Hourglass (Squeeze song)

"Hourglass" was the first single released from Squeeze's seventh album, Babylon and On. Aided by an optical illusion-filled music video directed by Ade Edmondson and featuring an appearance from former band member Jools Holland, it received substantial airplay on MTV, and "Hourglass" became the highest-charting hit the band ever had in the United States, peaking at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, while reaching number 16 in the UK Singles Chart.[1]

"Hourglass"
Single by Squeeze
from the album Babylon and On
ReleasedJuly 1987 (UK)
Length3:16
LabelA&M
Songwriter(s)Glenn Tilbrook and Chris Difford
Producer(s)Eric "ET" Thorngren & Glenn Tilbrook
Squeeze singles chronology
"King George Street"
(1986)
"Hourglass"
(1987)
"Trust Me To Open My Mouth"
(1987)

Background

"Hourglass" was written by Chris Difford and Glenn Tilbrook together in one room; traditionally, the two had written the lyrics and music, respectively, to their songs individually, but, at Tilbrook's suggestion, the two collaborated more directly for "Hourglass." Difford recalled, "I went to Glenn's house and within an hour we'd written 'Hourglass.' Glenn counteracted some lyrical ideas and I added some musical ideas, then he demoed it and made some changes, and finally the band got hold of it and changed it some more."[2]

Difford stated that the song "doesn't mean much" lyrically, while Tilbrook described the chorus' lyrics as "nonsense words." Musically, Tilbrook wrote the chorus; he explained, "I loved the idea of rapid delivery, which is what the chorus required."[2] Originally written as a more dance-style number, the song took on, in the words of Tilbrook, a typical "Squeeze sound." The song's break and sound effects were contributed by producer Eric "ET" Thorngren.

Release

"Hourglass" was released as the debut single from Babylon & On and became one of the band's biggest hits, reaching number 15 in the US and number 16 in the UK. The single remains the band's highest charting single in the US. Tilbrook argued that the negative lyrics were "ironic considering it went on to be a chart hit."[2]

The single's success was bolstered by a music video directed by Ade Edmondson, who was recruited by keyboardist Jools Holland. The video featured the band performing the song in a set with surrealist art and optical illusions. The video received an MTV Award for its effects. Difford later said, "The reason this song exists in my mind is purely for the video."[2]

Track listing

7"
  1. "Hourglass" (3:16)
  2. "Wedding Bells" (2:22)
12"
  1. "Hourglass" (3:16)
  2. "Splitting Into Three" (3:33)
  3. "Wedding Bells" (2:22)
gollark: The very ominously named "online safety bill" is very ominous and would impose ridiculous compliance requirements on basically everything, as well as allowing the media regulator to block sites which don't comply, as well as in a plausibly-deniable way banning end to end encryption, as well as requiring all web platform things to censor "harmful content".
gollark: The UK is also doing bad things nominally but not really in opposition to technology companies.
gollark: Australis is doing rather bad things seemingly not driven by and not desired by any tech companies.
gollark: Much of that seems to be from governments now.
gollark: It's a shame there isn't very good micropayments stuff available for most people. I would donate small amounts of money toward arbitrary internet people if possible.

References

  1. Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. pp. 522/3. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.
  2. Tilbrook, Glenn; Difford, Chris; Drury, Jim. Squeeze: Song by Song. Sanctuary.


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