Music That You Can Dance To

Music That You Can Dance To is the fourteenth studio album by American pop band Sparks, released in September 1986 by MCA Records in the US and Consolidated Allied Records in the UK, two years after their previous studio album, Pulling Rabbits Out of a Hat (1984).

"Shopping Mall of Love", "Let's Get Funky", and (on the original US edition) "Change" present a side of the band's sound that is discordant and experimental.

Whereas "Rosebud" and the rerecording of their 1982 single "Modesty Plays" are not dissimilar from the synth-pop sound that the band had pursued on their previous two studio albums.

The recording of the album was the last time that the Mael brothers worked with the line-up of guitarist Bob Haag, bassist Leslie Bohem, and drummer David Kendrick.

Anita Sarko in Spin was dismissive of the album and remarked that 'at one time they were considered rather avant-garde, but now they seem stuck in the techno-pop of years past'.

[8] The release featured a different sleeve and corresponded to the US track listing, with "Change" and not "Armies of the Night".