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Wikipedia

Heroin (song)

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"Heroin"
Song by The Velvet Underground

from the album The Velvet Underground & Nico

ReleasedMarch 1967
RecordedMay 1966 at T.T.G. Studios in Hollywood, California
GenreAvant-garde, Protopunk, Experimental Rock
Length7:12
LabelVerve Records
WriterLou Reed
ComposerLou Reed
ProducerAndy Warhol
Cover versions
The Velvet Underground & Nico track listing
  1. "Sunday Morning"
  2. "I'm Waiting for the Man"
  3. "Femme Fatale"
  4. "Venus in Furs"
  5. "Run Run Run"
  6. "All Tomorrow's Parties"
  7. "Heroin"
  8. "There She Goes Again"
  9. "I'll Be Your Mirror"
  10. "The Black Angel's Death Song"
  11. "European Son"

"Heroin" is a song by The Velvet Underground, released on their 1967 debut album, The Velvet Underground & Nico. Written by Lou Reed in 1964, the song is one of the band's most celebrated compositions, overtly depicting heroin use and abuse. Critic Mark Deming writes, "While 'Heroin' hardly endorses drug use, it doesn't clearly condemn it, either, which made it all the more troubling in the eyes of many listeners".[1]

In 2004, Rolling Stone ranked it #448 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. In 2006, Pitchfork Media ranked it #77 on their list of the 200 Greatest Songs of the 1960s. In 2007 Mental Floss magazine listed it as one of ten songs that changed the world. The song is included in The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll.

Contents

Recording

"Heroin" was among a three-song set to be re-recorded at T.T.G. Studios, Hollywood before being included on the final release of The Velvet Underground & Nico (along with "I'm Waiting for the Man" and "Venus in Furs"). This recording of the song would be the album's second longest at 7 minutes and 12 seconds, being eclipsed only by "European Son" by about thirty seconds.

"Heroin" begins slowly with Lou Reed's quiet, melodic guitar and hypnotic drum patterns by Maureen Tucker, soon joined by John Cale's droning electric viola and Sterling Morrison's steady rhythm guitar. The tempo increases gradually, mimicking the high the narrator receives from the drug, until a frantic crescendo is reached, punctuated by Cale's shrieking viola and the more punctuated guitar strumming of Reed and Morrison. Tucker's drumming becomes hurried and louder. The song then slows to the original tempo, and repeats the same pattern before ending.

The song is based on D♭ and a G♭ major chords. Like "Sister Ray", it features no bass guitar; Reed and Morrison use chords and arpeggios to create the song's trademark sound. Rolling Stone magazine said "It doesn't take much to make a great song," since the song only featured two chords.

Maureen Tucker actually got lost during the recording and stopped drumming for several moments in the middle of the song before picking up the beat again. This coincidental pause came at a dramatic shift in the song, however, and her "mistake" remains an essential element of the song.

Alternate versions

Ludlow Street Loft, July 1965

The earliest recorded version of "Heroin" was with Lou Reed, Sterling Morrison and John Cale at the band's Ludlow Street loft in July 1965. Unlike songs such as "I'm Waiting for the Man" and "Venus in Furs" which sound drastically different from their corresponding 1966 recordings on The Velvet Underground & Nico, the '65 version of "Heroin" is nearly identical to the album version in structure. On the recording, Reed performs the song on an acoustic guitar. This version of the song can be found on the 1995 compilation album, Peel Slowly and See.

Scepter Studios, April 1966

The original take of "Heroin" that was intended for release on The Velvet Underground & Nico was at Scepter Studios in New York City, April 1966. This version of the song features slightly different lyrics and a more contained, less chaotic performance. Overall, the tempo of the song is at a steadier, quicker pace. It is about a minute shorter in length.

One notable difference in the lyrics is Lou Reed's opening — he sings "I know just where I'm going" rather than "I don't know just where I'm going" as on the final album recording. Reed was known to do this during subsequent performances of the song as well.[2]

The Velvet Underground and drugs

"Heroin", (along with songs like "I'm Waiting for the Man" which dealt with similar subject matter), was chiefly one of the reasons The Velvet Underground were tied to drug use in the media. Some critics declared the band were glorifying the use of drugs such as heroin.[3] However, members of the band (Lou Reed, in particular) frequently denied any claims that the song was advocating use of the drug; in fact, it was quite the opposite. Lou Reed's lyrics, such as they are on the majority of The Velvet Underground & Nico, were more meant to focus on providing an objective description of the topic without taking a moral stance in the matter.[1][4] Critics were not the only ones who misunderstood the song's impartial message; fans would sometimes approach the band members after a live performance and tell them they "shot up to 'Heroin'",[5] a phenomenon that deeply disturbed Reed. As a result, Reed was somewhat hesitant to play the song with the band through much of the band's later career.[3]

Cover versions

References in popular culture

  • Denis Johnson's short story collection Jesus' Son, and the film based on it took its title from the lyrics of this song.
  • In an interview on the Jonathan Richman DVD, Take Me To The Plaza, he recounts trading a record by The Fugs for The Velvet Underground & Nico after hearing this song for the first time.
  • The song is featured in the 1991 Oliver Stone movie, The Doors
  • According to Mick Jagger, the Beggar's Banquet track "Stray Cat Blues" by The Rolling Stones was inspired by "Heroin", Jagger going as far as to say that the whole sound of "Stray Cat Blues" was lifted from "Heroin". The intros of both songs bear a distinct resemblance.[citation needed]
  • In Irvine Welsh's novel Trainspotting, the central character Mark Renton describes the playing of 'Heroin' during heroin ingestion as against the junky's "golden rule".
  • Jeff Ott of Fifteen's acoustic song also entitled "Heroin" contains the line "I feel like a man when I stick the spike into my vein."
  • Martin Amis's first novel The Rachel Papers features a scene in which the song is played in the bedroom of the novel's protagonist, Charles Highway, who calls it 'the most violent and tuneless of all [his] American LPs'.

References

  1. ^ a b "Heroin" at Allmusic
  2. ^ Cannon, Geoffrey (March 1971). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "The Insects of Someone Else's Thoughts"]. Zigzag (18). 
  3. ^ a b Clinton Heylin, ed (2005). All Yesterday's Parties: The Velvet Underground in Print 1966-1971 (first edition ed.). United States: De Capo Press. p. / 138. ISBN 0-306-81477-3. 
  4. ^ Harvard, Joe (2007) [2004]. The Velvet Underground & Nico. 33⅓. New York, NY: Continuum International Publishing Group. ISBN 0-8264-1550-4. 
  5. ^ Lester Bangs (May 1971). [Expression error: Missing operand for > "Dead Lie The Velvets, Underground"]. Creem 3 (2). "I meant those songs to sort of exorcise the darkness, or the self-destrutive element in me, and hoped other people would take them the same way. But when I saw how people were responding to them it was disturbing. Because like people would come up and say, 'I shot up to "Heroin,'" things like that. For a while, I was even thinking that some of my songs might have contributed formatively to the consciousness of all these addictions and things going down with the kids today. But I don't think that anymore; it's really too awful a thing to consider. (Lou Reed)". 

 

All translations of Heroin_(song)


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