Three Lions

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"Three Lions"
"Three Lions" cover
Single by Baddiel & Skinner & Lightning Seeds
Released 20 May 1996
8 June 1998 ("Three Lions '98")
3 June 2002
5 June 2006
Format CD, 7", cassette (1996)
CD, cassette (1998)
CD (2002)
DualDisc (2006)
Label Epic (1996 / 1998 / 2002)
BMG (2006)
Writer(s) Music: Ian Broudie
Lyrics: David Baddiel & Frank Skinner
Producer(s) Ian Broudie
Simon Rogers
Dave Bascombe
Chart positions
  • #1 (1996)
  • #1 (1998)
  • #16 (2002)
  • #9 (2006)
"Three Lions '98"
"Three Lions '98"
2002 release
2002 release
2006 release
2006 release

"Three Lions" was the official anthem of the England football team for the 1996 European Championships, held that year in England. The music was written by The Lightning Seeds, with comedians David Baddiel and Frank Skinner providing the lyrics. The song was a much bigger success than most football songs, and was said to capture the Zeitgeist perfectly. The title comes from the emblem of the England football team, which is in turn derived from the Coat of Arms of England.

Contents

[edit] Themes

The lyrics, unlike most football songs, spoke not of unbounded optimism for victory - but instead told of how, ever since 1966 and the one unequivocal success of the English football team, every tournament has ended in dashed hopes and the feeling that England will never again reach those heights ("Three Lions on a shirt, Jules Rimet still gleaming / Thirty years of hurt, never stopped me dreaming"). The song's intro included samples of pessimism from football commentators Alan Hansen ("I think it's bad news for the English game"), Trevor Brooking ("We're not creative enough; we're not positive enough"), and Jimmy Hill[citation needed] ("We'll go on getting bad results").

Despite the failures of the past, each tournament is greeted with fresh hopes that this might be the year they do it again, and the song's exuberant chorus proclaimed that "It's coming home, it's coming home, it's coming, football's coming home" (derived from the tournament's slogan, 'Football comes home').

The song makes reference to English heroes of the past, specifically Bobby Moore, Gary Lineker, Bobby Charlton and Nobby Stiles. According to Frank Skinner's autobiography, the original lyrics submitted to the FA included the line "Butcher ready for war", in reference to the player's notorious heroic performance in a qualifying game against Sweden. The FA requested this was changed, so as to avoid hooliganism imagery, and the "Bobby belting the ball" was written as a replacement. The "ready for war" motif was later used in the 1998 version of the song (see below), attributed to Paul Ince.

The commentary of the end of the song contrasts that of the song's opening with positive lines which suggest that England could win a major football championship:

  • "England have done it in the last minute of extra time!"
  • "What a save! Gordon Banks!"
  • "Good old England, England that couldn't play football"
  • "England have got it in the bag"

The single featured a karaoke version as a second track.

The crowd noise in the intro of the track is in fact from a Liverpool game versus Brondby at Anfield.

[edit] Success

The Britpop phenomenon was at its peak in 1996, and the Lightning Seeds were one of its leading lights, so their involvement gave the song very wide appeal. It stormed to number one in the singles chart, and as England progressed to the semi-finals, stadia around the country echoed to the sound of fans singing the song after English victories over Scotland, The Netherlands and Spain. It was so popular, in fact, that even other teams loved it. England faced Germany in the semi-finals, and Jürgen Klinsmann said later that the Germans were singing the song themselves on the way to the stadium, and perhaps even more ironically, the German team and the crowd sang the song as they paraded the trophy on a balcony above a square in Frankfurt.

The single as a result even made #16 in the German singles chart.

To this day, the original version of the song still receives regular airplay in England around the time of a major football tournament. It has been adopted as a terrace chant and is commonly sang by fans at England international matches today.

[edit] Three Lions '98

The hopes of a nation were once again dashed in 1996 when England lost agonisingly in a penalty shootout against Germany - and so the song's lyrics rang true once again. It was subsequently re-recorded with different lyrics (under the title '"Three Lions '98") as an unofficial anthem for England's World Cup campaign in 1998 and landed the number one spot in the singles chart for a second time, comprehensively beating the official England song, sung by the Spice Girls, to the top spot.

Where the 1996 song mentioned various memorable moments from the previous 30 years, the 1998 version made more specific reference to events from the preceding two years (including Euro '96), and sang about a number of the then-current players, specifically Paul Ince, Paul Gascoigne, Alan Shearer and Stuart Pearce. Ironically, Shearer was ruled out of the crucial qualification match against Italy due to injury, Ince missed during the Penalty shoot-out against Argentina, and neither Gascoigne or Pearce were selected for England's World Cup squad, which wasn't announced until some time after the song had been recorded.

As well as a karoake version of the new song, the single featured a fully-fledged b-side: a song called Tout est Possible (French for "Anything is Possible"). The song was largely composed of a recurring chorus, samples from commentators and pundits, and the occasional short verse.

[edit] Controversy

The video to the 1998 version of the song portrays a match between a group of English fans (including Baddiel, Skinner and Lightning Seeds' singer Ian Broudie) and their German equivalents, most of whom have the name "KUNTZ" printed on the back of their football shirts (except for one, who instead has "KLINSMANN"). This was a reference to German player Stefan Kuntz, who had been mocked on Baddiel and Skinner's Fantasy Football television programme and who had previously played an instrumental part in Germany's semi-final victory over England at Wembley in 1996, but caused controversy due to its obvious innuendo, and the segment was often cut by broadcasters. The video also featured cameo appearances from Geoff Hurst, John Regis, Robbie Williams and Chris Evans.

[edit] Other Versions

  • Three Lions '98 was re-released for the World Cup in 2002, and again on June 5, 2006 for the World Cup 2006 in Germany. It charted at #9 in the UK Singles Chart in 2006.
  • The 2006 rerelease was a DualDisc version with both the original version of Three Lions and Three Lions '98 on the CD side and the music videos for the two songs on the DVD side.
  • A Dutch band called "Hermes House Band" made a cover version which is called "Eagles on the shirt" or "Heroes in the shirts"
  • A German comedy duo called "Mundstuhl" made a German cover version with the title "Adler auf der Brust" (The Eagle on the Chest) which became the official hymn for the football club Eintracht Frankfurt.
  • A German group of musicians called themself "Die Original Deutschmacher" made a cover version with the title "Das W auf dem Trikot" (The W on the shirt) which became the most popular song of the supporters of the football club Werder Bremen.

[edit] External links

Preceded by
"Ooh Aah... Just A Little Bit" by Gina G
UK Singles Chart Number 1 single
May 26, 1996 for 2 weeks
Succeeded by
"Killing Me Softly" by The Fugees
Preceded by
"C'Est La Vie" by B*Witched
UK Singles Chart Number 1 single (Three Lions '98)
June 14, 1998 for 3 weeks
Succeeded by
"Because We Want To" by Billie