Only a Dream (The Kinks song)

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"Only a Dream"
Only a Dream Kinks.jpg
Single by the Kinks
from the album Phobia
B-side "Somebody Stole My Car"
Released29 March 1993
RecordedSeptember 1990 – February 1992
Studio Konk, London
Genre Rock
Length5:04
Label Columbia
Songwriter(s) Ray Davies
Producer(s) Ray Davies
The Kinks singles chronology
"Did Ya"
(1991)
"Only a Dream"
(1993)
"Scattered"
(1993)

"Only a Dream" is a song released and performed by the British rock band the Kinks, written by the main songwriter of the band, Ray Davies. The song appeared on their 1993 album Phobia , the band's final LP.

Contents

Background

Ray Davies said of the song in a 1993 interview, "I think I kind of found my voice again on 'Only a Dream,' which I wrote on a plane to England after I decided that the album needed to have a little more humanity. It's odd that an artist who's supposed to have been around still gets intimidated by certain things, but I do, and I had to really get myself prepared to do that vocal. The night before I did, I went out and got rat-arsed drunk on wine. I was still shaking when I got to the studio the next morning, and I did the vocal in one take. It's only a pop song, but there's a lot of emotion in it and there's a lot of me in it." [1]

Release

"Only a Dream" was first released as the sixth song on the Kinks' first Columbia album, Phobia . The album was not met with much success, not charting in Britain, and only hitting number 166 in America. Despite the failure of the album, the track was released separately as a standalone single, backed with "Somebody Stole My Car" (another song from the Phobia album). A second single from Phobia, "Scattered", was advertised to follow up "Only a Dream", but was cancelled and eventually released in small quantities to collectors. [2] One year later, Columbia Records dropped the Kinks. [2]

The song appeared on the compilation album, Picture Book .

Music video

Like many other Kinks tracks of the era, a music video was shot for "Only a Dream". [3] Featuring both Ray Davies and Dave Davies, Ray Davies lip-synced the song.

Reception

Louder Than War singled out "Only a Dream" as the highlight on Phobia, impressed by Davies' "trademarks humour, irony, mental anguish, loneliness and unrequited desire, all achieved by using a lift and a fantasy about a woman as metaphors". [4]

References

  1. DeMuir, Harold. "Brothers at Arms: After three decades of classic pop and internal turmoil, the Kinks are still not like everybody else". davedavies.com. Pulse Magazine. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 11 April 2015.
  2. 1 2 Hinman, Doug. All Day and All of the Night.
  3. Emlen, Dave. "Kinda Kinks". Kindakinks.net. Retrieved 14 June 2014.
  4. Dave Jennings (21 March 2012). "Lost gems – overlooked albums revisited – The Kinks 'Phobia'". Louder Than War .