Showing posts with label VH1 top 100 songs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label VH1 top 100 songs. Show all posts

Saturday, November 29, 1997

Green Day charted with “Time of Your Life”

Good Riddance (Time of Your Life)

Green Day

Writer(s): Billie Joe Armstrong, Mike Dirnt, Tré Cool (see lyrics here)


Released: December 23, 1997


First Charted: November 29, 1997


Peak: 11a US, 12 RR, 11 A40, 4 AA, 7 AR, 2 MR, 11 UK, 5 CN, 2 AU, 1 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): 5.0 US, 0.6 UK, 5.75 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): 0.8 radio, 101.30 video, 471.26 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

The punk-rock trio Green Day formed in 1987 in California. After two independently released albums, they made their major label debut in 1994 with Dookie. The blockbuster sold more than 10 million copies fueled by three chart-topping songs at alternative rock radio. The follow-up, 1995’s Insomniac, wasn’t as big, but still sold two million copies and produced two top-10 alternative rock hits. The next album, 1997’s Nimrod, followed the same pattern with two million more in sales and two more alternative rock hits. The second of those was “Good Riddance (Time of Your Life),” which spent thirteen weeks at #2.

The band’s singer, Billie Joe Armstrong, wrote the song in 1993 about his girlfriend, Amanda. She moved to Ecuador to live with her family and continue with her schooling. SF He wrote the song about his anger regarding her leaving, calling it “Good Riddance.” He said it was “about trying to be cool, accepting that, in life, people go in different directions.” SF

He shared it with his bandmates during the Dookie sessions, but its “mellow, contemplative lyrics with acoustic music” WK were too sonically different than the punk style of that album. They took another stab at it during the Nimrod sessions, adding strings to the song. It became a hit, but it also resulted in a high rate of returns at record stores from fans who thought it was too different than what they expected. SF

The band was surprised to find that it became a staple at high school proms. Many graduating seniors interpreted the lyrics as a nostalgic reflection of their time in school. In 2015, Rolling Stone magazine named it one of the 20 best graduation songs of the past 20 years. WK


Resources:


First posted 11/1/2022.

Saturday, May 24, 1997

Hanson “Mmmbop” hit #1

Mmmbop

Hanson

Writer(s): Isaac Hanson, Taylor Hanson, Zac Hanson (see lyrics here)


Released: April 15, 1997


First Charted: March 28, 1997


Peak: 14 US, 19 RR, 21 AC, 5 A40, 13 UK, 13 CN, 19 AU, 10 DF (Click for codes to singles charts.)


Sales (in millions): 1.5 US, 0.76 UK, 3.04 world (includes US + UK)


Airplay/Streaming (in millions): -- radio, 150.02 video, 107.6 streaming

Awards:

Click on award for more details.

About the Song:

“Mmmbop” followed closely on the heels of the Spice Girls’ “Wannabe,” another “deliriously catchy” SG gem of “bubblegum gibberish” SG which “fed a growing demand for bright, clean, euphorically energetic down-the-middle pop music.” SG It sounds “like cotton candy, or like the feeling of jumping into the pool on a hot day. It sounds like summer.” SG

The Hanson brothers were all born in the ‘80s in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Dad was an accountant who turned the kids on to doo-wop, the Beach Boys, and the Jackson 5. Mom was a homemaker who homeschooled them. They started making music when the oldest (Isaac) was 11 and the youngest (Zac) was 6. While they all played piano initially, Isaac moved to guitar and Zac to drums. They started playing events and self-released two albums. Christopher Sabec, lawyer for the Dave Matthews Band, saw them play at the SXSW festival in Austin and signed on as their manager.

After fourteen labels turned them down, Steve Greenberg from Mercury signed them. He thought the original version of “Mmmbop” was “amazing…But I was totally skeptical. I thought some adult was manipulating it. There must be adults playing the instruments, or adults must have written the song, and I bet that in real life the kids couldn’t sing that well. I wasn’t going to pursue it but the song stayed in my head.” FB He went to see them live and was astonished that it was really all them singing and playing the instruments. He told them on the spot “I want to make a record with you.” FB

That original version came out on their 1994 album Boomerang. It was slower and more cluttered, but “already hellaciously catchy.” SG They borrowed the title from the scatline ending of one of their other songs. FB As the brothers would get ready for bed, they’d sing it together in the bathroom. SG Greenberg matched the Hanson brothers with the Dust Brothers, who’d worked on the Beastie Boys’ Paul’s Boutique and Beck’s Odelay. They only spent two days with Hanson, but it was enough for them to speed up “Mmmbop” and make it much funkier.

The part of “MMMBop” that everyone remembers is that sticky, ecstatic nonsense chorus.” SG However, the lyrics offer astonishing wise advice from such young writers, such as “You have so many relationships in this life/ Only one or two will last.” “it’s a song about realizing that you can’t plan out your life and that you have to hold onto the friendships that matter.” SG When the song got a Grammy nomination, it made 12-year-old Zac the youngest songwriter ever nominated.


Resources:

  • DMDB encyclopedia entry for Hanson
  • FB Fred Bronson (2007). The Billboard Book of Number One Hits (4th edition). Billboard Books: New York, NY. Page 855.
  • SG Stereogum (5/6/2022). “The Number Ones” by Tom Breihan
  • WK Wikipedia


First posted 10/19/2022.