She Blinded Me with Science

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“She Blinded Me with Science”
Single by Thomas Dolby
from the album The Golden Age of Wireless
Released 1982
Recorded 1981
Genre New Wave
Label Capitol Records
Writer(s) Thomas Dolby, Joe Kerr
Producer Thomas Dolby

"She Blinded Me With Science" is a New Wave song by British musician Thomas Dolby, released in 1982. It first appeared on the album The Golden Age of Wireless. It is a quirky, playful synth-pop number built around bouncy synthesizer hooks, but occasionally ventures into darker interludes meant[citation needed] to evoke early Hollywood mad scientist films such as Frankenstein.

Although a Top 10 hit in the United States, peaking at #5, the song failed to make the Top 40 in Dolby's native United Kingdom.

In 2002, VH1 named "She Blinded Me With Science" #20 on its list of the "100 Greatest One-hit Wonders."[1] In 2006, VH1 placed it at #76 on their list of "Greatest Songs of the '80s."[2]

 Music Sample:

Thomas Dolby - She Blinded Me With Science excerpt

An excerpt from She Blinded Me With Science
Problems listening to the file? See media help.

Contents

[edit] Song structure

The song's chorus, "She blinded me with science," plays upon the colloquial British expression "to blind [someone] with science," meaning to deliberately confuse someone by giving the impression of highly complex knowledge (See also mathout). In the song, however, the phrase is interpreted as a straightforward reference to the natural sciences.

The song features interjections from the British scientist and TV presenter Magnus Pyke[1], who repeatedly shouts "Science!" and delivers other lines in a deliberately over-the-top "mad scientist" voice, the most famous line of which was, "Good heavens, Miss Sakamoto! You're beautiful!"

The song was showcased as part of Dolby's appearance at the South by Southwest 2007 music festival.[3]

[edit] Chart performance

Country Peak
position
United Kingdom 49[4]
United States 5[4]

[edit] Pop culture

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Greatest One Hit Wonders List (#20-1) from the VH1 website
  2. ^ VH1's "100 Greatest Songs Of The '80s" an October 2006 press release from the VH1 website
  3. ^ Thomas Dolby at SXSW 2007 website, with a free MP3 download of a live version of "She Blinded Me with Science"
  4. ^ a b Songfacts. Retrieved on 2008-03-09.