Sledgehammer – Peter Gabriel

peter_gabriel_70sSONG OF THE DAY

“Sledgehammer” by Peter Gabriel (So, Geffen Records, 1986). Written by Peter Gabriel.

INTERESTING FACTS (from wikipedia)

– It peaked at #1 in Canada for 4 weeks on 21 July 1986, #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the United States on 26 July 1986,[1] and #4 in the UK singles chart, thanks in part to a popular and influential music video.

– It was his biggest hit in North America and ties with “Games Without Frontiers” as his biggest hit in the United Kingdom.

– The song was influenced by 1960s soul music, as evident by the use of horns and a general Stax sound. The distinctive Horn section was provided by the Memphis Horns, the house musicians for Stax records. The song also features a synthesized shakuhachi flute.

– It replaced “Invisible Touch” by his former band Genesis, which had its only number-one U.S. hit the previous week.

– Dave Matthews Band began covering this song during the 2008 tour.

– “Sledgehammer” spawned a widely popular and influential music video directed by Stephen R. Johnson. Aardman Animations and the Brothers Quay provided claymation, pixilation, and stop motion animation that gave life to images in the song. The video ended with a large group of extras jerkily rotating around Gabriel, among them: Gabriel’s daughters Anna and Melanie, the animators themselves, and director Stephen Johnson’s girlfriend. Also included were six women who posed as the back-up singers of the song. Gabriel lay under a sheet of glass for 16 hours while filming the video one frame at a time.

– In 1987, it won nine MTV Video Music Awards, a record which still stands as of 2008. It ranked at #4 on MTV’s 100 Greatest Music Videos Ever Made (1999). MTV later announced that “Sledgehammer” is the most played music video in the history of the station. “Sledgehammer” has also been declared to be MTV’s #1 animated video of all time. The video was also voted #7 on TMF’s Ultimate 50 Videos You Must See – first aired 24 June 2006. It ranked at #2 on VH1’s “Top 20 Videos of the 80’s” as well as being named the #1 “Amazing Moment in Music” on the Australian TV show 20 to 1 in 2007. The portion of the song featuring the synthesized flute solo was realized in the video by first one and then two oven-ready chickens, headless and featherless, animated using stop-motion. These were animated by Nick Park (of Wallace and Gromit fame) who, at that time was refining his work in plasticine animation.

VIDEO OF THE DAY

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