- A View to a Kill (song)
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"A View to a Kill" Single by Duran Duran B-side "That Fatal Kiss" Released May 1985 Recorded Spring 1985 Genre Rock, New Wave. Spy music Length 3:34 Label EMI - DURAN 007 Producer Bernard Edwards Duran Duran singles chronology "The Wild Boys"
(1984)"A View to a Kill"
(1985)"Notorious"
(1986)Greatest track listing "The Reflex"
(2)"A View to a Kill"
(3)"Ordinary World
(4)James Bond theme chronology "All Time High"
(1983)"A View to a Kill"
(1985)"The Living Daylights"
(1987)"A View to a Kill" is the thirteenth single by Duran Duran, released in May 1985.
It was a stand-alone single, created for the James Bond movie A View to a Kill, and it remains the only James Bond theme song to have reached #1 on the Billboard Hot 100; it also made it to #2 for 3 weeks on the UK Singles Chart, held off the top spot by "19" by Paul Hardcastle. In 1986, John Barry and Duran Duran were nominated for the Golden Globe Award for Best Original Song for A View to a Kill. Many fans around the world acclaim it by its famous phrase, "Dance Into The Fire."
The song was the last track that the original five members of Duran Duran recorded together until their reunion sixteen years later, in 2001. It was played at their final 1985 performance together before splitting for the very first time, at Live Aid in Philadelphia. The single was at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 at the time they performed it on that historic event.
Contents
About the song
The song was written by Duran Duran and John Barry, and recorded at Maison Rouge Studio and CTS Studio in London with a 60-piece orchestra.
Duran Duran was chosen to do the song after bassist John Taylor (a lifelong Bond fan) approached producer Cubby Broccoli at a party, and somewhat drunkenly asked "When are you going to get someone decent to do one of your theme songs?"[1][2] This inauspicious beginning led to some serious talks, and the band was introduced to Bond composer John Barry, and also Jonathan Elias (whom Duran Duran members would later work with many times). An early writing meeting at Taylor's flat in Knightsbridge led to everyone getting drunk instead of composing.[3]
Singer Simon Le Bon said of Barry: "He didn't really come up with any of the basic musical ideas. He heard what we came up with and he put them into an order. And that's why it happened so quickly because he was able to separate the good ideas from the bad ones, and he arranged them. He has a great way of working brilliant chord arrangements. He was working with us as virtually a sixth member of the group, but not really getting on our backs at all."[4]
The song was finally completed in April 1985, and was released worldwide in May the same year.
Music video
The song was accompanied by a tongue-in-cheek video filmed in June 1985. It was directed by the duo Godley & Creme (who had also directed their 1981 video for "Girls on Film.") The video cast the band members as spies and assassins scampering all over the Eiffel Tower, in a rather tangled thicket of half-sketched storylines. Band members execute many actions: Roger Taylor sends out his probe-cams from inside his mobile HQ to patrol around the whole Eiffel Tower, Nick Rhodes takes pictures with his spy cam, John Taylor supposedly gives a "helping hand" to Bond (Roger Moore) by shooting at May Day (Grace Jones) with his hidden "binnoculars-camouflaged" gun while Andy Taylor directs his sonic accordion attacks upon Nick as Simon Le Bon wanders about, using a portable cassette player to set off a series of explosions elsewhere in the world. These shots are intercut with a few scenes taken from the A View to a Kill film, including those featuring Moore and Jones on the Eiffel Tower, so that it appears the actors and the band are participating in the same storyline.
At the end of the video, a woman approaches Le Bon asking him "Excuse me! Aren't you...?", then he finishes with a spoof of Bond's signature introduction, smarmily introducing himself: "Bon. Simon Le Bon." After saying this, he looks at his fake cassette player only to notice that it is programmed to make the Eiffel Tower explode immediately. However, instead of the entire tower collapsing, a postcard with a picture of Eiffel Tower that is being sold at a tourist stand on the ground floor explodes as a gun barrel closes to end the video.
B-sides, bonus tracks and remixes
The b-side was an instrumental piece orchestrated by John Barry, titled "A View To A Kill (That Fatal Kiss)."
It is thought that there was no 12" remix for the song because the band ran out of time. However, Capitol Records did commission and receive at least one remix of the track.[citation needed]
In addition BBC Radio 1 (in the UK) played one extended version of the track which included the well-known "I expect you to die" quote from 1964's Goldfinger as a one-off promotion around the time the single was released. An unofficial DJ Service remix called "A View to a kill (Art of Mix)" has appeared on various DJ and bootleg compilations. There is also a fan-made remix which combines the whole Duran Duran's version with some sampled scores from its film and an orchestral score completely based upon that of the band's. It was named as "A View To A Kill (Saint Ken Extended Remix)."
Covers, samples, and media references
Cover versions have been recorded by popular Welsh band Lostprophets, Canadian punk band Gob, and Australian band Custard. In 2006 the Chilean band Los MOX! recorded a new and heavier version of the song for their album titled "... con cover" [5] Another cover version of the song was created in 1985 by a euro disco group called DJ's Factory. This cover of A View to a Kill has a more disco/house sound as compared to that of Duran Duran's. Shirley Bassey covered the song, as she did with all of the Bond songs (up to GoldenEye) for an album- however, she wasn't satisfied with the quality, so the album was never released. Finnish Melodic Death Metal band Diablo has covered the song, so has Finnish symphonic metal cover supergroup Northern Kings. In 2008, the song was covered with a bossa feeling by former Morcheeba singer Skye on the cover album Hollywood Mon Amour.
Måns Zelmerlöw performed a live version of the song at the beginning of the Andra Chansen round of Melodifestivalen 2010 in Örebro, Sweden.
In 2011, Dutch artist Danny Vera performed a shortened version of the song during the football programme "Voetbal International" on Dutch television.
Chart positions
Country Peak
positionUnited Kingdom 2 US Billboard Hot 100 1 Canada 1 Sweden 1 Ireland 2 Italy 1 Norway 2 Australia 6 Austria 6 Switzerland 7 Germany 9 France 11 Track listing
7": EMI DURAN 007 (UK)
- "A View to a Kill" (3:34)
- "A View to a Kill (That Fatal Kiss)" (2:28)
- Also released in a gatefold sleeve (DURANG007)
CD: Part of "Singles Box Set 1981-1985" boxset
- "A View to a Kill" (3:34)
- "A View to a Kill (That Fatal Kiss)" (2:28)
Other appearances
Albums:
- Decade: Greatest Hits (1989)
- Greatest (1998)
- Singles Box Set 1981-1985 (2003)
- Encore Series 78-03 Reunion Tour (2003)
- Live from London (2005)
The Toronto Blue Jays take the field to "A View to a Kill."
The band performed it as part of American Express's UNSTAGED series on YouTube. Duran Duran's appearance on UNSTAGED was directed by David Lynch.
Personnel
- Nick Rhodes: Keyboards
- Simon Le Bon: Vocals
- Andy Taylor: Guitars
- John Taylor: Bass
- Roger Taylor: Drums
- John Barry: Orchestra
References
- ^ Malins, Steve. (2005) Notorious: The Unauthorized Biography, André Deutsch/Carlton Publishing, UK (ISBN 0-233-00137-9). pp 161-162
- ^ Paul Gambaccini Interview with John Taylor, 1985, Greatest DVD extras.
- ^ Pattenden, Sian. "Blame It on Rio." Deluxe Magazine, December 1998 (pp 125-129)
- ^ Leonard, Geoff. Bond By Barry: The Story of James Bond Music.
- ^ www.myspace.com/losmox
Preceded by
"Everything She Wants" by Wham!Canadian RPM Singles Chart number-one single
June 29, 1985Succeeded by
"Never Surrender" by Corey HartPreceded by
"Sussudio" by Phil CollinsBillboard Hot 100 number one single
July 13, 1985 - July 20, 1985Succeeded by
"Everytime You Go Away" by Paul YoungJames Bond music Themes "James Bond Theme" (Monty Norman) · "James Bond Is Back/From Russia with Love" (John Barry) · "007 Theme" (John Barry) · "On Her Majesty's Secret Service" (John Barry) · "Bond 77" (Marvin Hamlisch)Soundtracks Dr. No · From Russia with Love · Goldfinger · Thunderball · You Only Live Twice · On Her Majesty's Secret Service · Diamonds Are Forever · Live and Let Die · The Man with the Golden Gun · The Spy Who Loved Me · Moonraker · For Your Eyes Only · Octopussy · A View to a Kill · The Living Daylights · Licence to Kill · GoldenEye · Tomorrow Never Dies · The World Is Not Enough · Die Another Day · Casino Royale · Quantum of SolaceEon films
themes"Kingston Calypso" · "From Russia with Love" · "Goldfinger" · "Thunderball" · "You Only Live Twice" · "We Have All the Time in the World" · "Diamonds Are Forever" · "Live and Let Die" · "The Man with the Golden Gun" · "Nobody Does It Better" · "Moonraker" · "For Your Eyes Only" · "All Time High" · "A View to a Kill" · "The Living Daylights" · "Where Has Everybody Gone?" · "Licence To Kill" · "If You Asked Me To" · "GoldenEye" · "Tomorrow Never Dies" · "The World Is Not Enough" · "Die Another Day" · "You Know My Name" · "Another Way to Die"Non-Eon films
themesCompilations Related articles Categories:- Duran Duran songs
- 1985 singles
- Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles
- European Hot 100 Singles number-one singles
- Number-one singles in Sweden
- Oricon International Singles Chart number-one singles
- Songs from James Bond films
- A View to a Kill
- Music videos directed by Godley and Creme
- RPM Top Singles number-one singles
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