Walkin' on the Sun
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Background
Smash Mouth guitarist Greg Camp said about "Walkin' on the Sun": Template:Quote
Paul De Lisle, the band's bassist, stated the original version of "Walkin' on the Sun" was more of a rap song.[1] The band decided to record the song for Fush Yu Mang after drummer Kevin Coleman discovered a demo on one of Camp's tapes; it was the last song to be added to the album.[1]
The guitar riff present throughout the song has been compared to a riff from "Swan's Splashdown" by Perrey & Kingsley, from their 1966 album The In Sound from Way Out, as well as the Hohner Pianet riff from The Zombies' "She's Not There".[2][3][4]
Critical reception
Pan-European magazine Music & Media described it as a "punchy and highly infectious track." They noted that it "deftly fuses punk and ska—and that's a feat which it manages while avoiding sounding stereotypical of either genre."[5] Music Week rated the song five out of five, adding, "This fun-loving US quartet have managed to fuse The Doors with the Stereo MCs to create a deliciously frug-inducing slice of slacker pop. A cracker."[6] A reviewer from NME wrote, "'Walkin' On The Sun' is a classic, straight out of the groovy, secret agent world of Austin Powers. Although it was written in the aftermath of the Rodney King beatings, it has an organ hook that's a deadringer for The Zombies' 'She's Not There' and growling staccato vocal that make it the perfect soundtrack for a strut down Carnaby Street circa 1967."[4] Ian Hyland from Sunday Mirror gave the song nine out of ten. He commented, "It's jingly jangly American guitar music and Radio One are playing it to death. It'll be massive, then they'll disappear."[7]
Music video
Template:Unrefsect The song's accompanying music video, directed by McG, begins with each band member, one at a time, walking down a dark alley. Then, the band performs in a room while scenes of Steve Harwell pushing a remote control makes two girls appear under a glass dome. Afterwards, the band performs on a beach while beachgoers dance around them. The scene then changes to the band performing in front of the two same girls in an area full of flashing bright lights. A drag race is then shown in the street where a yellow hot rod races against an orange hot rod which the band is in. However, in the middle of the race, the orange hot rod implicitly crashes, and the race attendees and female race judge rush over to the scene. The band still performs while lying on the ground despite the crash. The video ends with them leaning close to the camera.
Track listings
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Personnel
Smash Mouth[8]
- Steve Harwell – vocals
- Paul De Lisle – bass, vocals
- Greg Camp – guitar, vocals
- Kevin Coleman – drums
Additional personnel
- Eric Valentine – keyboards, percussion
- John Grove, John Gibson, Lee Harris – horns
- J. Grady, Mark Harwell, Anzimee Camp, Kelly Young, Boston Johnny, Jason Slater, Sam Burbank, Dan Plok – vocals
Charts
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Certifications
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Release history
| Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref(s). |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | June 30, 1997 | Modern rock radio | Interscope | [30] |
| August 26, 1997 | Contemporary hit radio | [30][31] | ||
| United Kingdom | October 13, 1997 | Template:Hlist | [32] | |
| Japan | September 23, 1998 | CD | [33] |
Use in media
The song is a playable track in the video game Rock Band 3[34] and was featured in the movies An American Werewolf in Paris (1997), Can't Hardly Wait (1998), Made of Honor (2008), the television film Shredderman Rules (2007) and in the UK trailer for What Just Happened (2008).[35] It was also featured in early television advertisements to promote the Fox series Firefly in 2002. The television series ER featured the song during the opening scene of Season 4 Episode 13 "Carter's Choice", when Dr. Carter was arriving at work in the snow.[36]
The song is included in "Weird Al" Yankovic's medley "Polka Power!" from his 1999 album Running With Scissors. Neil Cicierega sampled the song in "Daft Mouth" from the 2014 mashup album Mouth Sounds. The Self song Paint by Numbers was written by Matt Mahaffey after seeing Walkin’ on the Sun’s success.
See also
References
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- ↑ Hyland, Ian (October 12, 1997). "Take That! It's a Smash Hit for the Mouth". Sunday Mirror. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
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