Video Killed the Radio Star

"Video Killed the Radio Star" is a song written by Trevor Horn, Geoff Downes and Bruce Woolley in 1978. It was first recorded by Bruce Woolley and the Camera Club (with Thomas Dolby on keyboards) for their album English Garden, and later by British new wave/synth-pop group the Buggles, consisting of Horn and Downes. The track was recorded and mixed in 1979, released as their debut single on 7 September 1979 by Island Records, and included on their first album The Age of Plastic. The backing track was recorded at Virgin's Town House in West London, and mixing and vocal recording would later take place at Sarm East Studios.

"Video Killed the Radio Star"
Single by Bruce Woolley
from the album English Garden
Released1979 (1979)
Recorded1979 (1979)
Length2:49
LabelEpic
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Mike Hurst
"Video Killed the Radio Star"
Single by The Buggles
from the album The Age of Plastic
B-side"Kid Dynamo"
Released7 September 1979
Recorded1979
StudioVirgin's Townhouse (West London, UK), Sarm East Studios (Brick Lane, London, UK)
Genre
Length
LabelIsland
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)The Buggles
The Buggles singles chronology
"Video Killed the Radio Star"
(1979)
"Living in the Plastic Age"
(1980)
Music video
"Video Killed the Radio Star" on YouTube
Audio
"Video Killed the Radio Star" (radio edit) on YouTube

The song relates to concerns about mixed attitudes towards 20th-century inventions and machines for the media arts. Musically, the song performs like an extended jingle and the composition plays in the key of D-flat major in common time at a tempo of 132 beats per minute. The track has been positively received, with reviewers praising its unusual musical pop elements. Although the song includes several common pop characteristics and six basic chords are used in its structure, Downes and writer Timothy Warner described the piece as musically complicated, due to its use of suspended and minor ninth chords for enhancement that gave the song a "slightly different feel."

On release, the single topped sixteen international music charts, including those in the UK, Australia, and Japan. It also peaked in the top 10 in Canada, Germany, New Zealand and South Africa, but only reached number 40 in the US. The accompanying music video was written, directed, and edited by Russell Mulcahy. It was the first music video shown on MTV in the US, airing at 12:01 a.m. on 1 August 1981, and the first video shown on MTV Classic in the UK on 1 March 2010. The song has received several critical accolades, such as being ranked number 40 on VH1's 100 Greatest One-Hit Wonders of the '80s.[1] It has also been covered by many recording artists.

Background and lyrics

The Buggles, which formed in 1977, first consisted of Trevor Horn, Geoff Downes and Bruce Woolley.[2] They all wrote "Video Killed the Radio Star" in an hour of one afternoon in 1978, six months before it was recorded, together in Downes' apartment located above a monumental stonemason's in Wimbledon Park, London.[3][4][5] The piece was built up from a chorus riff developed by Woolley.[4] It is one of the three Buggles songs that Woolley assisted in writing, the two others being "Clean, Clean" and "On TV."[2] An early demo of the song, featuring Horn's then-girlfriend Tina Charles on vocals, helped the group get signed to Island Records to record and release their debut album The Age of Plastic, as well as producing and writing for the label, after Downes' girlfriend, who worked for Island, managed to get it played to executives there.[2][6][7] Woolley left during recording to form his own band, The Camera Club, which did their own version of "Video", as well as "Clean, Clean" for their album English Garden.[2]

Horn has said that J.G. Ballard's short story "The Sound-Sweep", in which the title character—a mute boy vacuuming up stray music in a world without it—comes upon an opera singer hiding in a sewer, provided inspiration for "Video," and he felt "an era was about to pass."[8] Horn claimed that Kraftwerk was another influence of the song: "...It was like you could see the future when you heard Kraftwerk, something new is coming, something different. Different rhythm section, different mentality. So we had all of that, myself and Bruce, and we wrote this song probably six months before we recorded it."[5] In a 2018 interview Horn stated: "I'd read JG Ballard and had this vision of the future where record companies would have computers in the basement and manufacture artists. I'd heard Kraftwerk's The Man-Machine and video was coming. You could feel things changing".[7]

All the tracks of The Age of Plastic deal with positives and concerns of the impact of modern technology.[6] The theme of "Video Killed the Radio Star" is thus nostalgia, with the lyrics referring to a period of technological change in the 1960s, the desire to remember the past and the disappointment that children of the current generation would not appreciate the past.[9] The lyrics relate to concerns of the varied behaviours towards 20th-century technical inventions and machines used and changed in media arts such as photography, cinema, radio, television, audio recording and record production.[10] According to Horn, the band initially struggled to come up with a line to follow the song's opening ("I heard you on the wireless back in '52"): he eventually came up with "Lying awake intent at tuning in on you", inspired by memories of listening to Radio Luxembourg at night as a child.[7] Woolley worried about the song's name, given the existence of a band with the name Radio Stars and a song titled "Video King" by singer Snips.[11]

Development and composition

The Buggles' version of "Video Killed the Radio Star" is a new wave and synth-pop song.[12][13] It performs like an extended jingle,[12] sharing its rhythm characteristics with disco.[14] The piece plays in common time at a bright tempo of 132 beats per minute.[15] It is in the key of D♭ major,[4][15] and six basic chords are used in the song's chord progression.[14] According to Geoff Downes, "It's actually a lot more complicated piece of music than people think, for instance part of the bridge is actually suspended chords and minor 9ths. A lot of people transcribed the song wrongly, they thought it was a straight F# chord. The song was written in D flat. The suspended gives it a slightly different feel."[4] Writing in his book, Pop Music: Technology and Creativity: Trevor Horn and the Digital Revolution, Timothy Warner said that the "relatively quiet introduction" helping the listener detect a high amount of "tape hiss" generated through the use of analogue multi-track tape recorders, as well as the timbre of the synthesized instruments, give an indication of the technical process and time of producing the song.[16]

The song took more than three months of production.[4] In 2018 Downes stated that the version that was released was rewritten from that recorded for the band's demo tape: the verses were extended and Downes contributed a new intro and middle eight, with the bulk of the original song having already been written by Horn and Woolley when he joined.[7] The instrumental track was recorded at Virgin's Town House in West London in twelve hours, with mixing and recording of vocals held at Sarm East Studios.[5][6][17] The entire song was mixed through a Trident TSM console.[6] "Video" was the first track recorded for the group's debut LP The Age of Plastic, which cost a sum of £60,000 (equivalent to £346,751 in 2019) to produce,[17] and the song was mixed by Gary Langan four or five times.[6] According to Langan, "there was no total recall, so we just used to start again. We’d do a mix and three or four days later Trevor would go, 'It's not happening. We need to do this and we need to do that.' The sound of the bass drum was one of his main concerns, along with his vocal and the backing vocals. It was all about how dry and how loud they should be in the mix without the whole thing sounding ridiculous. As it turned out, that record still had the loudest bass drum ever for its time."[6]

The song includes instrumentation of drums, bass guitar, electric guitar, synth strings, piano, glockenspiel, marimbas and other futuristic, twinkly sounds, and vocals.[12][4][18] Downes used a Solina, Minimoog and Prophet-5 to create the overdubbed orchestral parts.[4] Both the male and female voices differ to give a tonal and historical contrast.[19] When Langan was interviewed in December 2011, he believed the male vocal was recorded through either a dynamic Shure SM57, SM58, Sennheiser 421, or STC 4038 ribbon microphone, and that four or five takes had to be done.[6] The male voice echos the song's theme in the tone of the music, initially limited in bandwidth to give a "telephone" effect typical of early broadcasts, and uses a Mid-Atlantic accent resembling that of British singers in the 1950s and '60s.[19] The Vox AC30 amplifier was used to achieve the telephone effect, and Gary Langan says he was trying to make it "loud without cutting your head off", in others words make the voice sound soft. Gary Langan and Trevor Horn also tried using a bullhorn, but they found it too harsh. Langan later compressed and EQ'd the male vocals, and he said that doing the compression for old-style vocal parts was a "real skill."[6] The female vocals are panned in the left and right audio channels,[6] and sound more modern and have a New York accent.[19]

The single version of "Video Killed the Radio Star" lasts for 3 minutes and 25 seconds. The album version plays for 4 minutes and 13 seconds, about 48 seconds longer than the single version, as it fades into a piano and synth coda, which ends with a brief sampling of the female vocals.[6]

Commercial performance

"Video Killed the Radio Star" was a huge commercial success, reaching number one on 16 different national charts.[20] In the Buggles' home country, the song made its debut on the UK Singles Chart in the top 40 at number 24, on the issue dated 29 September 1979.[21] The next week, the track entered into the chart's top ten at number six,[22] before topping the chart on the week of 20 October.[23] It was the 444th UK number-one hit in the chart's entire archive.[20] The single was later certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry for UK sales of 500,000.

In Australia, "Video Killed the Radio Star" reached number one, where it was the best-selling record for 27 years.[20] In late 1979, while the single was still in an eight-week run at Number one in the charts, the single was awarded a platinum disc by Festival Records, the record's distributing company, for sales of over 100,000 copies in Australia.[24] The track went number one on the Italian Singles Chart in 1980, where it became the best-selling single of the same year.[25] The song also made a number-one peak in France and Spain,[26][27] where it was certified gold and platinum, respectively, as well as Austria,[28] Ireland,[29] Sweden[30] and Switzerland.[31] In other parts of Europe and Oceania, "Video Killed the Radio Star" was a number-two hit in Germany and New Zealand,[32][33] and also charted in Flanders on the Ultratop 50[34] and in the Netherlands, on the Nationale Hitparade Top 50 (now the Single Top 100) and Dutch Top 40.[35][36]

"Video Killed the Radio Star" did not start charting in North America, however, until November 1979. In the United States, the song appeared on the Billboard Hot 100 and Cash Box Top 100, barely breaking into the top 40 on both charts.[37][38] In a 2015 list from Billboard, it tied with Marvin Gaye's recording of "The End of Our Road" as the "Biggest Hot 100 Hit" at the peak of number 40.[39] "Video Killed the Radio Star" debuted at number 86 on the Billboard Hot 100 on the week of 10 November 1979,[40] while on the Cashbox Top 100 it debuted at number 83 that same week.[41] It started also at number 83 on the Canadian RPM Top Single Chart.[42] By January 1980, it entered the top 40 at number 31,[43] and on 2 February made it into the top 20 at number 11.[44] Two weeks later, the song earned its peak in the top 10 at number 6 and issue dated 16 February 1980.[45]

Critical reception

The song became a Billboard Top Single Pick on 3 November 1979, whom the publication found the chorus catchy and also highlighted the orchestral instruments supporting the backing singers.[46] Although there had been a mixed review of the single from Smash Hits, who found the song to be "too tidy, like vymura" (wallpaper),[47] they listed it in a review of The Age of Plastic as one of the best tracks of the album, along with "Living in the Plastic Age".[48] Timothy Warner wrote that, although several common pop elements were still present in the song, it included stronger originality for its own purpose than most other pop hits released at the time.[49] These unusual pop music characteristics include the timbres of the male and female vocal parts, and the use of suspended fourth and ninths chords for enhancement in its progression.[14] He also felt it was unnecessary to dislike it as a "novelty song."[49] AllMusic's Heather Phares said the track "can be looked on as a perfectly preserved new wave gem," "just as the song looks back on the radio songs of the '50s and '60s." She concluded her review by saying that it "still sounds as immediate as it did when it was released, however, and that may be the song's greatest irony."[12]

However, many writers called Woolley's recording of "Video" much better than the Buggles' version.[50][51][52] This included one critic who called both acts overall as of being very high quality, but felt that Woolley's version was more faithful to the source material than that of The Buggles, noting the filtered vocals and cute, female vocals of the latter rendition as giving it a novelty feel.[53] However, he also wrote of liking both versions of "Clean, Clean" on the same level.

Music video

Production and concept

Trevor Horn (right) and Geoff Downes (left) as they appear in the video

The music video for "Video Killed the Radio Star", written, directed and edited by Australian Russell Mulcahy,[54][55] was produced on a budget of $50,000.[3] It was filmed in only a day in South London,[54] and was edited in a couple of days.[55] Mulcahy asked Virginia Hey, a friend who was a model and aspiring actress, to dress "in a silver costume and be lowered via wires in a test tube." There were about 30 takes required for shots of the actress in the tube. The tube falls over in the video, although Mulcahy claims it was not intended to be shown in the final edit.[54] Hans Zimmer can be briefly seen wearing black playing a keyboard,[56] and Debi Doss and Linda Jardim, who provided the female vocals for the song, are also seen.[57]

The video starts with a young girl sitting in front of a radio. A black-and-white shot of Trevor Horn singing into a radio-era microphone is superimposed over the young girl by the radio. The radio blows up by the time of the first chorus, and then in the second verse, she is seen transported into the future, where she meets Horn and a silver-jumpsuited female in a clear plastic tube. Shots of Horn and Geoff Downes are shown during the remainder of the video.[56]

Broadcasting and reception

The video was first released in 1979,[58] when it originally aired on the BBC's Top of the Pops for promotion of the single, in lieu of doing live performances.[3] Zimmer recalled in 2001 that the video drew criticism from some viewers who watched it before it aired on MTV, due to being "'too violent' because we blew up a television."[3] The video is best known as marking the debut of MTV, when the US channel started broadcasting at 12:01 AM on 1 August 1981.[59] On 27 February 2000, it became the one-millionth video to be aired on MTV.[60] It also opened MTV Classic in the UK and Ireland, which replaced VH1 Classic on 1 March 2010, at 6 AM. The video marked the closing of MTV Philippines before its shutdown on 15 February 2010 at 11:49 PM.[61][62] MTV co-founder Bob Pittman said the video "made an aspirational statement. We didn't expect to be competitive with radio, but it was certainly a sea-change kind of video."[3] In July 2013, multiple independent artists covered the song for the launch of the TV channel Pivot, which launched with the music video of the cover on 1 August at 6 am.[63]

Live performances and cover versions

A notable interpretation of the melody was released in 1979 by French singer Ringo, using French language lyrics by Étienne Roda-Gil supplying a new title "Qui est ce grand corbeau noir ?" ("Who is this big black raven?")[64][65] Ringo's version peaked at number 8 in France.[65]

A rare live performance of the song by Horn and Downes came at a ZTT showcase in 1998.[66] In 2004, the Buggles re-united again with Bruce Woolley at Wembley Arena to perform "Video Killed the Radio Star" and "Living in the Plastic Age" as part of a tribute event to Horn to raise money for The Prince's Trust charity. They were joined by Debi Doss and Linda Jardim (now Linda Allan), who performed the background singing on the original recording. Paul Robinson, who played drums on the original, also appeared. Both Horn and Downes have performed the song live in other acts, including Yes (which Downes and Horn joined for the Drama album and tour in 1980), Downes in the 2006–2009 revival of Asia with John Wetton singing lead and again in 2017 with Billy Sherwood singing lead, and Horn in his band the Producers, also in 2006.

In November 2006, the Producers played at their first gig in Camden Town. A video clip can be seen on ZTT Records of Horn singing lead vocals and playing bass in a performance of "Video Killed the Radio Star". Tina Charles appears on a YouTube video singing 'Slave to the Rhythm' with the Producers[67] and Horn reveals that Tina was the singer and originator of the "Oh Ah-Oh Ah-Oh" part of 'Video'; fellow 5000 Volt member Martin Jay was also a session musician on The Buggles record.[68]

Robbie Williams performed the song with Trevor Horn at the BBC Electric Proms on 20 October 2009.[69]

Personnel

Sources:[6][70]

Charts and certifications

Chart performance

Accolades

Publication/TV Show/Author(s) Country Accolade Year Rank
20 to 1 Australia Top 20 One Hit Wonders[87] 2006 3
Bruce Pollock United States The 7,500 Most Important Songs of 1944-2000 2005 *
Giannis Petridis Greece 2004 of the Best Songs of the Century 2003
Gilles Verlant, Thomas Caussé France 3000 Rock Classics 2009
The Guardian United Kingdom The Top 100 British Number 1 Singles[88] 53
Hervé Bourhis France Le Petit Livre Rock: The Juke Box Singles 1950-2009 2009 *
Les Inrockuptibles 1000 Indispensable Songs 2006
Mashable United States 32 Unforgettable Music Videos[89] 2013
MSN Music United Kingdom Best Song Titles Ever[90] 2003 19
NBC-10 United States The 30 Best Songs of the 80s 2006 *
Pause & Play Songs Inducted into a Time Capsule, One Track at Each Week
PopMatters The 100 Best Songs Since Johnny Rotten Roared[91] 2003 73
Q United Kingdom The 1010 Songs You Must Own (Q50: One-hit Wonders)[92] 2004 *
Time United States Top 10 MTV Moments[93] 2010
Time Out United Kingdom 100 Songs That Changed History[94] 100
Triple J Hottest 100 Australia Hottest 100 of All Time[95] 1998 79
VH1 United States 100 Greatest One-Hit Wonders of the 80's[1] 2009 40
100 Greatest Videos[96] 2001 79
Volume! France 200 Records that Changed the World 2008 *
Xfinity United States Top 10 Groundbreaking Videos[97] 10
WhatCulture! 10 Controversial Music Videos That Look Tame Today[98] 2013 *
WOXY.com The 500 Best Modern Rock Songs of All Time 2008 348
All accolades are adapted from Acclaimed Music,[99] except if cited by an additional source.
"*" indicates the list is unordered.
gollark: Hmm, interesting question.
gollark: People like to *say* "O NOES, Google has done [EVIL AND/OR ANNOYING AND/OR HOSTILE TO USER ACTION 1051259172589]" but so few actually do anything about it.
gollark: Perhaps Google is experimenting to see how much they can annoy users without a significant amount actually leaving.
gollark: Clearly their AI is just optimizing for somewhat short term ad revenue at the expense of all else.
gollark: Wow, the past is weird.

See also

No. 1 chart lists

References

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