin'
Just as fast as they can
'Cause every girl crazy
'Bout a sharp dressed man
(You can't lose a second)
(Get along real fast)
About This Song
"Sharp Dressed Man" is a swaggering celebration of masculine confidence and the transformative power of style that taps into deep-seated fantasies about status and attraction. Beneath its seemingly superficial focus on clothing and accessories, the song explores how external presentation can become a form of armor and identity, suggesting that the right look doesn't just attract others-it fundamentally changes how a man moves through the world. The lyrics reveal a character who has discovered that material success and sharp dressing create an almost magnetic effect, with the repeated line "every girl crazy 'bout a sharp dressed man" functioning as both boast and universal truth about the psychology of attraction. ZZ Top's signature blues-rock foundation gets a distinctly 1980s makeover here, with crisp production, synthesized elements, and a driving beat that mirrors the precision of the well-dressed protagonist. The song's appeal lies in its unapologetic embrace of surface-level glamour during an era obsessed with wealth and image, while Billy Gibbons' gritty vocals add an earthy authenticity that prevents the materialism from feeling hollow. Rather than critiquing consumerism, the track revels in it, creating an aspirational anthem that resonated with listeners who understood that in American culture, looking successful often precedes actually being successful. The song became a defining track of the MTV era, perfectly capturing the decade's fascination with style as substance.
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