We Didn't Start the Fire

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"We Didn't Start the Fire"
Single by Billy Joel
from the album Storm Front
Released November 10, 1989
Format 7" single, 12" single, CD
Genre Rock
Length 4:49
Label Columbia Records
Writer(s) Billy Joel
Producer Mick Jones, Billy Joel
Certification Gold (RIAA)
Billy Joel singles chronology
"This Is the Time"
(1987)
"We Didn't Start the Fire"
(1989)
"Leningrad"
(1990)

"We Didn't Start the Fire" is a song by Billy Joel that makes reference to a catalog of headline events during his lifetime, from March 1949 (Joel was born on May 9th of that year) to 1989, when the song was released on his album Storm Front. The events are mixed with a refrain asserting "we didn't start the fire". The song was a number-one hit in the U.S.

The song and music video have been interpreted as a rebuttal to criticism of Joel's Baby Boomer generation, from both its preceding and succeeding generations. The song's title and refrain imply that the frenzied and troubled state which others were criticizing had been the state of the world since long before his generation's time, but that this was being ignored by their critics.

Contents

[edit] History

Joel has a strong interest in history. "I'm a history nut. I devour history books. At one time I wanted to be a history teacher." According to his mother, he has been avidly reading history books since he was seven years old.[1] Unlike most of Joel's songs, the lyrics were written before the melody, owing to the somewhat unusual style of the song. The song was a huge commercial success and was Joel's third Billboard #1 hit. It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Record of the Year.

I had turned forty. It was 1989 and I said "Okay, what's happened in my life?" I wrote down the year 1949. Okay, Harry Truman was president. Popular singer of the day, Doris Day. China went Communist. Another popular singer, Johnny Ray. Big Broadway show, South Pacific. Journalist, Walter Winchell. Athlete, Joe Dimaggio. Then I went on to 1950... It's one of the worst melodies I've ever written. I kind of like the lyric though. [2]

Although the song ranked #1 in the U.S., and #7 in the UK, Blender magazine ranked "We Didn't Start the Fire" #41 on its list of the "50 Worst Songs Ever".[3] "We Didn't Start the Fire" also appeared in the same spot on VH1's 50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs Ever, a collaboration with Blender in 2004. This song has also been rated #1 Catchiest Song Ever by a number of respectable publications.

The Forms recorded a cover of the song for Engine Room Recordings' compilation album Guilt by Association Vol. 2, which was released in November of 2008[4].

This song could be classified as a patter song characterized by its moderately fast tempo with rapid succession of rhythmic lyrics.

[edit] Music video

A music video for the single was directed by Chris Blum.[5] It chronicles a middle-class husband and wife and their goal of the American Dream: a home, careers and children. This is juxtaposed with the tumultuous social times of the second half of the 20th century (e.g., bra burning). The singer acts as an omnipotent observer. The chorus shows Joel beating on a table while a backdrop of famous photographs (Lee Harvey Oswald's assassination and Nguyễn Văn Lém's execution, among others) are consumed in flames.

[edit] Chart positions

Chart (1989) Peak
position
ARC Weekly Top 40 1
Austrian Singles Chart 7
Dutch Top 40 11[6]
German Media Control Charts 4
Australian ARIA Charts 2
UK Singles Chart 7
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 1
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks 5
U.S. Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 6

[edit] Historical items referred to in the song

Stream of consciousness in style, the song could be considered a natural successor to songs such as "Subterranean Homesick Blues", "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)" and "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)", as it consists of a series of unrelated images in a rapid-fire, half-spoken, half-sung vocal style.

The following events are in chronological order, the order as they appear in the song. In the actual song they are slightly reworded and are occasionally punctuated by the chorus and other lyrical elements. Events from a variety of contexts, such as popular entertainment, foreign affairs, and sports, are intermingled, giving an impression of the culture of the time as a whole. There are 121 items listed in the song.


1949

1950

1951

1952

1953

1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

  • Buddy Holly dies in a plane crash on February 3 with Ritchie Valens and J. P. Richardson ("The Big Bopper"), in a day that had a devastating impact on the country and youth culture. The event was immortalized by Don McLean as "The Day the Music Died" in his famous tribute song American Pie. (As an intro to this stanza, Billy Joel mimics Buddy Holly's trademark "hiccup" style, singing a-UH-uh-oh...).
  • Ben-Hur a film based around the New Testament starring Charlton Heston, wins eleven Academy Awards.
  • Monkeys in space: Able and Miss Baker are the first living beings to successfully return to Earth from space aboard the flight Jupiter AM-18.
  • Mafia are the center of attention for the FBI and public attention builds to this organized crime society with a historically Sicilian-American origin.
  • Hula hoops reach 100 million in sales as the latest toy fad.
  • Fidel Castro comes to power after a revolution in Cuba and visits the United States later that year on an unofficial twelve-day tour.
  • Edsel: Production of this car marketing disaster (Ford spent $400 million developing it) ends after only three years.

1960

1961

1962

1963

  • Pope Paul VI: Cardinal Giovanni Montini is elected to the papacy and takes the regnal name of Paul VI.
  • Malcolm X makes his infamous statement "The chickens have come home to roost" about the Kennedy assassination, thus causing the Nation of Islam to censure him.
  • Profumo Affair: The British Secretary of State for War has a relationship with a showgirl, and then lies when questioned about it before the House of Commons. When the truth came out, it led to his own resignation and undermined the credibility of the Prime Minister.
  • John F. Kennedy assassination: President John F. Kennedy is assassinated on November 22 while riding in an open convertible through Dallas.

1965

  • Birth control: In the early 1960s, oral contraceptives, popularly known as "the pill", first go on the market and are extremely popular. Griswold v. Connecticut in 1965 challenged a Connecticut law prohibiting contraceptives. In 1968, Pope Paul VI released a papal encyclical entitled Humanae Vitae which declared artificial birth control a sin.
  • Ho Chi Minh: A Vietnamese Communist, who served as President of Vietnam from 1954–1969. March 2 Operation Rolling Thunder begins bombing of the "Ho Chi Minh Trail" supply line from North Viet Nam to the Viet Cong rebels in the south. March 8 first US combat troops, 3,500 marines, land in South Vietnam.

1968

1969

1974

  • Watergate scandal: Political scandal involving a hotel break-in, eventually leading to President Nixon's resignation.
  • Punk rock: The Ramones form, with the Sex Pistols following in 1975, bringing in the punk era. The movement went beyond the music to a cultural attitude of rebellion against authority as a way of life, the reverberations of which are still being felt today.

1977 (Note that these two items, while later chronologically than the two 1976 items, come immediately before them in the song.)

1976 (Note that these two items, while earlier chronologically than the two 1977 items, come immediately after them in the song)

1979

1983

  • Wheel of Fortune: A hit television game show which has been TV's highest-rated syndicated program since 1983.
  • Sally Ride: In 1983 she becomes the first American woman in space. Dr. Ride's quip from space "Better than an E-ticket," harkens back to the opening of Disneyland mentioned earlier, with the E-ticket purchase needed for the best rides.
  • Heavy metal, suicide: In the 1980s Ozzy Osbourne and the bands Metallica and Judas Priest were brought to court by parents who accused the musicians of hiding subliminal pro-suicide messages in their music. (Billy Joel himself has stated on his website that even though the two terms are separated by a comma they are collectively one item.)
  • Trade deficit: Persistent US trade deficits.
  • Homeless Vietnam veterans: Veterans of the Vietnam war, including many disabled ex-military, are reported to be left homeless and impoverished, the country unable to yet handle its failure to succeed.
  • AIDS: A collection of symptoms and infections in humans resulting from the specific damage to the immune system caused by infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). It is first detected and recognized in the 1980s, on its way to becoming a pandemic.
  • Crack cocaine: Refers to crack cocaine, a popular drug in the mid-to-late 1980s.

1984

  • Bernhard Goetz: On December 22, Goetz shot four young men who he said were threatening him on a New York City subway. Goetz was charged with attempted murder but was acquitted of the charges, though convicted of carrying an unlicensed gun.

1988

  • Hypodermics on the shore (Syringe Tide): Medical waste was found washed up on beaches in New Jersey after being illegally dumped at sea. Before this event, waste dumped in the oceans was an "out of sight, out of mind" affair. This has been cited as one of the crucial turning points in popular opinion on environmentalism.

1989

  • China's Martial law: On May 20, China declares martial law, enabling them to use force of arms against protesting students to end the Tiananmen Square protests.
  • Rock and Roller, Cola wars: Soft drink giants Coke and Pepsi each run marketing campaigns using popular music stars to reach the young adult demographic.

Of the 56 individuals mentioned by name in the song, the following nine are still alive as of April 2009: Doris Day, Queen Elizabeth II, Brigitte Bardot, Fidel Castro, Chubby Checker, Bob Dylan, John Glenn, Sally Ride, and Bernhard Goetz. Johnnie Ray was the first person mentioned in the song, still alive when it was released, to die (on 24 February 1990). The most recent to die was Floyd Patterson, on May 11, 2006.

Johnnie Ray, Joe DiMaggio, Richard Nixon, Roy Campanella, Mickey Mantle, Floyd Patterson, Marlon Brando, Menachem Begin and Ronald Reagan were all alive when the song was released but have died since.

Only two individuals, John F. Kennedy and Richard Nixon, are mentioned by name twice in the song.

The only U.S. Presidents in office from 1949 to 1989 not mentioned in the song are Lyndon Johnson, Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter.

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
"Blame It on the Rain" by Milli Vanilli
Billboard Hot 100 number one single
December 9, 1989- December 16, 1989
Succeeded by
"Another Day in Paradise" by Phil Collins
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