Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah)

"Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah)" is a song by A-ha, and their final recording before their second splitting on 4 December 2010. The song was sold digitally in Norway from July 5. It is included on 25, a compilation album released on July 19. Its world premiere was on June 14, 2010.[1]

"Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah)"
Single by A-ha
from the album 25
B-side"Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah) (Steve Osborne Version)"
Released5 July 2010 (EU)
20 September 2010 (UK)
Recorded2010
GenreSynthpop, alternative rock
Length4:10 (album version)
3:40 (single edit)
LabelWarner Music
Songwriter(s)Paul Waaktaar-Savoy
Producer(s)Martin Terefe
A-ha singles chronology
"Shadowside"
(2009)
"Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah)"
(2010)
"Under the Makeup"
(2015)

The single entered the Norwegian single chart at #13 and reached #6 on the airplay chart soon after.[2] It also charted at #66 in the World singles official top 100.

Music video

Much like many of A-ha's early music videos (including that of "Take On Me"), the music video for "Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah)" was directed by Steve Barron,[2] and features stop-frame animation by student animator Stefan Ramirez. The video shows the band playing under a bridge (shot on location in Shoreham-by-Sea) amidst clips from previous music videos for Take On Me, The Sun Always Shines on T.V., Manhattan Skyline and Cry Wolf (all directed by Barron) intercut and projected onto the concrete pillars. The video ends with the band embracing one last time before leaping into the air, transforming into butterflies and flying away.

Barron said, of his involvement:

"It was really nice to work with A-ha again, especially as I had not made a music video for such a long time... I wanted to create a really emotional film to accompany the sentiments of the track. To hopefully bring a tear to the eye from, especially, the fans... I asked Morten, Pal and Mags to embrace, get close, almost uncomfortable and then silently say goodbye. It was certainly very powerful on the day. It seemed to sum up how much they had been through together and still stayed as one." [3]

Track list

UK/Germany/French CD Single

  1. Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah) (Single Edit)
  2. Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah) (Steve Osborne Version)[4]

iTunes Digital EP (Germany)

  1. Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah) (Album Version)
  2. Butterfly, Butterfly (The Last Hurrah) (Steve Osborne Version)
  3. The Sun Always Shines On TV (Album Version)
  4. Hunting High And Low (Album Version)
  5. Stay On These Roads (Video)[5]
  • The single was available as a digital download, and also a physical single in Germany, France and the UK. The single was released in the UK on Monday 20 September 2010.

Charts

Chart (2010) Peak
position
German Singles Chart[6] 22
Israeli Singles Chart[7] 9
Norwegian Singles Chart 13
UK Singles Chart 98
French Singles Chart 193
gollark: Still, I would expect that for non-time-critical stuff people wouldn't mind waiting for a few years if they could run their computing tasks on an entire moon comparatively cheaply.
gollark: I guess one might be network connectivity, since your moonbrain being several light-years from a stargate would make it not very useful for real-time stuff.
gollark: It seems like - since there's not any mention of the eldraeverse having moonbrains everywhere - there's some reason you can't just cheaply stick some self-replicating machinery on a planet and come back in a hundred years and... do moonbrain things.
gollark: Giant fractal things are a nice decoration for *any* planet, really.
gollark: Especially since the magic phased array thing will probably dump lots of heat for all the computing and... phased-arraying, I have no idea how an optical one would actually work internally.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.