Longview (song)

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“Longview”
“Longview” cover
Single by Green Day
from the album Dookie
Released June 6, 1994
Format CD
Recorded 1993
Genre Punk rock
Length 3:59
Label WEA International, Reprise
Producer Rob Cavallo
Green Day singles chronology
"Longview"
(1994)
"Welcome to Paradise"
(1994)

"Longview" is the first major-label single released by punk band Green Day, from their hit 1994 album, Dookie. The song was the band's first #1 on the Modern Rock chart, in a career that contained many chart-toppers on this chart. The music video for this song received intense airplay on MTV, which is largely credited for breaking Green Day into mainstream popularity.[citation needed] The lyrics describe intense boredom and are about a day spent sitting around the house, doing absolutely nothing of importance, masturbating until it is no longer fun, having no job, and no life. The song captured the attention of many youth at the time with its overt allusions to masturbation. Bassist Mike Dirnt has stated that the famous bass line intro to this song was written one night while he was high, and what remains on the album is what he and lead singer Billie Joe Armstrong could recall in the morning. With the verses featuring the signature bassline and tribal tom-tom drumbeat culminating into the melodic yet destructive chorus, the song echoes the 1965 classic, "We Gotta Get Out of This Place" by The Animals.

In 1995, Green Day was nominated for Grammys for Best New Artist and Best Hard Rock Performance for "Longview".

This song can also be found on their 2001 greatest hits collection International Superhits and a live performance can be found on the Bullet in a Bible DVD.

Contents

[edit] Song idea

"It's about boredom, masturbation and smoking dope." - Billie Joe Armstrong[1]

"I guess it was just living in the suburbs in a sort of shit town where you can't even pull in a good radio station. I was living in Rodeo, California, about 20 minutes outside of Oakland. There was nothing to do there, and it was a real boring place." - Billie Joe Armstrong in an interview in Guitar Legends magazine, May 2005.

"When Billie gave me a shuffle beat for Longview, I was frying on acid so hard. I was laying up against the wall with my bass lying on my lap. It just came to me. I said, "Bill, check this out. Isn't this the wackiest thing you've ever heard?" Later, it took me a long time to be able to play it, but it made sense when I was on drugs." - Mike Dirnt in Rolling Stone magazine, 1995.

It is said that the name of a song came about after the band took a trip to Longview, Washington where they first played this song. - according to Jim Baltutis, their press agent for the concert.[citation needed]

[edit] Other Versions

  • A live version found on the Foot in Mouth EP, Live Tracks EP, and "Basket Case" single. (recorded March 11, 1994 at Jannus Landing, St. Petersburg, Florida).
  • A slightly different version on International Superhits! (no fade from "Chump")
  • Another live version found on Bullet in a Bible.

[edit] Music video

The video takes place in a dimly-lit basement unit of a house in Berkeley, California that the band used to live in. The band members say that the look was intentionally grungy. This was Green Day's first music video and was directed by Mark Kohr. Cinematography was by Adam Beckman. The video was edited by Bob Sarles, who also edited ZZ Top's "Legs" music video. The "Longview" music video was produced by Robert Caruso of Commotion Pictures for Warner Bros. Records. The video was nominated for three MTV Video Music Awards in 1994: Best Group Video, Best Alternative Video, and Best New Artist.[2]

[edit] Trivia

The song was featured on MuchMusic's "50 best virgin videos" and it was number 10

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Longview (Album Version)"
  2. "Welcome to Paradise (Live)"
  3. "One of My Lies (Live)"
  • (live tracks recorded March 11, 1994 at Jannus Landing, St. Petersburg, Florida)

[edit] References

Preceded by
"Selling the Drama" by Live
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number one single
June 11, 1994
Succeeded by
"Fall Down" by Toad the Wet Sprocket