Here Comes Your Man
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
“Here Comes Your Man” | |||||
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Single by Pixies from the album Doolittle |
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Released | 19 June 1989 | ||||
Format | Vinyl record (7"), CD | ||||
Recorded | October/November 1988 | ||||
Genre | Alternative rock Pop Punk |
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Length | 3:21 | ||||
Label | 4AD/Elektra | ||||
Producer | Gil Norton | ||||
Pixies singles chronology | |||||
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Doolittle track listing | |||||
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"Here Comes Your Man" is a song by the American alternative rock band Pixies, and is the fifth track on their 1989 album Doolittle. "Here Comes Your Man" was written and sung by the band's frontman Black Francis, and produced by Gil Norton. The song was released as a single in June 1989 in the United Kingdom and the United States, and reached #3 on the U.S. Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
Written by Francis as a teenager, "Here Comes Your Man" was recorded for the band's 1987 demo tape, but not included on either Come on Pilgrim or Surfer Rosa; it was seen as an anomaly in the band's repertoire by their producers. Critics saw "Here Comes Your Man" as the Pixies' breakthrough song; Jon Dolan of Spin magazine commented that it was "the most accessible song ever by an underground-type band."[1]
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[edit] Background and music
From the very beginning, the band members and their early producers (Gary Smith on Come on Pilgrim and Steve Albini on Surfer Rosa) saw "Here Comes Your Man" as "pop" material. The song, originally recorded for the Purple Tape (an acoustic version of the song), was not included on either Come on Pilgrim or Surfer Rosa. For a post-Surfer Rosa single, the band's label, 4AD, rejected another recording of the song; they later chose "Gigantic" and "River Euphrates" as a B-side.[2]
The song opens with the Hendrix chord, favored by Santiago and used on "Tame", reminiscent of the opening to "Hard Day's Night"[3].
[edit] Lyrics and meaning
In an interview with NME, Francis commented on the meaning of the song:[4]
“ | It's about winos and hobos traveling on the trains, who die in the California Earthquake. Before earthquakes, everything gets very calm—animals stop talking and birds stop chirping and there's no wind. It's very ominous.
I've been through a few earthquakes, actually, 'cause I grew up in California. I was only in one big one, in 1971. I was very young and I slept through it. I've been awake through lots of small ones at school and at home. It's very exciting actually—a very comical thing. It's like the earth is shaking, and what can you do? Nothing. |
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[edit] Video and imagery
A music video, filmed by local students, to promote the single shows the band playing their instruments through a distorted fish-eye lens, the camera variously panning horizontally across the performance space and vertically over the individual band members. Keeping in the spirit of the mimed performance, Francis and Deal open and shut their mouths in time with their prerecorded vocals, yet make no attempt to articulate their lips in synch with the words that they are supposed to be singing. Instead, they simply keep their mouths wide open with blank expressions for the duration of each verse.[5]
[edit] Use in pop culture and cover versions
- Here Comes Your Man was featured in the opening of "Stuck on you" a 2003 comedy movie about a pair of conjoined twin brothers.
- "Here Comes Your Man" was the title of the Season 6 2-part episode premiere of the canadian television show Degrassi: The Next Generation.
- The chorus of "Here Comes Your Man" was used in the song "Back Seat Dog" by The Pillows.
[edit] Single
The following tracks appeared on the single:[6]
- Here Comes Your Man (Francis) - 3:00
- Wave of Mutilation [UK Surf] (Francis) - 3:00
- Into the White - (Francis/Deal) - 4:42
- Bailey's Walk - (Francis) - 2:23
[edit] Sample
[edit] References
- Frank, Josh; Ganz, Caryn. (2005). Fool the World: The Oral History of a Band Called Pixies. Virgin Books. ISBN 0-312-34007-9.
- Sisario, Ben. (2006). Doolittle. Continuum, 33⅓ series. ISBN 0-8264-1774-4.
[edit] Notes
- ^ Frank, Ganz, 2006. p. 118
- ^ Sisario, p. 88-9
- ^ Sisario, Ben (2006). Doolittle, p.82 and 90. ISBN 0826417744.
- ^ Biel, Jean-Michel; Gourraud,Christophe. Pixies Titles/Names. Alec Eiffel. Retrieved on 2007-02-26.
- ^ Here And There And Everywhere. Retrieved on 2006-01-21.
- ^ 4AD - 1989 Releases - Here Comes Your Man. Retrieved on 2006-01-21.
[edit] External links
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