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====Of note====
====Of note====
Of the 56 individuals mentioned by name in the song, only seven are women: [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]], [[Brigitte Bardot]], [[Doris Day]], [[Marilyn Monroe]], [[Grace Kelly]], [[Sally Ride]], and [[Julius and Ethel Rosenberg|Ethel Rosenberg]] (who is identified in conjunction with her husband).
Of the 56 individuals mentioned by name in the song, only seven are women: [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]] (by a not entirely accurate periphrasis referring only to England), [[Brigitte Bardot]], [[Doris Day]], [[Marilyn Monroe]], [[Grace Kelly]], [[Sally Ride]], and [[Julius and Ethel Rosenberg|Ethel Rosenberg]] (who is identified in conjunction with her husband).


Of the individuals mentioned, the following eight are still alive as of January 2014: [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]], [[Brigitte Bardot]], [[Chubby Checker]], [[Bob Dylan]], [[Doris Day]], [[John Glenn]], [[Fidel Castro]], and [[Bernhard Goetz]].
Of the individuals mentioned, the following eight are still alive as of January 2014: [[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth II]], [[Brigitte Bardot]], [[Chubby Checker]], [[Bob Dylan]], [[Doris Day]], [[John Glenn]], [[Fidel Castro]], and [[Bernhard Goetz]].

Revision as of 02:17, 6 March 2014

"We Didn't Start the Fire"
Song
B-side"House of Blue Light"

"We Didn't Start the Fire" is a song by Billy Joel. Its lyrics include brief, rapid-fire allusions to more than 100 headline events between January 1949 (Joel was born on May 9 of that year) and 1989, when the song was released on his album Storm Front. The song was a No. 1 hit in the US.

History

Joel got the idea for the song while he had just turned 40 and was in a recording studio when he met a friend of Sean Lennon that had just turned 21 who said "It's a terrible time to be 21!" Joel replied to him, "Yeah, I remember when I was 21 -- I thought it was an awful time and we had Vietnam, and y'know, drug problems, and civil rights problems and everything seemed to be awful." The friend replied, "Yeah, yeah, yeah, but it's different for you. You were a kid in the fifties and everybody knows that nothing happened in the fifties". Joel retorted, "Wait a minute, didn't you hear of the Korean War or the Suez Canal Crisis?" Joel later said those headlines formed the basic framework for the song.[1][2]

Joel has said, "I'm a history nut. I devour books. At one time I wanted to be a history teacher". According to his mother, he was a bookworm by the age of seven.[3] 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 No. 1 hit. It was nominated for the Grammy Award for Record of the Year.[4]

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, Johnnie 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.[5]

Joel has said, "There's an element of malevolence in the song"; it's like waiting for the other shoe to drop.[1]

Joel has mixed feelings about the song. "It's a nightmare to perform live, because if I miss one word, it's a train wreck."[6] He has also called it a "novelty song" that does not "really define me as well as album songs that probably don't get played".[7] On being asked if he could do a follow-up about the next couple of years after the events that transpired in the original song, he commented "No, I wrote one song already and I don't think it was really that good to begin with, melodically."[2]

Blender magazine ranked "We Didn't Start the Fire" No. 41 on its list of the "50 Worst Songs Ever", a list that also includes songs from Paul McCartney and Simon & Garfunkel. They considered the production bombastic and stated that the song "resembles a term paper scribbled the night before it’s due."[8]

Music video

A music video for the single was directed by Chris Blum,[9] which chronicles a middle-class married couple and their goal of the American Dream: a home, careers and children. This is symbolised by the constant revamping of a domestic kitchen - 1940s utilitarian turning into 1950s Populuxe, 1960s op art into 1970s earth-colored tiles and macramé, and finally 1980s black lacquer & granite bench tops. This is juxtaposed with the tumultuous social times of the second half of the 20th century (e.g., bra burning and draft card burning). The singer acts as an omnipresent observer. During each chorus, Joel is wearing Roy Orbison style sunglasses while beating on a black table, in the background, famous photographs (of Lee Harvey Oswald's assassination and Nguyễn Văn Lém's execution, among others) are consumed by fire.

Historical items referred to in the song

Though the lyrics are rapid-fire with several people and events mentioned in a single word each, there is widespread agreement on the meaning of the lyrics. Steven Ettinger wrote,

Billy Joel captured the major images, events, and personalities of this half-century in a three-minute song.... It was pure information overload, a song that assumed we knew exactly what he was singing about...What was truly alarming was the realization that we, the listeners, for the most part understood the references.[10]

The following events are listed in the order that they appear in the song, which is almost entirely chronological.[11] The lyric for each individual event is brief and the events are punctuated by the chorus and other lyrical elements. The following list includes longer, more descriptive names for clarity. 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 119 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 The Big Bopper, in a day that had a devastating impact on the country and youth culture. Joel prefaces the lyric with a Holly signature vocal hiccup: "Uh-huh, uh-huh."
  • Ben-Hur, a film based around the New Testament starring Charlton Heston, wins eleven Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
  • Space Monkey: Able and Miss Baker return to Earth from space aboard the flight Jupiter AM-18.
  • The 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 is a no-go: Production of this car marque ends after only three years due to poor sales.

1960s

1960

1961

1962

1963

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 Vietnam to the Vietcong rebels in the south. On March 8, the first U.S. combat troops, 3,500 marines, land in South Vietnam.

1968

1969

  • Moonshot: Apollo 11, the first manned lunar landing, successfully lands on the moon.
  • Woodstock: Famous rock and roll festival of 1969 that came to be the epitome of the counterculture movement.

1970s

1974–75

  • Watergate: Political scandal that began when the Democratic National Committee's headquarters at the Watergate office complex in Washington, DC was broken into. After the break-in, word began to spread that President Richard Nixon (a Republican) may have known about the break-in, and tried to cover it up. The scandal would ultimately result in the resignation of President Nixon, and to date, this remains the only time that anyone has ever resigned the United States Presidency.
  • Punk rock: The Ramones form, with the Sex Pistols following in 1975, bringing in the punk era.

1976–77

(An item from 1977 comes before three items from 1976 to make the song scan.)

1979

1980s

1983

1984

  • Bernie 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: 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 under 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 rock & roll and popular music stars to reach the teenage and young adult demographic.

Of note

Of the 56 individuals mentioned by name in the song, only seven are women: Queen Elizabeth II (by a not entirely accurate periphrasis referring only to England), Brigitte Bardot, Doris Day, Marilyn Monroe, Grace Kelly, Sally Ride, and Ethel Rosenberg (who is identified in conjunction with her husband).

Of the individuals mentioned, the following eight are still alive as of January 2014: Queen Elizabeth II, Brigitte Bardot, Chubby Checker, Bob Dylan, Doris Day, John Glenn, Fidel Castro, and Bernhard Goetz.

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

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

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

The Dodgers are mentioned twice, but only in reference to their homes rather than by name: "Brooklyn's got a winning team", concerning their 1955 World Series victory, and "California baseball" about the Dodgers' and Giants' move from New York to California in 1958.

Derivations

Numerous parodies and takeoffs have been based on the song, including The Simpsons' parody "They'll Never Stop the Simpsons" at the end of the 2002 "Gump Roast" episode,[14] and the San Francisco a cappella group The Richter Scales' 2007 Webby Award-winning[15] parody "Here Comes Another Bubble." A version called "We Love Barney Fife," recorded by the band Guns 'n' Moses, was played frequently on the Doctor Demento radio show. The song was parodied in an episode of the U.S. version of The Office. Irish band The Memories released "The Game" set to the tune of We Didn't Start The Fire about Ireland's World Cup 1990 Campaign. Another parody was released in 2010 titled "The Wii Didn't Start the Fire" about the history of video games.[16] On February 12, 2007, NeoMatrixClt published an internet meme on YTMND called "we didn't start this website."

In 1995, the Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper ran commercials with the tagline "News From Around the World and Around the Corner", the jingle for which was to the tune of We Didn't Start the Fire.

JibJab set their 2007 year in review song to We Didn't Start the Fire's tune.

In early 2009, comedy website CollegeHumor created a parody entitled "We Didn't Start the Flame War" which chronicles a long list of common inflammatory (and often explicit) comments left on content over a wide variety of popular websites by internet trolls.[17]

In the Netherlands the Dutch punk rock band Heideroosjes did a parody on their 20-year anniversary album about things that happened over those twenty years in the Netherlands called "De Wereld Draait Door" (The World Keeps Turning).

German comedian Otto Waalkes did a parody called "Wir haben Grund zum Feiern" (English: "We have reason to celebrate"), with a list of alcoholic beverages.

An edition of the BBC Three comedy programme 'Russell Howard's Good News' featured a parody of the song detailing numerous items that the Daily Mail newspaper actually believed caused cancer.[18]

Mitch Benn also based his song about the BBC 'I'm proud of the BBC' on Billy Joel's song.

Los Angeles, California-based cinematic pop band Milo Greene performed a version of the song in June 2013 for The A.V. Club's A.V. Undercover series.[19] The band altered some of the lyrics, referencing newer television shows, including Friends and Everybody Loves Raymond, and NBA teams and players.

Charts

Preceded by Billboard Hot 100 number-one single
December 9, 1989 – December 16, 1989
Succeeded by

References

  1. ^ a b Rolling Stone magazine - "Billy Joel Starts a Fire" by Sheila Rogers. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  2. ^ a b Billy Joel Q&A: Tell Us About 'We Didn't Start The Fire?' University of Oxford, May 5, 1994 - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dx3T8pbDcms
  3. ^ Bordowitz, pp. 168, 161, 9
  4. ^ http://www.rockonthenet.com/archive/1990/grammys.htm
  5. ^ DeMain, Bill (2004). In their own words: songwriters talk about the creative process. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 119. ISBN 978-0-275-98402-1.
  6. ^ Newman, Melinda "Joel Sees Pop Exit with Greatest Hits 3", Billboard, July 26, 1997; cited in Bordowitz, p.169.
  7. ^ Nadboy, Arie, "I am the Edu-Tainer", Island Ear, March 1996; cited by Bordowitz, p. 169
  8. ^ Aizlewood,John; Collis, Clark; et. al. (April 1, 2009). Run for Your Life! It's the 50 Worst Songs Ever! Blender.com. Retrieved May 3, 2008. Quoted at [1] . Retrieved December 20, 2013.
  9. ^ Garcia, Alex S. Billy Joel - We didn't start the fire. MVDBase - Music Video Database.
  10. ^ Ettinger, Steven (2003). Torah 24/7: A Timely Guide for the Modern Spirit. Devorah Publishing Company. p. 2. ISBN 1-930143-73-7. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  11. ^ Joel, Billy. "Lyrics: We Didn't Start the Fire". www.billyjoel.com. Retrieved August 24, 2009.
  12. ^ Bernstein, Adam (May 21, 2008). "Obituaries: Barbara Sears Rockefeller, 91; Miss Lithuania, Millionaire Bride". The Washington Post.
  13. ^ 30th Academy Awards winners
  14. ^ Seisman, Matt (April 16, 2009). "We Didn't Start the Song Parody". Techland.com. Time.com. Retrieved May 28, 2010.
  15. ^ "12th Annual Webby Awards Nominees & Winners : Online Film & Video". WebbyAwards.com. 2008.
  16. ^ Serrels, Mark (2010-12-20). "The Wii Didn't Start The Fire". Kotaku.
  17. ^ ""We Didn't Start the Flame War" - CollegeHumor Video". 14 April 2009.
  18. ^ "'Russell Howard's Good News' Cancer song".
  19. ^ "Milo Greene covers Billy Joel". Retrieved 25 May 2013.
  20. ^ http://www.ultratop.be/nl/showitem.asp?interpret=Billy+Joel&titel=We+Didn%27t+Start+The+Fire&cat=s (Retrieved September 17, 2012)
  21. ^ Jans, Micha (updated April 23, 2009) Dutch Top 40 1989, MichaJans.nl, Jaarlijsten/1989. Retrieved April 2, 2010.
  22. ^ Oricon Singles Chart Oricon Singles Chart (Retrieved 2 November 2012)
  23. ^ http://ki.informatik.uni-wuerzburg.de/~topsi/deu1989/deu_1989t.html
  24. ^ "Billboard Top 100 - 1990". Retrieved 2009-09-15.
  25. ^ "Canada RPM Top Singles of 1989". Retrieved 2010-08-09.

Sources