Burning the Ground | |
Cover: | Duranduran burningtheground.jpg |
Border: | yes |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Duran Duran |
Album: | Decade |
B-Side: | Decadance |
Released: | [1] |
Studio: | Olympic (London)[2] |
Length: | 4:00 (single version) |
Label: | |
Producer: | John Jones |
Prev Title: | Do You Believe in Shame? |
Prev Year: | 1989 |
Next Title: | Violence of Summer (Love's Taking Over) |
Next Year: | 1990 |
"Burning the Ground" is a song by the English pop rock band Duran Duran, released on 4 December 1989 as a stand-alone single to promote the compilation album Decade. The song is a megamix of Duran Duran's history created by producer John Jones, featuring snippets of the band's biggest hits from the previous decade into a new piece of music. However, the track was not included on the Decade album itself.
Its music video was included on the band's audiovisual compilation Greatest, released in 1999 (VHS) and 2003 (DVD).
The remix was created by producer John Jones, with assistance from Dee Long and engineer Chris Potter, in an upstairs room at Olympic Studios in Barnes while Duran Duran was downstairs recording new material for the album Liberty, to be released the following year.[2]
The video for "Burning the Ground", much like the song, used snippets of many of Duran Duran's previous audiovisual work, including scenes from their 1985 concert film Arena (An Absurd Notion) and their 1987–1989 Strange Behaviour and Electric Theatre world tours. The video also used footage of burning South American rainforests, as well as the NASA Space Shuttles and even some scenes of the band walking around in the street during the recording sessions for their then-upcoming Liberty album. It was directed by Adrian Martin.[3]
The B-side was another megamix, this one more instrumental in nature, called "Decadance". The song uses the "why" bits of "The Reflex", the "no, no" from "Notorious", "wild" from "The Wild Boys", the chorus from "All She Wants Is", the solo from "Save a Prayer" mixed with "Rio", and a little bit of "Skin Trade", as well as some of the suggestive screams from "Hungry Like the Wolf".
Upon single release Melody Maker reviewer Mick Mercer called song a "sample-heavy thing" in "The Reflex" style.[4]
Peak position | |
Italy (Musica e dischi)[5] | 7 |
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Duran Duran