The Gap Band II is the fourth studio album by the Gap Band, released in 1979 on Mercury Records.
It is their second major label release, and produced by Lonnie Simmons.
36 Black Singles), and "I Don't Believe You Want to Get up and Dance (Oops!)"
The album's most successful track, "I Don't Believe You Want to Get up and Dance (Oops!
The song also alludes to a well-known corruption of the childhood nursery rhyme, Jack and Jill (a pattern later continued on "Humpin'").