Is That All There Is?
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Is That All There Is? is a song written by Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller and recorded by Peggy Lee in 1969.
It was a popular single, reaching number 11 on the U.S. pop singles chart and doing even better on the adult contemporary scene. It won Lee the Grammy Award for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance, and then later was named to the Grammy Hall of Fame.
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[edit] Lyrics
The lyrics of this existentialist song are written from the point of view of a person who is disillusioned with events in life that are supposed unique experiences. The singer tells the story of when she saw her family's house on fire when she was a little girl, when she saw the circus and when she fell in love for the first time. After each story, she expresses her disappointment in each experience. She suggests that we "break out the booze and have a ball — if that's all — there is", instead of worrying about life. She also explains that she'll never kill herself either because she knows that death will be a disappointment as well.
[edit] Inspiration
The song was inspired by the story "Disillusionment" by Thomas Mann, written in 1896. The narrator in Mann's story tells the same stories of when he was a child.
One difference between the story and the song is that the narrator in Mann's story finally has a sensation to feel free when he sees the sea for the first time and laments for a sea without a horizon. Most of the lyrics of the chorus are actually spoken in the story.
[edit] Cover versions
This song has been covered by assorted artists, including Chaka Khan, Bette Midler, Sandra Bernhard, P.J. Harvey, Alan Price and Firewater. An altered version by No Wave singer Cristina in 1980 offended Leiber and Stoller, who sued and were able to get it suppressed for some time.
[edit] Other appearances
The song is featured prominently in the 1985 film After Hours and the 2007 film The Nines. It is also referenced in the HBO miniseries From The Earth To The Moon; also on HBO, Sex and the City Season 5, Episode 8: "I Love a Charade" uses the song as an allegory for each character as a song in the final scene of the season finale at the wedding of Bobby Fine Nathan Lane & Bitsy von Muffling Julie Halston; as the Apollo 12 crew prepares to leave lunar orbit, LM Pilot Alan Bean (Dave Foley) remarks, "I kind of feel like that song. Is that all there is?" In an episode of the Simpsons, Rod and Tod Flanders ask Homer to sing them "that crazy song" they love, and Homer breaks into this song.
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