Verb
dance to a new tune (third-person singular simple present dances to a new tune, present participle dancing to a new tune, simple past and past participle danced to a new tune)
- To significantly change one's opinion, attitude, or behavior.
1991, J. L. Granatstein, Robert Bothwell, Pirouette: Pierre Trudeau and Canadian Foreign Policy, →ISBN, page 207:Policy was to be bold, not timid; campaign promises were to be carried out, not cynically shelved; and the public service would dance to a new tune, one where the ministers called the tune.
2005, Louis Adams, Diary of a Shattered Spirit, →ISBN, page 46:We must ask God to give us strength to dance to a new tune.
2008, Ian Nish, The Iwakura Mission to America and Europe: A New Assessment, →ISBN:As a result, the Japanese found themselves having to dance to a new tune and it was one they were scarcely familiar with.
2011, Bob Shaw, The Peace Machine, →ISBN:I can make neutrons dance to a new tune, but I shrink from telling a human tick to fasten onto someone else.
- Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see dance, new, tune.