I Think I'm Go Go

"I Think I'm Go Go" is a 1980 song by the British new wave band Squeeze, released on their third album Argybargy. The lyrics were written by Chris Difford and the music was written by Glenn Tilbrook.

"I Think I'm Go Go"
Song by Squeeze
from the album Argybargy
ReleasedFebruary 1980
Recorded1979
GenreRock, new wave
Length4:18
LabelA&M
Songwriter(s)Chris Difford, Glenn Tilbrook
Producer(s)John Wood, Squeeze
Argybargy track listing
11 tracks
Side one
  1. "Pulling Mussels (from the Shell)"
  2. "Another Nail in My Heart"
  3. "Separate Beds"
  4. "Misadventure"
  5. "I Think I'm Go Go"
Side two
  1. "Farfisa Beat"
  2. "Here Comes That Feeling"
  3. "Vicky Verky"
  4. "If I Didn't Love You"
  5. "Wrong Side of the Moon"
  6. "There at the Top"

Background

Chris Difford said about the lyrics, "This was a song about touring, which could be a very strange experiences. It would get to the stage where I'd think 'I don't know where I am, I don't know which county I am in, what time we're onstage, or who I'm sleeping with.' 'I think I'm go go' was the turn of phrase in the band at the time."[1] Difford continued, "Interestingly, this song was very popular in America. The first verse is about being in Amsterdam because a lot of our early gigs were in Holland. Glenn's dad lived out there and he used to arrange gigs for us. It was always good fun playing there. The second verse is about New York and mentions liquor stores, rodeos and PIX, which was an American radio station. The last verse is about London."[1]

Glenn Tilbrook said of the song, "This was a step forward in our imaginations. It was influenced lyrically by the fact we have been whopped around the head and rendered bewildered by the amount of traveling we'd been doing. We all found it bewildering, but I had the sense that Chris probably felt this more so than the rest of us."[1] Tilbrook also said, "It's very Beatles-like and also has a similar sound to our song, 'The Knack'. There's a direct through line from 'The Knack' to 'I Think I'm Go Go', with that sense of other-worldness. The use of strings added to that feeling. I wanted to contrast real strings with synth strings and change the feel between the verses. This meant the listener got a sense of being jolted out of one mood or another."[1]

Critical opinion

AllMusic critic Stephen Thomas Erlewine said that "the group stretches into some spacy territory on "I Think I'm Go Go[.]"[2]

gollark: If I was making stuff people actually *depended* on in large quantities I would probably want cashmoney, in order to be able to keep it maintained and all.
gollark: Or, well, things which are practical enough that multiple people are likely to use them for serious purposes.
gollark: If I was actually making some sort of useful thing or something which might be a component of some important systems, I might GPLv3 it and try and sell commercial licenses, but... I don't make useful things.
gollark: My stuff is all just shoved under the MIT license because honestly who cares.
gollark: Just say something like "ported from Cobalt (here) according to the terms of (license)".

References

  1. Tillbrook, Glenn; Difford, Chris; Drury, Jim. Squeeze: Song by Song. Sanctuary.
  2. Allmusic review
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