C'mon Everybody Encore Lyrics — All Shook Up
C'mon Everybody Encore Lyrics
Come on everybody clap your hands real loud
Come on everybody take a real deep breath
And repeat after me
I love my baby
I love my baby
Hey, hey, hey and my baby loves me
Come on everybody and whistle this tune right now
Come on everybody and stomp your feet real loud
Come on everybody take a real deep breath
And repeat after me
I love my baby
I love my baby
Hey, hey, hey and my baby loves me
Well there ain't nothing wrong with the long-haired music
Like Brahms, Beethoven and Bach
Well I was raised with a guitar in my hand
And I was born to rock
Well, come on everybody and turn your head to the left
Come on everybody and turn your head to the right
Come on everybody take a real deep breath
And repeat after me
I love my baby
I love my baby
Hey, hey, hey and my baby loves me
Song Overview
Review and Highlights
Quick summary
- Work: All Shook Up (Broadway jukebox musical, book by Joe DiPietro), using songs associated with Elvis Presley.
- Where it appears: after bows, as the cast returns for the last communal send-off.
- Who sings it: Chad and company, led on the cast recording by Cheyenne Jackson with the All Shook Up Ensemble.
- What this version does: it shifts the tune from plot device to curtain-call handshake, a final jolt of rhythm and smiles.
All Shook Up (2005) - stage musical number - non-diegetic. Curtain call: after the finale resolves weddings, reconciliations, and the open-road romance, the company returns for one more burst. It matters because it reframes the evening. The show has spent two acts teasing rules and breaking them, and then it ends by turning the rebellion into a shared party. That is not nothing. In a theatre, the encore is where the audience and cast agree on what kind of night it was.
As a piece of stagecraft, this is a clean bit of business. The song already sits early in Act One as the moment Chad "electrifies" the town, so bringing it back after bows creates a bookend. Same hook, different stakes. First time, it is a provocation. Second time, it is proof. I like that the encore does not pretend to be plot. It leans into theatre ritual: applause, breath, and a last chance to see the ensemble move as one.
Key takeaways
- Structure: a deliberate bookend to the Act One spark that started the town’s transformation.
- Energy: built for claps, grins, and tight unison hits rather than character confession.
- Audience effect: sends people out on rhythm, not reflection.
Creation History
The underlying song was written by Joy Byers for Elvis Presley’s film-era repertoire and recorded in 1963 for the 1964 MGM picture Viva Las Vegas. The musical borrows it for Act One, then reprises it as an encore after bows, a decision supported by the cast recording and licensed song lists. There is also a famous, unrelated rock-and-roll track with the same title by Eddie Cochran and Jerry Capehart, but the show’s credits point to Byers, not Cochran, which is worth noting before anyone walks into rehearsal with the wrong riff in their head.
Song Meaning and Annotations
Plot
The show ends with a triple wedding, Chad’s return, and Natalie choosing the road with him. The town that began as policed and buttoned-up finishes in public celebration. After the bows, the encore arrives as a final wave from the company. No misunderstandings, no disguises, no decency-law anxiety. Just the group saying goodbye in the language the show has insisted on all night: rock-and-roll momentum.
Song Meaning
In the story proper, the tune is about ignition: Chad arrives and the town catches fire. In the encore, the meaning changes because the stakes change. It becomes a simple invitation to join the party, an affirmation that the evening has been communal. The lyric is not deep, and it does not need to be. The meaning is the form: people together, in time, ending together.
Annotations
"After the bows at curtain call, the cast sings one last song."
This is the production telling you how to watch it. The encore is not a hidden scene. It is the ritual ending, the show acknowledging its own machinery and enjoying it.
"Sizing up the dreariness of the town, Chad electrifies a broken-down jukebox ... 'C'mon Everybody'."
The Masterworks album synopsis frames the first use as the moment of transformation. The encore works because it recalls that first spark and shows what it turned into: a town that can move together without fear.
Rhythm and staging
Keep the rhythm crisp and the spacing clean. Curtain call is a traffic problem as much as a musical one. The best versions look effortless because they are rehearsed like clockwork: entrances timed, lines tight, and everyone clear about whether this is a dance break or a final bow pattern with music under it.
Technical Information (Quick Facts)
- Song: C'mon Everybody (Encore)
- Artist: Cheyenne Jackson; All Shook Up Ensemble
- Featured: Chad and company (curtain call)
- Composer: Joy Byers
- Producer: Jay David Saks
- Release Date: May 31, 2005
- Genre: Rock and roll; musical theatre curtain call
- Instruments: Ensemble vocals with pit band (licensed orchestration varies)
- Label: Masterworks Broadway
- Mood: Celebratory, driving, communal
- Length: PT1M57S
- Track #: 27
- Language: English
- Album: All Shook Up - Original Broadway Cast Recording
- Music style: Hook-forward rock shuffle designed for ensemble unity
- Poetic meter: Accentual, chant-like phrasing
Frequently Asked Questions
- What is the encore, in practical stage terms?
- It is a post-bows return where the company performs a final song as a send-off, separate from the plot’s final scene.
- Who leads the cast recording track?
- The track is credited to Cheyenne Jackson with the All Shook Up Ensemble.
- Is this the same as the Act One "C'mon Everybody" number?
- It uses the same underlying song, but the framing is different: Act One is the town’s ignition, the encore is the show’s farewell.
- What scene does it follow?
- It follows the finale sequence in which the town celebrates and then the bows at curtain call.
- Who wrote the song used by the musical?
- It is credited to Joy Byers in the musical’s licensed song list and in film-era documentation tied to Viva Las Vegas.
- Why do people confuse this title with another rock standard?
- There is an unrelated 1958 track by Eddie Cochran and Jerry Capehart with the same title. The musical’s credits point to Byers, not Cochran.
- Is there a known alternate title or reprise label in licensing?
- Yes. Many licensed lists specify it as an encore, often written as "C'mon Everybody (Encore)" and assigned to Chad and company.
- How long is the cast recording track?
- The cast recording lists it at 1 minute and 57 seconds.
Awards and Chart Positions
The encore track itself is a cast-recording item rather than a chart single, but the underlying song has its own film-era paper trail. It was recorded for Viva Las Vegas, and it later lent its title to a Presley compilation of movie songs. Meanwhile, the Broadway production earned major-season attention, including a Theatre World Award for Cheyenne Jackson, which helps explain why the encore feels like a victory lap and not mere filler.
| Item | Type | Result | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| All Shook Up (Broadway) | Theatre World Award | Winner | Cheyenne Jackson |
| "C'mon Everybody" (film-era song) | Recording and release | Documented | Recorded July 9, 1963; released on the Viva Las Vegas EP in 1964 |
Additional Info
Two versions of the title circulate in pop culture, and the difference matters for theatre. The Eddie Cochran hit is lean, guitar-forward rock-and-roll with documented UK and US chart peaks. The Byers song is a movie-world engine written for Presley’s mid-1960s screen persona. The musical chooses the Byers song because it is already in the Presley catalogue the show is built around. That choice keeps the dramaturgy tidy, even if it occasionally confuses a music director who grew up on the Cochran record.
One side note, for the theatre-minded: an encore is a contract between room and stage. The cast is no longer playing characters. They are playing the night. This is why the number can be short and still feel necessary.
Key Contributors
| Entity | Type | Relationship statement |
|---|---|---|
| Joy Byers | Person | Joy Byers is credited as songwriter for the tune used by the musical. |
| Joe DiPietro | Person | Joe DiPietro wrote the book that frames the score and the curtain-call encore tradition. |
| Stephen Oremus | Person | Stephen Oremus served as music director-arranger for the Broadway production’s sound. |
| Jay David Saks | Person | Jay David Saks produced the original Broadway cast recording. |
| Cheyenne Jackson | Person | Cheyenne Jackson originated Chad on Broadway and leads the encore track credit. |
| Masterworks Broadway | Organization | Masterworks Broadway released the 2005 cast recording that includes the encore track. |
Sources
Sources: Masterworks Broadway track page and album notes, IBDB production record, Wikipedia (musical numbers list and Elvis film-era song entry), Apple Music album metadata, Spotify track metadata, YouTube topic track metadata
Music video
All Shook Up Lyrics: Song List
- Act 1
- Overture
- Love Me Tender
- Heartbreak Hotel
- Roustabout
- One Night With You
- C'mon Everybody
- Follow That Dream
- Teddy Bear/Hound Dog
- Teddy Bear Dance
- That's All Right
- You're the Devil in Disguise
- It's Now or Never
- Blue Suede Shoes
- Don't Be Cruel
- Let Yourself Go
- Cant Help Falling in Love
- Act 2
- All Shook Up
- It Hurts Me
- A Little Less Conversation
- Power of My Love
- I Don't Want To
- Jailhouse Rock
- There's Always Me
- If I Can Dream
- Fools Fall in Love
- Burning Love
- C'mon Everybody Encore