"Babies" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Pulp | ||||
from the album His 'n' Hers | ||||
Released | 5 October 1992 | |||
Recorded | 20–24 July 1992 | |||
Studio | Island Records Fallout Shelter, London | |||
Genre | ||||
Label | Gift Records | |||
Composer(s) | Pulp | |||
Lyricist(s) | Jarvis Cocker | |||
Producer(s) | Ed Buller | |||
Pulp singles chronology | ||||
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"Babies" is a song written and released by British rock group Pulp. Featuring lyrics about a boy spying on his friend's sister from a wardrobe, the song features a guitar riff that drummer Nick Banks had played for Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker. Though poppier and lighter than much of the band's earlier material, the band was pleased with the song and was released as a single.
"Babies" was first released as a single for Gift Records in 1992, accompanied by a music video directed by Cocker. Though it failed to chart, the song was included on the band's next album, His 'n' Hers and was later remixed for the Sisters EP in 1994. This new EP release became a top 20 hit when re-released in 1994, peaking at number 19 on the UK Singles Chart. It has since seen critical acclaim and has been named by many writers as among Pulp's best songs.
Jarvis Cocker discussed the song with Will Hodgkinson in the 2009 Sky Arts Jarvis Cocker: Songbook. Cocker described the genesis for the song being when Pulp's drummer Nick Banks played a few mistaken chords on the guitar, leading to some interesting sounds that Cocker then worked into a song. In another interview, Banks recalled that the band had switched instruments as a way to generate new song ideas. He explained:
"I was the germ of the song idea. ... We'd stopped for a cup of tea and I'd just picked up Jarvis' guitar and started playing two chords. So then Jarvis sort of said, 'What's those two chords you're playing there?' And I went, 'Well, one of them is G, no idea what the other one is.' ... Literally 20 minutes after I'd played those first two chords, we had the entire song, basically." [1]
Cocker summed up the song as "a fairly poppy song with slightly iffy subject matter." [2] He explained of the song's meaning, "'Babies' is just a thing you get up to when you are fourteen and certain things are still taboo and you get into situations because of curiosity." [3] The Stanhope Road referred to in the song is in the Intake area of Sheffield. [4]
The song's lighter tone was a significant departure for the band; Cocker noted the song's composition as "the first time we'd written a proper pop song." Cocker recounted the band's initial reaction, "At first I thought it sounds like indie dance, which really put me off. But Mark Webber, who wasn't in the group at the time, said, 'That's the best song you've written', and everybody seemed to like it. It was goodbye to the long, dark midnight of the soul, the Eurodisco with gothic leanings or whatever, and more of the recognisable Pulp of today, I suppose." [2]
Lyrically, "Babies" tells the story of a boy who is so enamored with listening to his female friend's sister having sex that he begins to hide in the sister's wardrobe to spy on her. [5] When the sister catches the boy in her wardrobe, they begin to have sex before being caught by the distraught female friend, who the boy is really in love with. To whom the boy says, "I know you won't believe it's true / I only went with her 'coz she looks like you." Ben Hewitt of The Guardian described the song as "an awkward kind of Bildungsroman: a coming-of-age story full of lust, betrayal and remorse about one youth's transition from sex-struck fledgling to guilty cad." [5]
Musically, the song was noted by Ryan Leas of Stereogum for its "new wave-y guitar and synths," which he pointed to as a departure from Pulp's earlier work. [6]
Two music videos for "Babies" were recorded. The first was directed by Cocker and was interspersed with clips of two sisters fooling around on a bed. it is currently available on the Hits DVD, and was previously included on the Sorted for Films and Vids VHS. Cocker reflected on the video in 2020, "The girls were real sisters. You know the group Saint Etienne? The younger girl was Bob Stanley's girlfriend at the time. She was good fun. She wasn't an actress but I thought she could play that part well. Her sister was two or three years older so their relationship was perfect for the song. They didn’t mind being nasty to each other." [7]
Island Records had the band make another video to promote The Sisters EP, extracts from which have been used in the stage backdrops for Pulp's 2011/2012 reunion gigs.
An early version of "Babies" was recorded with producer and former Pulp member Simon Hinkler, but it was passed over for single release in favor of "O.U. (Gone, Gone)" at the time. Hinkler recalled, "I always thought 'Babies' should have been the A-side. It's so obviously the single from that session, whereas 'O.U.' was probably the worst of the bunch. Jarvis enjoyed being difficult about such things." [8] The first single release of the song, according to Cocker, "was recorded in the Fallout Shelter, underneath Island's Chiswick head office." [9] This initial single did not chart. A remixed version is featured on the His 'n' Hers album, while the original single mix appeared on the Intro – The Gift Recordings and Hits compilations.
"Babies" was later re-released as the lead track from Pulp's The Sisters EP —"due to public and record company demand," according to Cocker. [9] The rest of the EP, made up of songs not included on His 'n' Hers, included "Your Sister's Clothes," a sequel song to "Babies." The EP was commercially successful, reaching number 19 in the UK, becoming the band's highest charting release to that point. [10]
"Babies" has seen critical acclaim and has been labelled by many writers as one of Pulp's best songs. At the time of the song's release, reviewer David Bennun called the track, "budget magnificence... a blueprint for an epic to be constructed in a more liquid future"—to which Cocker responded, "That's quite a laff, that! That took us ages to do. But we've just got the instruments we ended up with." [11] Q called the track "epic" and "one of the band's "first great singles." [12] NME wrote that the song "retain[s] a sense of head-spinning grandeur after countless plays." [13]
NME readers ranked the song as Pulp's fourth best in a fan vote, [14] while Stereogum's Ryan Leas ranked it as the band's seventh best, calling it "one of the most recognizable and quintessentially Pulp songs out there." [6] The Guardian named it as one of Pulp's ten best songs, writing, "What makes many of Pulp's finest singles so enchanting is that they unfold like little short stories, full of odd narrative bumps and lovable characters, with Cocker coming on like some sort of northern J.D. Salinger. Take 'Babies', the standout track from 1994's brilliant breakthrough His 'n' Hers, and one of Cocker’s best ever yarns." [5] Orange County Weekly named the song as the number ten Pulp song for beginners. [15]
In 2005, Freaky Trigger placed it at number 84 in their list of "The Top 100 Songs of All Time". [16]
All tracks written and composed by Jarvis Cocker, Russell Senior, Steve Mackey, Nick Banks and Candida Doyle.
12" vinyl
CD single
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
United Kingdom (BPI) [17] | Silver | 200,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
Chart (1994) | Peak position |
---|---|
UK Singles (OCC) [18] | 19 |
Pulp are an English rock band formed in Sheffield in 1978. At their critical and commercial peak, the band consisted of Jarvis Cocker, Russell Senior, Candida Doyle (keyboards), Nick Banks, Steve Mackey (bass) and Mark Webber. The band's "kitchen sink drama" lyrics, coupled with its references to British culture, led to Cocker and Pulp becoming reluctant figureheads of the Britpop movement.
Jarvis Branson Cocker is an English musician. As the founder, frontman, lyricist and only consistent member of the band Pulp, he became a figurehead of the Britpop genre of the mid-1990s. Cocker has also pursued a solo career, and for seven years he presented the BBC Radio 6 Music show Jarvis Cocker's Sunday Service.
His 'n' Hers is the fourth studio album by English rock band Pulp, released on 18 April 1994 by Island Records. It proved to be the band's breakthrough album, reaching number nine on the UK Albums Chart, and was nominated for the 1994 Mercury Music Prize. In 1998, Q magazine readers voted it the seventieth greatest album of all time, while it was placed at number 110 in the book Virgin All-Time Top 1000 Albums.
This Is Hardcore is the sixth studio album by English rock band Pulp, released on 30 March 1998. Following the success of Different Class (1995), friction grew in the band, culminating in the notable departure of guitarist and violinist Russell Senior; frontman Jarvis Cocker left for New York alone to decompress and write in isolation from the rest of the band. These new songs took a much more art rock approach and glam rock influence from its predecessor. After reconciling with the band, work on the album began in November 1996 and finished in January 1998. Lead single "Help the Aged" was released on 11 November 1997, followed by the album's title track on 16 March 1998. After the album's release on 30 March, two more singles were released; "A Little Soul" on 8 June and "Party Hard" on 7 September.
"Common People" is a song by English alternative rock band Pulp, released in May 1995 by Island Records as the lead single from their fifth studio album, Different Class (1995). It reached No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming a defining track of the Britpop movement as well as Pulp's signature song. In 2014, BBC Radio 6 Music listeners voted it their favourite Britpop song in an online poll. In a 2015 Rolling Stone readers' poll it was voted the greatest Britpop song.
"Sorted for E's & Wizz" is a song written and performed by the English band Pulp for their 1995 album Different Class. Based lyrically on a phrase that lead singer Jarvis Cocker overheard at a rave, the song features lyrics examining the hollow and artificial nature of drug culture. Because of its subject matter, the song sparked controversy in the UK, where several tabloids attacked the song.
Candida Mary Doyle is an Irish musician who is keyboard player and occasional backing vocalist with the band Pulp, which she joined in 1984. She joined her brother, drummer Magnus Doyle, in the line-up to replace the previous keyboard player, Tim Allcard, who had left the band.
Intro – The Gift Recordings is a compilation album by Pulp. It contains the band's three singles recorded for Gift and was released in October 1993. The version of "Babies" included here is the original single mix released in 1992, slightly different from the 1994 version available on the album His 'n' Hers. "Sheffield: Sex City" features a spoken vocal contribution from keyboardist Candida Doyle - reciting a selection from the book My Secret Garden by Nancy Friday - which is one of the few times her voice is audible on a Pulp song.
The Sisters EP is an EP by English rock band Pulp released in May 1994. It was their third release after the band signed to Island Records and it reached number 19 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming their highest chart position at the time.
"Help the Aged" is a song by British alternative rock band Pulp from their 1998 album, This Is Hardcore. Written as a sarcastic reflection of Pulp singer Jarvis Cocker's ageing, the song was disliked by Pulp guitarist Russell Senior who left the band before the song's release and sought to prevent it from being released as a single.
"This Is Hardcore" is a song by English rock band Pulp, released as the second single from their sixth album, This Is Hardcore (1998). Written as a commentary on fame using pornography as an analogy, the song includes a sample of the Peter Thomas Sound Orchestra's "Bolero on the Moon Rocks." Released as a single in March 1998, the song reached number 12 in the UK and became a top-40 hit in Finland, Iceland, and New Zealand. It has since seen critical acclaim, as has its music video.
"Mis-Shapes" is a song written and released by English alternative rock band Pulp from their 1995 album Different Class. Lyrically inspired by Cocker's experiences socializing in Sheffield as an outcast, the song features lyrics that call for misfits to unite and take over. This lyrical theme would make Cocker uncomfortable with Pulp's growing popularity with "townies" after the song's release.
"Something Changed" is a song by Britpop band Pulp, released on their 1995 album, Different Class. Written much earlier in the band's existence but revived for the Different Class sessions, "Something Changed" features lyrics that focused on the random nature as to how important events happen in life. The song also features a guitar solo performed by guitarist Mark Webber.
The Peel Sessions is a double live album by Pulp released on 23 October 2006, containing the recordings the band made for John Peel's Radio 1 show and live performances which had been broadcast by the BBC.
"Do You Remember the First Time?" is a song by British rock band Pulp, taken from their fourth studio album, His 'n' Hers (1994). With lyrics loosely based on Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker's loss of virginity, the song saw some controversy for its sexual topic. Released as the second single from His 'n' Hers, the song reached number 33 in the UK, becoming the band's first top-40 hit in that country. The single was accompanied by a lengthy music video featuring celebrities discussing how they lost their virginity. The song has since become one of the band's most famous songs and has seen critical acclaim. The track also notably served as the band's opening song on their reunion tour setlist.
"Lipgloss" is a song by British rock band Pulp from their fourth album, His 'n' Hers (1994). With lyrics written by Pulp frontman Jarvis Cocker about the deterioration of social skills that comes with a relationship in the context of a breakup, the song was the first that the band worked on for their new record company, Island Records.
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