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We Built This City

1985 debut single by Starship


Summary

1985 debut single by Starship

FieldValue
nameWe Built This City
coverWeBuiltThisCity.jpg
typesingle
artistStarship
albumKnee Deep in the Hoopla
B-side"Private Room" (Instrumental)
releasedAugust 26, 1985
recorded1984−1985
* synth-rock<ref name"Breihan 2020"
length4:53 (album version)
4:49 (single version)
labelGrunt, RCA
writer
next_titleSara
next_year1985
misc{{Audio sample
typesingle
fileStarship - We Built This City.ogg
description"We Built This City"

| B-side = "Private Room" (Instrumental)

  • Dance-rock
  • synth-rock 4:49 (single version)
  • Peter Wolf
  • Jeremy Smith "We Built This City" is the debut single by American rock band Starship, from their 1985 debut album Knee Deep in the Hoopla. It was written by English musicians Martin Page and Bernie Taupin, who were both living in Los Angeles at the time, and was originally intended as a lament against the closure of many of that city's live music clubs.

The song peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. Outside the United States, "We Built This City" topped the charts in Australia and Canada, peaked inside the Top 10 of the charts in Germany, the Republic of Ireland, Sweden and Switzerland, the Top 20 on the charts in Belgium, New Zealand and the United Kingdom and the Top 30 of the charts in Austria and the Netherlands.

Although Billboard and Cash Box magazines positively reviewed the song upon its release, significant criticism surfaced in later years, both for the inscrutability of its lyrics and the purported contrast between the song's anti-corporate message and its polished, "corporate rock" sound. It topped a 2011 Rolling Stone poll of worst songs of the 1980s by a wide margin, and the magazines Blender and GQ both called it the worst song of all time.

The album's title, Knee Deep in the Hoopla, is taken from a lyric in the first verse of this song.

Content and production

Song co-writers Martin Page and Bernie Taupin have stated that the song is about the decline of live-performance clubs in Los Angeles during the 1980s. In 2013, Taupin told Rolling Stone that the "original song was a very dark kind of mid-tempo song ... about how club life in L.A. was being killed off and live acts had no place to go ... A guy called Peter Wolf [the album's producer] ... got ahold of the demo and totally changed it. He jerry-rigged it into the pop hit it was". In an interview with Songfacts, Page added that the "demo was quite high-energy techno, because that was the sound of the band I was in ... it was a little more edgy. And I'm very pleased with what Starship did with it, because they made it a universally appealing song".

Though "We Built This City" was originally written about Los Angeles, the Starship rendition references San Francisco (the hometown of both Starship and its predecessors, Jefferson Airplane and Jefferson Starship). MTV executive and former DJ Les Garland provided the DJ voiceover during the song's bridge. While "the city by the bay" refers to San Francisco, the other two phrases used by Garland—"the city that rocks" and "The City That Never Sleeps"—refer to Cleveland, Ohio, and New York City, respectively. To capitalize on this, several radio stations, with the help of jingle company JAM Creative Productions, customized the bridge when broadcasting the song by adding descriptions of their own local areas or inserting their idents.

The song was engineered by producer Bill Bottrell, written by Bernie Taupin, Martin Page, Dennis Lambert and Peter Wolf and arranged by Bottrell and Jasun Martz with shared lead vocals by Mickey Thomas and Grace Slick.

Reception

Initial release

Initially, "We Built This City" had positive reviews. Billboard said in 1985 that this "unusual rock 'n' roll anthem is as wise as it is rebellious". Cash Box called it "an ear-catching tune" and described it as "dance rock with sharp hooks".

"We Built This City" received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Rock Vocal Performance by a Duo or Group in 1986.

Half Man Half Biscuit parodied the song on their Achtung Bono album, "We Built This Village on a Trad. Arr. Tune".

Legacy

However, the song began to be seen less favorably in later decades. In 2004, the magazine Blender ran a feature on "The 50 Worst Songs Ever", in conjunction with the VH1 Special The 50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs...Ever. To qualify, songs had to be well-known hits; the list also avoided novelty songs, and multiple songs by the same artist. "We Built This City" came in at #1. According to Blender editor Craig Marks, the choice was nearly unanimous among those who had been polled. Marks said of the song, "It purports to be anti-commercial but reeks of '80s corporate-rock commercialism. It's a real reflection of what practically killed rock music in the '80s." Asked about the listing, Mickey Thomas, one of the singers of Starship, said he was surprised at the ranking, but also "thrilled" because of the other high-profile groups on the list, saying, "I wish Blender had called us for a group shot. I'd love to have my picture taken with Stevie Wonder and Paul McCartney." (Wonder and McCartney were listed together at #10 for their 1982 duet "Ebony and Ivory".)

  • In 2011, a Rolling Stone magazine online readers poll named "We Built This City" the worst song of the 1980s. The song's winning margin was so large that the magazine reported it "could be the biggest blow-out victory in the history of the Rolling Stone Readers Poll".

  • In August 2016, Gentleman's Quarterly magazine declared this song as the worst of all time, referring to it as "the most detested song in human history". The article covered Bernie Taupin and Martin Page's roles in writing an early version of the song, the song's development into its final version, its massive success and backlash, and Grace Slick's inconsistent statements about whether she liked the song.

  • Richmond Times-Dispatch music critic Melissa Ruggieri argued that "Nothing's Gonna Stop Us Now" and "Sara" were Starship songs that were more suitable for the top of the lists than "We Built This City", a song Ruggieri said "references Marconi, the father of the radio...inserted a cool snippet of DJ chatter from the band's beloved San Francisco...[and] found Grace Slick enunciating the phrase 'corporation games' with nutty abandon."

Personnel

  • Mickey Thomas – lead and backing vocals
  • Grace Slick – lead and backing vocals
  • Craig Chaquico – lead and rhythm guitar
  • Pete Sears – bass guitar
  • Donny Baldwin – electronic drums, backing vocals

Additional personnel

  • Peter Wolf – keyboards, synthesizers
  • Les Garland – DJ voice

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1985–1986)Peak
positionAustralia (Kent Music Report)Europe (European Hot 100 Singles)ParaguaySouth Africa (Springbok Radio)US Cash Box Top 100
1
7
1
1
1
Chart (2014)Peak
position

Year-end charts

Chart (1985)PositionCanada Top Singles (RPM)US Billboard Hot 100US Cash Box Top 100
25
14
26
Chart (1986)PositionAustralia (Kent Music Report)South Africa (Springbok Radio)
11
10

Certifications

Covers and samples

LadBaby version

In December 2018, British blogger LadBaby released a comedy version of the song with a sausage roll theme (the refrain being "We Built This City on Sausage Rolls") as a charity single whose profits went to The Trussell Trust. It debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart, beating Ava Max's "Sweet but Psycho" and Ariana Grande's "Thank U, Next" to the 2018 Christmas number one.

Chart (2018)Peak
positionAustralia Digital Track Chart (ARIA)US Hot Rock Songs (Billboard)
31
47

Other versions

American indie rock band Cursive covered the song in 2010 for the first season of The A.V. Clubs A.V. Undercover web series.

Portions of the song – with altered lyrics such as "we quilt this city on a comfy roll" – were used in 2024 advertisements for Quilted Northern toilet paper.

References

References

  1. "FMQB".
  2. Breihan, Tom. (November 9, 2020). "The Number Ones: Starship's "We Built This City".
  3. "We Built This City On Rock and Roll". Oddculture.com.
  4. Tannenbaum, Rob. (August 21, 2016). "An Oral History of "We Built This City," the Worst Song of All Time".
  5. Greene, Andy. (2013-09-26). "Bernie Taupin on Elton John's New LP: 'It's Kudos All Around'".
  6. Wiser, Carl. (2014-03-21). "Martin Page".
  7. "We Built This S**tty : The worst song of all time? Les Garland begs to differ". Reelradio.com.
  8. (July 31, 2015). "'We Built This City': 30 years ago, the day the music (almost) died". wtop.com.
  9. (August 31, 1985). "Reviews".
  10. (September 7, 1985). "Single Releases".
  11. De Atley, Richard. (January 10, 1985). "Dire Straits, Tina Turner, Sting lead performer nominations". The Times-News.
  12. "Half Man Half Biscuit : Achtung Bono".
  13. (May 2004). "Run for Your Life! It's the 50 Worst Songs Ever!". Blender.
  14. (April 20, 2004). "10 Really, Really Bad Songs". CBS News.
  15. (April 27, 2004). "We built this city on detestable lyrics". [[The Sydney Morning Herald]].
  16. Recker, Rachael. (May 2, 2010). "It's not Jefferson, but it is 'Starship starring Mickey Thomas' at 2010 Tulip Time". The Grand Rapids Press.
  17. (October 6, 2011). "1. Starship – 'We Built This City' Photo – Readers' Poll: The 10 Worst Songs of the 1980s".
  18. Ruggieri, Melissa. (April 29, 2004). "Are you kidding me? Many tunes are obviously inferior to Blender's 50 Worst Songs of All Time". [[Richmond Times-Dispatch]].
  19. Kent, David. (1993). "Australian Chart Book 1970–1992". Australian Chart Book.
  20. (January 6, 1986). "European Hot 100 Singles".
  21. (20 April 1986). "Las canciones más populares en Latinoamérica". [[La Opinión (Los Angeles)]].
  22. "SA Charts 1965–1989 (As presented on Springbok Radio/Radio Orion) – Acts S".
  23. "Cash Box Top 100 Singles – Week ending November 23, 1985". [[Cashbox (magazine).
  24. (December 28, 1985). "RPM's Top 100 Singles of 1985".
  25. (December 31, 1985). "Top Pop Singles of 1985".
  26. (December 28, 1985). "The Cash Box Year-End Charts: 1985 – Top 100 Pop Singles". Cash Box.
  27. (December 1986). "National Top 100 Singles for 1986".
  28. "Top 20 Hit Singles of 1986".
  29. Alibhai, Zaina. (December 18, 2018). "Who is LadBaby – the dad behind We Built This City poised to beat Ariana Grande in Christmas number one race?". Metro.
  30. (December 24, 2018). "ARIA Australian Top 40 Digital Tracks". [[Australian Recording Industry Association]].
  31. "Top Rock Songs Chart: December 29, 2018".
  32. "Cursive covers Starship's "We Built This City"".
  33. "Quilted Northern Parodies 'We Built this City' in New Campaign".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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