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📰 You Can Make Me Dance, Sing, Or Anything… The Faces - Advert : Dec. 1974

  • Writer: Faces
    Faces
  • Dec 28, 1974
  • 2 min read

A full-page Disc advertisement promoting The Faces’ new single with a characteristically wild and humorous illustration.


Their single “You Can Make Me Dance, Sing, Or Anything…”


Disc

Date: December 28, 1974

Length: 3 min read


📰 Key Highlights

• Colourful, chaotic cartoon illustration by Ron Wood showing the band (and large fish) in a drunken underwater party scene

• Playful headline “To Thank You All… We’ll Drink Those Fish Under The Table”

• Prominent “FACES” lettering in dripping green and yellow style

• Announcement of the new single “You Can Make Me Dance, Sing, Or Anything…”

• Warner Bros Records branding


📰 Overview

Published on December 28, 1974, this advert in Disc used Ron Wood’s distinctive artwork to promote The Faces’ final single in typically irreverent, boozy fashion.


📰 Source Details

Publication / Venue: Disc

Date: December 28, 1974

Format: Full-page single advertisement

Provenance Notes: Original 1974 Disc magazine advert from Warner Bros Records.


📰 The Story

The Faces thanked fans with a humorous, over-the-top illustration and announced their new single in a light-hearted way that perfectly reflected the band’s good-time, shambolic reputation.


📰 Visual Archive

Vibrant cartoon by Woody ’74 depicting the band members arm-in-arm with giant fish, drinking and partying underwater, with the band name rendered in large, dripping letters across the bottom.


📰 Related

For more similar posts, check out the tags at the bottom of the page.


📰 Closing Notes

This December 1974 Disc advert is a fitting, fun farewell gesture from The Faces — chaotic, colourful and full of the boozy spirit that defined the band right to the end.



📝 Copyright Notice

All magazine scans, photographs, and original text excerpts referenced in this entry remain the property of their respective copyright holders. This Chronicle entry is a transformative, non-commercial archival summary created for historical documentation and educational reference. No ownership of the original material is claimed or implied.




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