Going to a Town
"Going to a Town" | |||||||
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Single by Rufus Wainwright | |||||||
from the album Release the Stars | |||||||
Released |
April 3, 2007 (US) May 7, 2007 (UK) | ||||||
Format | Digital download | ||||||
Length | 4:06 | ||||||
Label | Geffen | ||||||
Writer(s) | Rufus Wainwright | ||||||
Producer(s) | Rufus Wainwright | ||||||
Rufus Wainwright singles chronology | |||||||
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"Going to a Town" is a song written and performed by Canadian-American singer-songwriter Rufus Wainwright. It was the first single from the album Release the Stars, released on April 3, 2007, in the United States and on May 7 in the United Kingdom.
Composition and lyrics
Wainwright said of the song:
"The meaning is very plain, mainly that I'm having problems with the United States at the moment, as we all are. We all love America, I think everybody does in a certain way. But we have to admit that there's just been too many mistakes made in the recent past over too many issues, and we've just got to deal with that fact."— Rufus Wainwright, rufuswainwright.com Audio Commentary - April 2007
Music video
The music video for the song was directed by Sophie Muller, who also directed Wainwright's first music video ("April Fools"). The video premiered in April 2007, and Logo aired a 20-minute feature on the making of the video on April 27, 2007 (Making the Video: Going to a Town). The video begins with Wainwright as a D.H. Lawrence-like character, sitting alone at a table in an isolated room. As the video progresses, a large bouquet of roses appears and viewers see Wainwright with a bed cot. Three women emerge, dressed in black clothing and veils, visibly mourning the loss of their husbands. At times, their presence is abstract, digitally projected as if they exist only in Wainwright's character's mind. Other times, Wainwright is physically interacting with them within the same room.
Viewers then see images of the roses burning, the women crying, and catching Wainwright as he falls to the ground. With light cast upon him from a single window, they place a laurel wreath on his head. As his arms are spread out and straight across, and light is cast upon him as if by divine intervention, this image is clearly meant to symbolize a crucifixion.
In Making the Video, Wainwright discusses the various images and elements depicted in the music video. He states the song is "an emotional reaction to a lover you had a fight with", and is about "mourning" and "moving on to bigger and better things." The three women in the video represent three widows, an element he took from Mozart's The Magic Flute. One woman represents Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, another Frida Kahlo, and the third a more abstract, "fairy tale-like" woman from The Magic Flute. Later in the interview, Wainwright states the women represent The Three Graces. He claims the burning roses symbolize "purification by fire", representing the United States--"beautiful, but thorny." Admitting "Going to a Town" is more about birth than destruction, he believes Americans (at the time the video was made) need to "change things" and "make sacrifices". The laurel wreath, he says, also represents the US, which "dominates the planet but is in peril of losing democracy."
In the video, Wainwright wears a suit created by American fashion designer Marc Jacobs.
Track listing
- US digital single
- "Going to a Town"
- UK digital single
- "Going to a Town"
- "Low Grade Happiness"
Chart performance
In the UK, "Going to a Town" entered the UK Singles Chart on May 5, 2007, at number 68. The following week (May 26), the track reached its highest position at number 54.[1][2] "Going to a Town" lasted on the chart for two weeks total, and failed to chart in any other countries.
Chart | Peak |
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UK Singles Chart[3] | 54 |
Personnel
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Other appearances
- Live at KEXP - Volume Four (2008)
- In the end credits of Tom at the Farm[4]
Cover versions
- George Michael from the UK version of his Symphonica (2014) album
- Salma Hayek, as performed in the film soundtrack for Americano
References
- ↑ "Chart Stats - Going to a Town". ChartStats.com. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- ↑ Roach, Martin (2008). The Virgin Book of British Hit Singles. Virgin Books. p. 422. ISBN 0-7535-1537-7.
- ↑ "Chart Stats - Rufus Wainwright". ChartStats.com. Retrieved 2008-11-12.
- ↑ Lodge, Guy. "Venice Film Review: ‘Tom at the Farm’". variety us edition. Retrieved 30 November 2015.
External links
- Rufus Wainwright's official site
- Rufus Wainwright at Geffen Records
- Lyrics of this song at MetroLyrics
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