Birdhouse in Your Soul

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Template:Infobox song "Birdhouse in Your Soul" is a song by American alternative rock band They Might Be Giants. It was released in late 1989 through Elektra Records as the lead single from the album Flood, making the single the band's first release on a major label. "Birdhouse in Your Soul" is the band's highest-charting single in both the United States and the United Kingdom, and is one of their best-known songs.

The song's lyrics are narrated from the perspective of a nightlight in the shape of a blue canary. It includes an atypical snare drum pattern and modulation among four keys.

Background

"Birdhouse in Your Soul" was one of four songs on Flood produced by Clive Langer and Alan Winstanley; these four songs alone exhausted two-thirds of the album's budget.<ref name="RS09">Template:Cite magazine</ref> The track was selected early for a release as a single.<ref name="ReedSandifer 2014">Template:Cite web</ref> An early two-minute demo version of the song was made available by the band via its Dial-A-Song service a year before they signed with Elektra.<ref name="guardian">Template:Cite web</ref>

Recording and composition

Lyrics

The melody to "Birdhouse in Your Soul" was written several years prior to its recording for Flood. John Linnell has stated that he "shoehorned" the song's lyrics into the existing melody.<ref name="RS09" /> The lyrics are hyper-associative, rapidly connecting disparate topics such as Jason and the Argonauts and The Longines Symphonette. Elizabeth Sandifer and S. Alexander Reed have noted movement between lyrical themes is a recurring motif throughout Flood.<ref name="ReedSandifer 2014" /> However, Linnell has commented that he feels the lyrics ultimately sound like stand-in "dummy lyrics".<ref name="DeMain">Template:Cite book</ref>

Music

"Birdhouse in Your Soul" features an unconventional drum beat, which was programmed by Linnell, wherein the snare drum sounds on every beat. During production, Linnell created a demo using a more standard pop drum beat with the snare drum only on the backbeats. However, Langer and Winstanley emphatically rejected this change, which Linnell credits as saving the song.<ref name="ReedSandifer 2014" />

Musically, Reed and Sandifer note that the song makes an unanticipated jump from its initial key of C major to E-flat major, and then back to C major. The frequent key changes (18 in total) may be a product of the album's largely digital composition and production; they call the album in general "modular" in its movement between musical ideas. The track's later shifts to F-sharp minor and A major divide the octave into equal intervals. The music also interpolates elements of "Summer in the City" by The Lovin' Spoonful. The car horn-like trumpet sound in the bridge of "Birdhouse in Your Soul" recalls the sounds of traffic in "Summer in the City" and both songs use similar rhythms in their chord progressions. Linnell states that these references were inspired by the intense heat during the album's recording in the summer of 1989.<ref name="ReedSandifer 2013">Template:Cite book</ref>

Music video

The music video for "Birdhouse in Your Soul" was directed by Adam Bernstein and filmed in New York County's Surrogate's Courthouse building in Manhattan in 1989.<ref>"Birdhouse in Your Soul (commentary track)". Direct from Brooklyn, produced by John Linnell and John Flansburgh. Restless Records, 2003.</ref> The video features Linnell and Flansburgh dancing and performing erratically amidst a group of dancers dressed in red plaid shirts. In the video, the dancers wear masks made from sunglasses affixed with an image of the eyes of William Allen White, whose face is used frequently in the band's visual material.<ref name="Petermann">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> These props were designed by John Flansburgh.<ref>Template:Cite web[self-published]</ref> In an article on They Might Be Giants music videos, Emily Petermann speculates that the zombie-like behavior of the dancers, coupled with the video's warehouse setting, evokes "oppressed factory workers". Petermann finds this view to be at odds with the song's "cheerful" music. On the other hand, the "non sequitur" lyrics and "surreal" musical elements—such as modulation—are complemented by moments of "nonsense" in the video, such as when "[Linnell and Flansburgh's] performance becomes embedded in a bizarre situation or the performance is abandoned altogether".<ref name="Petermann" />

Reception and promotion

"Birdhouse in Your Soul" received positive attention from critics. In his review of Flood for AllMusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine called it one of the band's "finest singles".<ref name="Allmusic Flood">Template:Cite web</ref> Reviewing the single alone, Stewart Mason elaborates that, compared to previous releases, the high production value highlights Linnell's and Flansburgh's "knack for dynamics and arrangement". Mason also speculates that the song's popularity stems from the modest depth of its lyric, which is somewhat oblique on the surface but ultimately "easy to figure out", giving the listener a sense of pride in their understanding.<ref name="Allmusic BIYS">Template:Cite web</ref> Chris Willman, writing for the Los Angeles Times, predicted the track would become a "college radio standard".<ref name="LAT">Template:Cite news</ref>

Performances

In April 1990, They Might Be Giants appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson to promote the release of Flood. As part of the appearance, Linnell and Flansburgh performed "Birdhouse in Your Soul" with Doc Severinsen and the Tonight Show Band. Severinsen's unusually fast count-in resulted in a performance with a noticeably faster tempo than the album recording. The band adopted a similar tempo for subsequent live performances.<ref name="Gigantic">Gigantic (A Tale Of Two Johns). Dir. AJ Schnack. 2002. Plexifilm, 2003.</ref>

Commercial performance

"Birdhouse in Your Soul" peaked at No. 3 on the United States Modern Rock Tracks chart and No. 6 on the UK Singles Chart.<ref name="Billboard">[[[:Template:BillboardURLbyName]] Billboard Single Chart History] for They Might Be Giants. Billboard. Retrieved September 10, 2012.</ref><ref name="UK singles" /> It is They Might Be Giants' highest-charting single in both countries. In 2010, the song was featured in an advertisement for Clarks shoes; the song returned to the UK singles chart for three weeks, peaking at No. 70.<ref name="UK singles" />

Personnel

They Might Be Giants
Additional musicians
Production

Charts

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Weekly charts

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Chart (1990) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)<ref name="AIRA">Template:Cite web</ref> 125
Ireland (IRMA)<ref name="Irish singles">Template:Cite web</ref> 12
UK Singles Chart (OCC)<ref name="UK singles">They Might Be Giants | Artist | Official Charts Company. Official Charts Company. Retrieved November 22, 2013.</ref> 6

Year-end charts

Chart (1990) Position
US Modern Rock Tracks (Billboard)<ref>Template:Cite magazine</ref> 28

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Certifications

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Cover versions

A cover of "Birdhouse in Your Soul" was featured in the Pushing Daisies episode "Pigeon", which premiered on October 24, 2007. This version was arranged and performed by series composer Jim Dooley with vocals from actors Kristin Chenoweth and Ellen Greene. The cover also appears on the show's official soundtrack.<ref name="Allmusic Pushing Daisies">Template:Cite web</ref> In a 2015 Decider article revisiting the episode, Joe Reid wrote that the selection of "Birdhouse in Your Soul" contributed to "a moment that must have felt tailor-made for the audience members who responded to it".<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

The song was also covered by Neil Cicierega as Lemon Demon on his second album, Live From the Haunted Candle Shop, which was released on July 23, 2003.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref> The cover is 129 BPM, which is 29 faster than the original at 100 BPM.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

References

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