Something to Believe In (Ramones song)

"Something to Believe In"
Song by Ramones
from the album Animal Boy
ReleasedMay 1986
RecordedDecember 1985
Length4:09
LabelSire
Songwriter(s)Dee Dee Ramone, Jean Beauvoir
Producer(s)Jean Beauvoir

"Something to Believe In" is a song that was originally released as a single called the "Sire Single Version", and then re-recorded as a song on the Ramones album Animal Boy released in May 1986. There are also live video versions of the song. It was written by Dee Dee Ramone and Jean Beauvoir. The "Sire Single Version" was re-released as track 14 of the second disk of the Ramones Anthology.[1] The song was re-released in 2005 by Rhino/Warner Bros, on the album Weird Tales of the Ramones.[2]

The song is more gentle sounding than most Ramones songs, particularly the cover by The Pretenders, which was produced by Johnny Ramone and is sung at an extremely slow tempo for a Ramones song.

Ramones Aid

"Something to Believe In" was also the background track for a music video called "Ramones Aid" which was frequently played on MTV.[3] In the video, the Ramones are depicted in a group of people who give money to charity. This video parodies Hands Across America, by featuring T-shirts with the logo "Hands Across Your Face" and showing various hands holding each other in various settings. A large number of people appear in Ramones Aid, including Mark Holton (including a skeleton hand and a hook), Animotion, Afrika Bambaataa, Circle Jerks, John Doe and Exene Cervenka of X, The B-52's, Berlin, Fishbone, Ron Mael and Russell Mael of Sparks, Ted Nugent, Spinal Tap, Weird Al Yankovic, Penn and Teller, and The Untouchables, Toni Basil, Rodney Bingenheimer, The Bongos, Tom Petersson, Fisher & Preachman, Holly Beth Vincent, Richie Stotts, The Cruzados, False Prophets, The Pandoras, Rudy Sarzo, The Rattlers, Carla Olsen, David Pahoa, Gary U.S. Bonds, Mary Woronov, Dangerzone, Elliot Hoffman.[4] The video included lookalikes from the 1985 USA for Africa video titled "We Are the World" (Michael Jackson, Lionel Richie, and Cyndi Lauper). When juxtaposed with images in parody of other aid videos, the songs hook line, "I'm looking for something to believe in", is frequently interpreted as making fun of true believers whose identity is derived from embracing a cause.

Awards

"Something to Believe In" was nominated for the New York City Music Award, for best video clip, and was only surpassed by Peter Gabriel's "Sledgehammer".[5] The album the song was on took New York City Music Awards best album, the other single track on the album took best single.

Pretenders version

The final version which was one of the last production accomplishments of Johnny Ramone, and was done shortly before his death, was a cover version by The Pretenders. It was included on the album We're a Happy Family: A Tribute to Ramones.[6]

References

  1. ^ "Hey Ho Let's Go: Anthology: Music". Amazon.com. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  2. ^ "Yahoo Music - Exclusive New Music and Music Videos". New.music.yahoo.com. Retrieved 2014-02-09.
  3. ^ On The Road With The Ramones ISBN 978-0-857-12223-0 p. xi
  4. ^ See credits at end of the Ramones Aid video for complete listing of participants
  5. ^ [1][dead link]
  6. ^ "The Trapeze Waltz @ARTISTdirect". Artistdirect.com. Retrieved 2014-02-09.

This page was last updated at 2019-11-16 04:53 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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