Particle Man

"Particle Man" is a song by alternative rock band They Might Be Giants, released and published in 1990.[1] The song is the seventh track on the band's third album, Flood. It has become one of the band's most popular songs, despite never having been released as a single.[2] John Linnell and John Flansburgh performed the song, backed by a metronome, for their 1990 Flood promotional video.[3] Although it was released over a decade before the band began writing children's music, "Particle Man" is sometimes cited as a particularly youth-appropriate TMBG song, and a precursor to their first children's album, No!, which was not explicitly educational. The song is somewhat influenced by the theme of the 1967 Spider-Man TV series.[4][5]

"Particle Man"
Song by They Might Be Giants
from the album Flood
Published1990
ReleasedJanuary 15, 1990 (1990-01-15)
Recorded1989, Skyline Studio, New York City
GenreAlternative rock, polka
Length1:59
LabelElektra
Songwriter(s)John Flansburgh, John Linnell
Producer(s)They Might Be Giants

They Might Be Giants' official YouTube account has the user name "ParticleMen", derived from the song title.[6]

Lyrical content

The song describes four different "men": Particle Man, a microscopic being whose attributes are deemed "not important" enough to be discussed lyrically; Triangle Man, a belligerent entity who hates Particle Man, fights him, and wins; Universe Man, a kinder being, who is the size of the universe, and has a watch with hands relevant to the age of the universe ("He’s got a watch with a minute hand, a millennium hand, and an eon hand"); and Person Man, a "degraded" being who lives in a garbage can, and who is also despised, challenged, and defeated by Triangle Man. The song's author, John Linnell, denied the assertion that there is a deeper meaning to "Particle Man", stating on a phone interview filmed for Gigantic (A Tale of Two Johns), that "nothing is missing from your understanding of 'Particle Man'".[3] Band member John Flansburgh described it as "just a song about characters in the most obvious sense" and claims that the lyrics are not intended to allude to real people,[7] though Linnell later said that "Triangle Man was based on a friend's observation that Robert Mitchum looked like an evil triangle when he took his shirt off in Night of the Hunter. Nothing else not explicitly stated need be inferred."[8]

Video

Both "Particle Man" and another They Might Be Giants song, "Istanbul", were made into music videos featured on the Warner Bros. animated series, Tiny Toon Adventures and The Plucky Duck Show. Both appeared in the episode "Tiny Toons Music Television".[9] In the video for "Particle Man", Plucky Duck portrays both Particle Man and Person Man (Person Man being, in the video's interpretation, Particle Man’s secret identity), and the other characters are featured as massive wrestlers. It also portrays Universe Man as being just as mean as Triangle Man towards Particle Man, despite what the lyrics suggest.[4] The video also includes cameos by The Crusher from the Looney Tunes short Bunny Hugged, Hamton J. Pig as a wrestling announcer who lip-syncs the song's lyrics, and Dizzy Devil playing the accordion.

The music videos for "Particle Man" and "Istanbul" are credited with having introduced young fans to the band.[10] Although they were not official music videos, the Tiny Toons selections warranted inclusion on the band's 1999 video compilation, Direct from Brooklyn.

Influence and usage

In addition to the Tiny Toons Adventures music video above, "Particle Man" has been performed by schoolchildren on multiple occasions. In two such instances, the band has obtained recordings of the performances and released them to their fans and the general public. A cover entitled "Schoolchildren Singing 'Particle Man'", recorded by a music teacher at an elementary school, appeared on the band's Dial-A-Song phone line, as well as their 1999 compilation Then: The Earlier Years.[2] John Linnell stated that this was his favourite version of the song.[11] Another rendition was done by the fifth graders of the Kingsley Montessori School in Boston. The recording was accompanied by an animated video made by the students, which the band uploaded to YouTube.[12]

In the Marvel Comics series X-Factor, writer Peter David referenced "Particle Man" as the source song for a fictional parody by "Weird Al" Yankovic about the character Multiple Man. A partial verse, which discussed Multiple Man's ability to create duplicates of himself, was presented as a radio broadcast in issue #73.[13] The song was also a minor inspiration to author Terry Pratchett. One of his recurring Discworld characters, Foul Ole Ron, frequently mutters "millennium hand and shrimp". This was a result of Pratchett feeding various texts to a text-generation computer program, and this phrase was a result of merging this song's lyrics (which mention a "millennium hand") with a Chinese takeaway menu.[14]

A cover of the song was used, in part, for advertisements and previews for the video game Geometry Wars: Galaxies. In reference to the nature of Geometry Wars, the part of the song about "Triangle Man" is particularly stressed.[15]

The single "Particle Man" appears on "Dr. Demento's 25th Anniversary Collection," released in 1995 on Rhino Records.

Personnel

They Might Be Giants

Additional musicians

Production

  • Roger Moutenot – mixing[1]
  • They Might Be Giants – producer[1]
gollark: And "in the category of C-likes" -> in the group of languages which are like C.
gollark: Basically, Elm is a language which relies on compiler magic/special-casing, like Go.
gollark: It's not *my* quote, but it makes sense.
gollark: Quote from the Haskell server:```Go is just an Elmoid in the category of C-likes, what's the problem```Correct But Weird-Sounding Thing #10125™
gollark: I WILL BITSHIFT YOU!

References

  1. Flood (album notes). Elektra Records. 1990.
  2. Mason, Stewart. "Particle Man - They Might Be Giants". Allmusic. Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  3. Gigantic (A Tale of Two Johns). Dir. AJ Schnack. 2003.
  4. Ricks, Rosy. "They Might Be Giants at the PabstOh, Boy". Third Coast Digest. 2011-10-30. Prime 7 Media.
  5. Blisten, John (2011-07-12). "They Might Be Giants Grow Up Again with "Join Us"". Billboard. Retrieved 2013-05-21.
  6. "ParticleMen - YouTube". YouTube. Retrieved 2018-07-07.
  7. Flansburgh, John. "Interview". Archived from the original on April 2, 2012. Retrieved 2005-02-20.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link) by Matt Springer and Brian Bender. Pop Culture Corn. October 1998. Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  8. Ferris, D.X. (2009-10-08). "They Might Be Giants' Flood: Track by Track Guide to the Geek-Chic Breakthrough". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2012-08-06.
  9. "'Tiny Toon Adventures' Tiny Toon Music Television(1991) soundtrack". IMDb. Retrieved 2013-02-11.
  10. Rivait, Lindsay. "Here Comes They Might Be Giants". Lance. 2008-03-05.
  11. Flansburgh, John and John Linnell. "John and John Answer Your Questions". TMBG Info Club. 1994.
  12. Beale, Scott (June 21, 2012). "TMBG's Particle Man Performed by the Kingsley Montessori School". Laughing Squid. Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  13. David, Peter, Larry Stroman, and Al Milgrom. "Crowd Control" X-Factor #73. Ed. Bob Harras. 1991. Marvel Comics.
  14. Pratchett, Terry. "The Annotated Pratchett File v9.0 — Lords and Ladies". Retrieved 2013-02-10.
  15. "Geometry Wars Wii - Particle Man Trailer". YouTube. 2007-08-06. Retrieved 2013-03-04.
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