- The Boy with the Thorn in His Side (song)
Infobox Single
Name = The Boy with the Thorn in His Side
Artist =The Smiths
from Album =The Queen Is Dead
Released =September 23 1985
Format = 7", 12"
Recorded = August 1985
Genre =Alternative rock
Length = 3:15
Label = Rough Trade
Writer =Johnny Marr Morrissey
Producer =The Smiths (single); Morrissey and Johnny Marr (album version)
Video director =
Certification =
Reviews =
Last single = "That Joke Isn't Funny Anymore "
(1985)
This single = "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side"
(1985)
Next single = "Bigmouth Strikes Again "
(1986)"The Boy with the Thorn in His Side" is a song byThe Smiths . It appears on their third album "The Queen Is Dead " but was released as a single (albeit in a different mix) several months before the album, reaching #23 in theUK Singles Chart in Autumn 1985.This was the first Smiths single to be accompanied by a promotional video, something the band had previously resisted. Some of the Smiths' more purist fans at the time derided this as a sell-out.
The following year, the "
New Musical Express " greeted the news that the band had signed a contract withEMI with the headline "The Boy With The Thorn-EMI On His Side".The jumping man on the cover of the single release is a young
Truman Capote .The song was covered by Scottish band Bis on the tribute album "
The Smiths Is Dead ". Music reviewer, Stephen Thomas Erlewine, trashed the cover, stating: "In particular, the Bis utterly disembowel 'The Boy with the Thorn in His Side' with a single-minded stupidity that is just bewildering." ["The Smiths is dead " album review, allmusic, http://wc08.allmusic.com/cg/amg.dll?p=amg&token=&sql=10:fvfuxq9hldfe]The song has also been covered by
Jeff Buckley ,Belle & Sebastian and Dinosaur Jr'sJ Mascis in live performances. The song's title was also adopted for the name of a book written byPete Wentz , bassist of the bandFall Out Boy .The song was featured in the third episode of the British drama musical series
Blackpool .The Smiths performed this song on an episode of the popular British television programTop of the Pops , in whichMorrissey lip-synched to the album's recording of the song.Margi Clarke asked Morrissey if this song was inspired byOscar Wilde and Morrissey replied: "No that's not true. The thorn is the music industry and all those people who never believed anything I said, tried to get rid of me and wouldn't play the records. So I think we've reached a stage where we feel: if they don't believe me now, will they ever believe me? What more can a poor boy do?"Fact|date=September 2007The chief difference between the single version and the one appearing on the album "
The Queen is Dead " is in the use of synthesized strings. They are largely absent from the single version, only appearing in the song's coda.Track listing
7": Rough Trade / RT191 (UK)
# "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side"
# "Asleep"12": Rough Trade / RTT191 (UK)
# "The Boy with the Thorn in His Side"
# "Rubber Ring "
# "Asleep"The original 12" has "Rubber Ring" and "Asleep" segued into a continuous piece with the voice sample at the end of the former looped and faded into the wind noise preceding the latter. Described by Simon Goddard (in "Songs That Saved Your Life", 2nd edition p154) as a "spectacular combination" - a suggestion with which Johnny Marr concurs - this carefully executed sequence can only be found on the original 12" single, the two tracks having been separated on all subsequent compilations.
Etchings on vinyl
*UK 7" and 12": ARTY BLOODY FARTY / "IS THAT CLEVER"...JM
The words of the B-side etching are the ones heard at the end of the B-side song "Rubber Ring", a sample taken from a recording of Oscar Wilde's "
The Importance of Being Earnest ". "JM" stands for Johnny Marr.Other media
This song is used in a musical number in the 2004 UK series "Blackpool".
References
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