A Song for the Lovers
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“A Song for the Lovers” | |||||
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Single by Richard Ashcroft from the album Alone with Everybody |
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B-side | "(Could Be) A Country Thing, City Thing, Blues Thing", "Precious Stone" | ||||
Released | 3 April 2000 | ||||
Format | CD, 12", Cassette | ||||
Genre | Alternative rock | ||||
Length | 5:39 | ||||
Label | Hut Records | ||||
Producer | Chris Potter, Richard Ashcroft | ||||
Richard Ashcroft singles chronology | |||||
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Alone with Everybody track listing | |||||
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"A Song for the Lovers" is a song by English singer-songwriter Richard Ashcroft and is the opening track on his 2000 album, Alone with Everybody. The song was also released on April 3, 2000 as the first single from that album in the United Kingdom (see 2000 in British music). The single peaked at #3 in the UK Singles Chart, a position that would be matched by Ashcroft's 2006 single "Break the Night with Colour".
[edit] Track listings
- CD HUTCD128, 12" HUTT128, Cassette HUTC128
- "A Song for the Lovers" – 5:39
- "(Could Be) A Country Thing, City Thing, Blues Thing" – 6:33
- "Precious Stone" – 5:23
[edit] Music video
The music video for "A Song for the Lovers" premiered in May 2000 and was directed by Jonathan Glazer.
The video is of narrative style. It is shot in real-time with an element of diegetic sound unusual in most music videos. Diegetic sound was used previously by Glazer for "Rabbit in Your Headlights".
The video appears to take its cue from the first lines of the song:
I spend the night, yeah,
Looking for my insides in a hotel room,
Waiting for you.
It shows Richard Ashcroft shirtless in a hotel room, having apparently just showered. The hotel room is decorated with a large amount of Native American imagery, featuring framed photos of tribal chiefs and a large mural in the bedroom. Ashcroft turns on a stereo and "A Song for the Lovers" starts playing. He makes an enigmatic, mumbled phone call, ending with the complaint, "It's been half an hour."
He hangs up, and walks out into the hotel corridor (still shirtless) as if expecting to find someone there. He looks around, finding nothing, then returns to his hotel room.
He goes into the bathroom, where he washes his hands and distractedly dabs at his appearance. While he is in the bathroom, the song plays loudly as to hide the sound of someone knocking on the hotel room door. The sound of the knocking is loud and insistent, almost threatening, but Ashcroft, in the bathroom, hears nothing other than the song.
He sings along with it, in a Postmodern manner in which two Ashcrofts are heard: pre-recorded audio of Ashcroft singing the song, occasionally being paused by the "real life" Ashcroft holding a remote control; and the "live" voice of Ashcroft as seen in the video, less articulate, mostly mumbling or humming in a rough counterpoint to the song.
He leaves the bathroom, and stops short, staring... at a room-service tray left in the centre of the room, holding a covered dish.
Ashcroft sits down and starts to eat in a largely dissatisfied way. He picks apart a single sandwich before becoming distracted by an ominously flickering light in the nearby bathroom. He pauses the song and listens for further indication that anything is wrong. Dead silence. Ashcroft resumes the song (in mid-word) and resumes eating. He then pauses the song again, disturbed further by something never explained within the video.
He walks towards the bathroom, past the flickering fluorescent tube, and stops. In a close up, Ashcroft stares slightly downward into a corner of the room for a long, silent moment. The silence is broken by the sound of Ashcroft urinating into an off-camera toilet. Immediately, ironically, as if to dismiss the prior foreboding, the song resumes of its own accord, loudly and triumphantly as Ashcroft continues to pass water.
The final shot shows Ashcroft standing in the bathroom, urinating obliviously, as every light in the hotel room turns itself off except for the bathroom light... which is no longer flickering on and off. Ashcroft is left alone in a single square of light surrounded by darkness.