Plush (song)

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“Plush”
“Plush” cover
Single by Stone Temple Pilots
from the album Core
B-side "Sin"
Released 1993
Format CD single,
Cassette,
Vinyl
Recorded 1992
Genre Alternative rock, Grunge
Length 5:13
Label Atlantic
Writer(s) Music: Robert DeLeo
Lyrics: Scott Weiland & Eric Kretz
Producer Brendan O'Brien
Stone Temple Pilots singles chronology
"Sex Type Thing"
(1992)
"Plush"
(1993)
"Creep"
(1993)
Core track listing
"Piece of Pie"
(Track 8)
"Plush"
(Track 9)
"Wet My Bed"
(Track 10)
Alternate cover
U.S. Promotional Radio Release
U.S. Promotional Radio Release
Alternate cover
German Promotional Radio Release
German Promotional Radio Release

"Plush" is a song by the American rock band Stone Temple Pilots. It is one of the band's biggest hits, and was composed and written by singer Scott Weiland, drummer Eric Kretz and bassist Robert DeLeo for STP's debut album, Core (see 1992 in music).

The song was released in 1993 as Core's second single and became a major rock radio hit in the U.S. "Plush" won in the category of "Best Hard Rock Performance" at the 1994 Grammy Awards.

Weiland and STP guitarist Dean DeLeo performed an acoustic version of "Plush" on the MTV show Headbanger's Ball that was also very popular. It was originally only available on a CD single from England for their single, "Creep", but is now featured on the band's "greatest hits" compilation, Thank You, along with the original electric version.

Contents

[edit] Composition and inspiration

The song's chord structure was inspired by DeLeo's love of Ragtime music, and its lyrics were loosely based on a newspaper article Weiland had read about a girl who had been found dead in an area outside of Seattle. Weiland has also said that the song's lyrics are a metaphor for a failed relationship.

[edit] Music video

The award-winning music video, directed by Josh Taft, was released in 1993 and had heavy rotation on MTV. It combines a visual interpretation of the song's lyrics with footage of a red-haired Weiland singing with the band as a lounge act in an empty bar. There are two different versions of this video, with minor but very noticeable differences. For example, in the version that appears on the Thank You Bonus DVD, the last shot of the video is a woman looking at a mirror image of herself and viewing her whole body while the mirror image drifts away. In another version, she's looking at a mirror image of her face, with water (possibly rain) dripping down the reflection.

[edit] Charts

Chart (1994) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 9
U.S. Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 1
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 18
UK Singles Chart 23

[edit] Notable appearances of the song

[edit] Covers

Signature

Languages