Jump to content

Slip Inside This House

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Slip Inside This House"
Single by the 13th Floor Elevators
from the album Easter Everywhere
B-side"Splash 1"
ReleasedNovember 1967 (1967-11)
RecordedSeptember 1967
Genre
Length
  • 8:03 (album version)
  • 3:53 (single version)
LabelInternational Artists
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Lelan Rogers

"Slip Inside This House" is a song originally released by psychedelic rock band the 13th Floor Elevators as the first track on their 1967 sophomore album Easter Everywhere.[1] At 8:03 in length, it is the longest track the band released on a studio album; a single version edited to just under four minutes was released by International Artists.

The song contains many of the band's distinct musical elements, including the electric jug of Tommy Hall, a repetitive fuzz guitar riff, and impassioned vocals by Roky Erickson. Lyricist Hall attempted to express many of his philosophical influences in the song, including elements of Eastern religions, Christian mysticism, general semantics, and the ideas of mystic George Gurdjieff.

"Slip Inside This House" has been covered by Scottish alternative rock band Primal Scream on their album Screamadelica,[2] by Norwegian band Madrugada, by New York noise rock band Oneida on their album Come on Everybody Let's Rock, and by Scottish electronic band the Shamen on their 1992 promo Make It Mine. In a 2019 Pitchfork interview, Stephen Malkmus deemed it "a song I wish I wrote."[3]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Peter Buckley, ed. (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. London: Rough Guides Ltd. pp. 1075–1076. ISBN 1-85828-457-0. Retrieved 29 August 2012. slip inside this house.
  2. ^ Peter Buckley, ed. (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. London: Rough Guides Ltd. pp. 816–817. ISBN 1-85828-457-0. Retrieved 29 August 2012. slip inside this house.
  3. ^ The One Song Stephen Malkmus Wishes He Wrote (Video). Pitchfork. 2019-05-28. Retrieved 2024-07-27 – via YouTube.