Uncle Walter (song)
"Uncle Walter" | ||||||||||
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Single by Ben Folds Five | ||||||||||
from the album Ben Folds Five | ||||||||||
Released |
August 8, 1995 (Album) | |||||||||
Recorded |
Wave Castle, Chapel Hill, North Carolina | |||||||||
Genre | Alternative rock | |||||||||
Length | 3:49 | |||||||||
Label |
Passenger/Caroline | |||||||||
Writer(s) | Benjamin Scott Folds | |||||||||
Producer(s) | Caleb Southern | |||||||||
Ben Folds Five singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"Uncle Walter" is a song from Ben Folds Five's 1995 self-titled debut album.[1] It was written by Ben Folds.[2] The song is about a young man left alone with the opinionated, possibly crazy, relative of his significant other.
History
Uncle Walter is that relative who has soured with age. Opinionated when he was younger; vitriolic as he got older; now swathed in an air of righteousness and contempt without self-awareness or regard to repercussion, drowned in beer. The song of "Uncle Walter" recounts an afternoon or evening where a young man is left by his girlfriend or wife for an extended period of time to listen to the unrestrained rants of the eponymous relative on life and the ways of the world. The point of view of the song is from the young man dressing down his significant other after her return.
Folds, Sledge, and Jessee were known to have fun during interviews and often give false, misleading or intentionally humorous answers to questions. True or not, Folds has said that Uncle Walter
“ | ...was actually based on this woman, the mother of this guy I played in a garage band with, and she was a total absolute drunk. They'd leave to go get a cord or beer or something - I was 14 - and she'd trap me in the corner and just talk, talk, talk. [drunk voice] "If I was President, I would have done this..." She's dead now 'cause she was washing her hair in the bathtub and the bathtub was filling up, and she hit her head on the faucet and she passed out into the tub and drowned. The Uncle Walter I actually have is a nice guy.[3] | ” |
Charles Leahy, first cousin of songwriter (and Folds' former wife) Anna Goodman, corroborates this in a June 2006 interview:
“ | Uncle Walter was actually a real, genuine uncle (by marriage) of Anna's mom and my mom. (They're sisters). Uncle Walter had a great log cabin in the mountains of Virginia with an awesome large creek running beside it. He was a farmer from the depression days and a REAL character. Anna's mom and my mom were always telling stories about him and that's where the name comes from. Of course the character in the song is indeed a compilation of characters (including the woman you referenced), but I just wanted to give my great uncle some credit![4] | ” |
Additional versions
This song appears on the Ben Folds Five Live album which was released on June 4, 2013. It was recorded at the Kool Haus, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, 10/5/12.[5]
Singles
U.S. promotional CD single
Released in 1996 to radio programmers in the United States to promote the song and the album Ben Folds Five. Features the album cut of the song.[6]
- Uncle Walter – 3:49
European commercial CD single
Released in 1996 in Europe by Intercord Records for Passenger/Caroline. Features the album cut of the song. The other tracks were recorded live on August 12, 1995, at Ziggy's in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, by John Alagia and Doug Derryberry. The tracks were mixed at Rutabaga Studios on May 1996. "Tom & Mary" also appears on the Japanese release of Ben Folds Five.[7]
- Uncle Walter – 3:49
- Tom & Mary (Live) – 2:51
- Emaline (Live) – 3:40
Australian commercial CD single
Released in 1996 in Australia by Virgin Records for Passenger/Caroline. Features the album cut of the song. The other tracks were recorded live on August 12, 1995, at Ziggy's in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, by John Alagia and Doug Derryberry. The tracks were mixed at Rutabaga Studios on May 1996. "Tom & Mary" also appears on the Japanese release of Ben Folds Five.[8]
- Uncle Walter – 3:49
- Tom & Mary (Live) – 2:51
- Emaline (Live) – 3:40
Compilations and soundtracks
The song appears on the 1996 Caroline Records compilation album How Low Can A Punk Get.
Personnel
Production
- Producer: Caleb Southern
- Mixing: Marc Becker
References
- ↑ Amazon: Ben Folds Five
- ↑ BMI Repertoire Listing
- ↑ Galgano, Rob (1996). "Ben Folds Five: Dropping Pianos and Swatting Flies". You Could Do Worse Magazine; reprinted online at SmartAss.org. Retrieved 2009-01-26.
- ↑ A Who's Who in Ben Folds Five Songs
- ↑ "Ben Folds Five First Official Live Album To Be Released June 4". Retrieved 19 April 2013.
- ↑ Promotional Singles - The Unauthorized Discography of Ben Folds Five
- ↑ Singles - The Unauthorized Discography of Ben Folds Five
- ↑ Singles - The Unauthorized Discography of Ben Folds Five
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