Black Hole Sun — Soundgarden

soundgardenSONG OF THE DAY

- “Black Hole Sun” by (Supe­run­k­nown, A & M Records, 1994). Writ­ten by Chris Cornell.

INTERESTING FACTS (from wikipedia)

- Writ­ten by front­man Chris Cor­nell, “Black Hole Sun” was released in 1994 as the third sin­gle from the band’s fourth stu­dio album, Supe­run­k­nown (1994). It is arguably the band’s most rec­og­niz­able and most pop­u­lar song.

- The song was included on Soundgarden’s 1997 great­est hits album, A-Sides.

- Cor­nell said that he wrote the song in about 15 min­utes. He used a Gretsch gui­tar to write the song, and com­mented, “I wrote the song think­ing the band wouldn’t like it—then it became the biggest hit of the sum­mer.”

- Regard­ing “Black Hole Sun”, Cor­nell stated, “It’s just sort of a sur­real dream­scape, a weird, play-with-the-title kind of song.” He also said that “lyri­cally it’s prob­a­bly the clos­est to me just play­ing with words for words’ sake, of any­thing I’ve writ­ten. I guess it worked for a lot of peo­ple who heard it, but I have no idea how you’d begin to take that one lit­er­ally.” In another inter­view he elab­o­rated fur­ther, stat­ing, “It’s funny because hits are usu­ally sort of con­gru­ent, sort of an iden­ti­fi­able lyric idea, and that song pretty much had none. The cho­rus lyric is kind of beau­ti­ful and easy to remem­ber. Other than that, I sure didn’t have an under­stand­ing of it after I wrote it. I was just sucked in by the music and I was paint­ing a pic­ture with the lyrics. There was no real idea to get across.”

Com­ment­ing upon how the song was mis­in­ter­preted as being pos­i­tive, Cor­nell said, “No one seems to get this, but “Black Hole Sun” is sad. But because the melody is really pretty, every­one thinks it’s almost chip­per, which is ridicu­lous.” When asked about the line, “Times are gone for hon­est men,” Cor­nell said:

It’s really dif­fi­cult for a per­son to cre­ate their own life and their own free­dom. It’s going to become more and more dif­fi­cult, and it’s going to cre­ate more and more dis­il­lu­sioned peo­ple who become dis­hon­est and angry and are will­ing to fuck the next guy to get what they want. There’s so much step­ping on the backs of other peo­ple in our pro­fes­sion. We’ve been so lucky that we’ve never had to do that. Part of it was because of our own tenac­ity, and part of it was because we were lucky.

- It appeared on Bill­board magazine’s Hot 100 Air­play chart, reach­ing the top 30. The fol­low­ing week it debuted on the Top 40 Main­stream, where it peaked at #9 in its 8th week and remained on the chart until its 20th week. The song peaked at #1 on the Bill­board Main­stream Rock Tracks chart and num­ber two on the Bill­board Mod­ern Rock Tracks chart. The song spent a total of seven weeks at #1 on the Main­stream Rock chart.

- At the 1995 Grammy Awards, “Black Hole Sun” received the award for Best Hard Rock Per­for­mance and received a nom­i­na­tion for Best Rock Song.

- Out­side the United States, the sin­gle was released in Aus­tralia, France, Ger­many, and the United King­dom. In Canada, the song reached the top 10 on the Cana­dian Sin­gles Chart. It remained in the top 10 for 3 weeks and became the band’s high­est charted song in Canada. “Black Hole Sun” reached the UK Top 20 and was the last sin­gle from the album which charted in the UK Top 20. The song remains the band’s high­est chart­ing sin­gle in the United King­dom to date. “Black Hole Sun” debuted at #10 in Aus­tralia but quickly descended the chart, how­ever wide­spread air­play and a pro­mo­tional visit to Aus­tralia stim­u­lated a resur­gence of inter­est in Supe­run­k­nown. “Black Hole Sun” would peak at #6 on the Aus­tralian Sin­gles Chart. “Black Hole Sun” reached the top 30 in Ger­many, the Nether­lands, and New Zealand, and was a top 10 suc­cess in Aus­tralia, France, and Ire­land. It was a mod­er­ate top 20 suc­cess in Swe­den. The sin­gle has sold over three mil­lion copies worldwide.

- Greg Prato of All­mu­sic called the song “one of the few bright spots” of the sum­mer of 1994 when “the world was still reel­ing from Nir­vanaKurt Cobain’s sui­cide the pre­vi­ous April.” He said, “The song had a psy­che­delic edge to it (espe­cially evi­dent in the verse’s gui­tar part), as the com­po­si­tion shifted between sedate melod­i­cism and gar­gan­tuan gui­tar riffs. The lyrics were clas­sic Chris Cornell—lines didn’t exactly make sense on paper but did within the song.” Jon Par­e­les of The New York Times said, “The Bea­t­les’ techniques—fuzz-toned low chords, legato lead-guitar hooks and lumpy Ringo Starr-style drumming…are linked to Lennon-style melody in ‘Black Hole Sun’.” J.D. Con­si­dine of Rolling Stone stated, “With its yearn­ing, Lennonesque melody and watery, Har­rison­style gui­tar, “Black Hole Sun” is a won­der­ful exer­cise in Beat­leisms; trou­ble is, it’s not a very good song, offer­ing more in the way of mood and atmos­phere than melodic direc­tion.” Ann Pow­ers of Blender pro­claimed that “Cornell’s fix­a­tion with the Bea­t­les pays off with the hit sin­gle ‘Black Hole Sun’.” The solo for “Black Hole Sun”, per­formed by Thayil, was ranked #63 on Gui­tar World’s list of the “100 Great­est Gui­tar Solos” and #56 on Total Gui­tar’s list of the “100 Hottest Gui­tar Solos”. The song was included on VH1’s count­down of the “100 Great­est Songs of the ‘90s” at #25. It was also included on VH1’s count­down of the “100 Great­est Hard Rock Songs” at #77.

- “Black Hole Sun” is a playable song in the 2007 video game, Rock Band. The song is also avail­able in the 2008 video games, Karaoke Rev­o­lu­tion Presents: Amer­i­can Idol Encore, and SingStar 90s, for the PlaySta­tion 2. Also, a sec­tion of the Nin­tendo DS 2008 role-playing game, Sonic Chron­i­cles: The Dark Broth­er­hood, is titled “Black Hole Sun”, a very likely ref­er­ence to the song.

- The sur­real and apoc­a­lyp­tic music video for “Black Hole Sun” was directed by Howard Green­halgh. The video fol­lows a sub­ur­ban neigh­bor­hood and its inhab­i­tants which are even­tu­ally swal­lowed up by a black hole, while the band per­forms the song some­where in an open field. In the video, Cor­nell can be seen wear­ing a fork neck­lace given to him by Shan­non Hoon of Blind Melon. In an online chat, the band stated that the video “was entirely the director’s idea,” and added, “Our take on it was that at that point in mak­ing videos, we just wanted to pre­tend to play and not look that excited about it.” Thayil said that the video was one of the few Soundgar­den videos the band was sat­is­fied with. The video was released in June 1994. After sev­eral weeks of air­play on MTV, a sec­ond ver­sion of the video was sub­sti­tuted con­tain­ing more elab­o­rate visual effects than the orig­i­nal, includ­ing the addi­tion of a computer-generated black hole. The music video for “Black Hole Sun” became a hit on MTV and received the award for Best Metal/Hard Rock Video at the 1994 MTV Video Music Awards. In 1995, it received the Clio Award for Alter­na­tive Music Video.

- “Black Hole Sun” has been cov­ered by numer­ous artists. An instru­men­tal ver­sion of the song by The Moog Cook­book appears on the band’s 1995 debut album, The Moog Cook­book, per­formed entirely using vin­tage ana­log syn­the­siz­ers. One of the first cover record­ings was a jazz ver­sion by Steve Lawrence and Eydie Gormé on the 1997 com­pi­la­tion album, Lounge-A-Palooza. For­mer Hugo Largo vocal­ist Mimi Goe­seSoak. The singer-songwriter Paul Anka gave “Black Hole Sun” a swing treat­ment on his 2005 album, Rock Swings. A cover was also done by the band Copeland which was fea­tured on the 2006 com­pi­la­tion album, Punk Goes ‘90s. Peter Framp­ton cov­ered “Black Hole Sun” on the 2006 instru­men­tal album, Fin­ger­prints. Framp­ton was joined on the track by Cameron and Pearl Jam. In 2008, the Brad Mehldau Trio cov­ered “Black Hole Sun” on the band’s Live album (recorded in late 2006), work­ing the song’s verse and cho­rus melodies into a 23 minute long extem­po­ra­ne­ous jazz piece. The strings group The Sec­tion Quar­tet cov­ered the song on its 2007 album, Fuzzbox. In 2009, Eng­lish alter­na­tive rock band Fight­star posted an acoustic cover of the song on its Face­book ver­sion by cov­ered the song on her 1998 solo album gui­tarist account. “Weird Al” Yankovic included the song in “The Alter­na­tive Polka”, a polka med­ley entirely made up of alter­na­tive rock songs, from the 1996 album, Bad Hair Day.

VIDEO OF THE DAY

Leave a Reply

*