Jump to content

Writing to Reach You

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by DeemDeem52 (talk | contribs) at 14:43, 26 August 2018 (→‎Background). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

"Writing to Reach You"
Single by Travis
from the album The Man Who
B-side
  • "Yeah Yeah Yeah Yeah"
  • "High as a Kite"
  • "Green Behind the Ears"
  • "Only Molly Knows"
Released8 March 1999
RecordedSeptember 1998;
Mayfair Studios
(London, England)
GenrePost-Britpop
Length3:41
LabelIndependiente
Songwriter(s)Fran Healy
Producer(s)Nigel Godrich
Travis singles chronology
"More Than Us"
(1998)
"Writing to Reach You"
(1999)
"Driftwood"
(1999)
Alternative cover

"Writing to Reach You" is the first single taken from Indie band Travis' second studio album, The Man Who.

Background

The song was written by Fran Healy, who admitted that he had written this song while listening "'74–'75" on the radio[1] and took the guitar chords from Oasis' "Wonderwall"; as an overt acknowledgement of this, the song contains the lyric "and what's a wonderwall, anyway?". In 2004, both "Writing to Reach You" and "Wonderwall" were mixed with Green Day's "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" in the popular mashup "Boulevard of Broken Songs". The single was the group's first release in Japan and Australia, following their success in the United Kingdom. The song also earned Travis their first appearance on Top of the Pops. The single peaked at #14 on the UK Singles Chart. Fran was reading Letters to Felice from Franz Kafka while he wrote this song.

Music video

The video was directed by John Hardwick. It features Healy walking in the countryside and being attacked by a pair of innocent looking schoolchildren. They pelt him with stones and shoot him with arrows, only to find that he is wearing body armour, which he takes off with the arrows still embedded. He was attacked by a fighter plane. The video ends with Healy giving a letter of some sort to the school girl that shot him with arrows earlier and she runs toward the camera as it travels further away from the set.

Track listing

The song's intro is used as bumper music on the Ring of Fire radio program.

References