He's on the Phone explained

He's on the Phone
Cover:He's on the Phone.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Saint Etienne
Album:Too Young to Die
Released:[1]
Genre:Handbag house[2]
Length:5:10
Prev Title:Hug My Soul
Prev Year:1994
Next Title:Sylvie
Next Year:1997

"He's on the Phone" is a song by British pop group Saint Etienne in collaboration with French singer-songwriter Étienne Daho, released in October 1995 by Heavenly and MCA as a single from their third compilation album, Too Young to Die (1995). A fast-paced dance track, it is one of Saint Etienne's biggest hits, reaching number 11 on the UK Singles Chart, number 31 in Iceland, number 41 in Sweden and number 33 on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart. The lyrics tell of an "academia girl" trying to escape from a relationship with a married man: He's on the phone / And she wants to go home, / Shoes in hand, / Don't make a sound, / It's time to go. At the centre of the track is a spoken-word section by Daho.

The song is a remix by Motiv8 of "Accident", which appeared on the Saint Etienne/Étienne Daho Reserection EP, released a few months previously in June 1995. "Accident" itself is a rewritten version of Daho's 1984 French-language hit single "Weekend à Rome", with original English lyrics. Daho's spoken-word vocals are from the Reserection opening track, "Reserection".

The single was credited to "Saint Etienne featuring Étienne Daho". Daho also appears in the song's music video, which was directed by Paul Kelly, and joined the band in their performance of the song on Top of the Pops. He would also go on to perform the original "Weekend à Rome" lyrics with the instrumentation from "He's on the Phone" in a performance on the French edition of Star Academy. The single also had the honour of being Pete Tong's essential tune on Radio One.[3]

Production

According to producer Steve Rodway, the band had never intended to use "Accident" as single material, but had given it to him for remixing as it was "the only new track they had" at the time of the release of Too Young to Die. Rodway retained an edited-down portion of Daho's vocals, and otherwise only kept the opening piano riff from the original instrumentation (both at the band's request).

Sound on Sound magazine describes "He's on the Phone" as characteristic of most of Rodway's "trademark" sounds:

A hard disk recorder was used to create backing vocals echoing the original through time stretching and pitch shifting.

Critical reception

Glenn Swan from AllMusic praised the song as "smart", noting that it "once again [are] showcasing the gorgeous voice of Sarah Cracknell and the plaintive Brit-pop songwriting skills of Bob Stanley, Pete Wiggs, and Ian Catt."[4] Christopher Burns from Associated Press said it is "truly plastic, shameless Eurodisco with plenty of strings and horns. The hotel life, forget your wife, you're on your own, they sing in "He's on the Phone". It's a contrast from the more experimental stuff Saint Etienne has done in the past."[5] Larry Flick from Billboard described it as a "twirlin' U.K. club smash", that with "its deliciously sweet pop hook and adorable girl-group vocals" is "ripe for pop radio picking." He also stated that Motiv8 "kicks a snappy hi-NRG beat on its jiggly remix".[6] James Masterton for Dotmusic complimented it as a "fantastic single", noting that "this is the first time they have ever release an out-and-out pop stomper." He concluded, "One of Britain's most unique bands is finally a major chart force."[7] Swedish Expressen highlighted the "lovely" disco mix by the remixer.[8] Tom Ewing of Freaky Trigger featured "He's on the Phone" in his list of "Top 100 Singles of the 90s" in 1999, saying, "Of course it would take this supremely thoughtful pop group to realise the naive potential of handbag house and then alchemise it into a single which is both their and handbag’s most ravishing five minutes.".[2]

John Hamilton from Idolator remarked that the remixer had "painstaking rearranged Sarah’s vocals into a more melodic chorus and injected the track with what can only be described as a high dose of poppers: a galloping bass line, bright keyboards and a relentless nu-disco beat, with Daho’s spoken-word passage figuring powerfully in the breakdown."[9] Ross Jones from The Guardian stated, "Saint Etienne's marriage to Europop is now official. 'He's on the Phone' has it all – schlurping cymbals, swooping strings, pumping piano, forlorn chords, heartbroken lyrics, ramblings in a foreign tongue..."[10] Taylor Parkes from Melody Maker named it Single of the Week, writing, "This is winter disco, sweet, sad and strong. You don't have to buy it, just believe in it."[11] Brad Beatnik from Music Weeks RM Dance Update gave it four out of five, saying that Motiv8 "have given the single a very upbeat Euro feel that's both sassy and trashy."[12] In his RM dance column, James Hamilton viewed it as a "sweetly enunciated tuneful gentle ditty".[13] John Robinson from NME wrote, "In fact, 'He's on the Phone' is very much entirely standard Etienne — slightly wistful initial melancholia daubed with essence of Peter Purves — and poses the same question: why the Hi-NRG drumbeats of marauding arse?"[14] Another NME editor, Jim Wirth, called it "stunning", adding that the single, together with "Sylvie", are "a stellar amalgamation of handbag house and Bacharachian pop aesthetics."[15] Rob Sheffield from Rolling Stone declared it the "perfect" U.K. hit.[16]

Chart performance

"He's on the Phone" was a notable hit in Europe, peaking at number nine in Scotland and number eleven in the UK. In the latter, it peaked in its first week at the UK Singles Chart, on 5 November 1995, becoming the group's most successful single there. Additionally, it entered the top 40 in Iceland (31),[17] as well as the top 50 in Sweden (41), and on the Eurochart Hot 100, where it peaked at number 44 on November 25.[18] Outside Europe, it was very successful in Israel, peaking at number three in 1996. In the US, the song made it to a respectable number 33 on the Billboard Dance Club Songs chart.

Music video

The accompanying music video for "He's on the Phone" was directed by English film director, musician, photographer and designer Paul Kelly.[19] [20] It features the group performing at a white set. In some scenes, Cracknell sits on a purple bed by a red telephone on the nightstand. Other scenes shows the singer wandering alone around town at night. Étienne Daho appears in some scenes throughout the video.

Track listings

All tracks were written and composed by Cracknell, Stanley, Wiggs, Daho; except where indicated.

  1. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 extended mix) — 6:25
  2. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 dub)
  1. "Cool Kids of Death" (Underworld mix) (Stanley, Wiggs) — 14:31
  2. "Like a Motorway" (David Holmes mix) (Stanley, Wiggs) — 13:01
  1. "He's on the Phone" (Bungee Vocal Mix)
  2. "He's on the Phone" (Naked Bungee Dub)
  1. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 mix) — 6:26
  2. "He's on the Phone" (Primax Bungee dub mix) — 6:03
  3. "He's on the Phone" (Primax Bungee vocal mix) — 5:05
  1. "He's on the Phone" — 4:09
  2. "Groveley Road" (Stanley, Wiggs) — 3:39
  3. "Is It True" (Marc Bolan) — 2:49
  4. "The Process" (Stanley, Wiggs) — 3:11
  1. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 mix) — 6:25
  2. "Cool Kids of Death" (Underworld remix) (Stanley, Wiggs) — 14:31
  3. "How I Learned to Love the Bomb" (Treacy) — 3:05
  1. "He's on the Phone" (radio edit) — 4:08
  2. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 mix) — 6:26
  3. "He's on the Phone" (Primax Bungee dub mix) — 6:03
  4. "He's on the Phone" (Primax Bungee vocal mix) — 5:05
  1. "He's on the Phone" — 4:09
  2. "He's on the Phone" (Motiv8 mix) — 6:25

Charts

Chart (1995–1997)Peak
position
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)44
Iceland (Íslenski Listinn Topp 40)31

Notes and References

  1. New Releases: Singles. Music Week. 43. 28 October 1995. 28 June 2021.
  2. Web site: Ewing. Tom. 29. Saint Etienne – "He's On The Phone". Freaky Trigger. 15 January 2017. 12 November 1999.
  3. Motiv8 Break Out With New Release . Music Week, in Record Mirror (Dance Update Supplemental Insert) . 14 October 1995 . 2 . 13 May 2021 .
  4. Web site: Glenn . Swan . Saint Etienne – He's on the Phone . . 6 November 2020 .
  5. Christopher. Burns. Saint Etienne's only prayer is listener's desire to disco. Daily News. 28 July 1996. 15 March 2020.
  6. Larry. Flick. Single Reviews. Billboard. 9 November 1996. 5 February 2020. 68. Larry Flick.
  7. Web site: Masterton. James. Week Ending November 11th 1995. Chart Watch UK. 5 November 1995. 4 October 2021. James Masterton.
  8. Expressen. 11 December 1995.
  9. Web site: Hamilton, John. The 50 Best Pop Singles Of 1995 (Featuring New Interviews With Alanis Morissette, Garbage, Kylie Minogue, Monica, Ace Of Base & More!). Idolator. 9 December 2015. 8 April 2020.
  10. Jones, Ross (4 November 1995). "Reviews: Singles". p. 31. The Guardian.
  11. Taylor. Parkes. Singles. Melody Maker. 21 October 1995. 36. 17 March 2024. Taylor Parkes.
  12. Brad . Beatnik . Hot Vinyl . Music Week, in Record Mirror (Dance Update Supplemental Insert) . 28 October 1995 . 12 . 13 May 2021 .
  13. James . Hamilton . Dj directory . Music Week, in Record Mirror (Dance Update Supplemental Insert) . 4 November 1995 . 15 . 15 May 2021 . James Hamilton (DJ and journalist).
  14. John. Robinson. Singles. NME. 28 October 1995. 51. 17 March 2024.
  15. Web site: Jim . Wirth . St Etienne – London Kentish Town Forum . . https://web.archive.org/web/20000817175611/http://www.nme.com/reviews/reviews/19990005105525reviews.html . 24 November 2020. 2000-08-17 .
  16. Rob . Sheffield . Saint Etienne – Good Humor . . 4 September 1998 . 6 November 2020 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070930180555/http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/188925/good_humor . 2007-09-30 .
  17. News: Íslenski Listinn Topp 40 (25.11.1995 – 01.12.1995). Dagblaðið Vísir. is. 60. 25 November 1995. 3 February 2018.
  18. Eurochart Hot 100 Singles. Music & Media. 12. 47. 18. 25 November 1995. 9 April 2018.
  19. Web site: Saint Etienne featuring Etienne Daho - He's on the phone (Clip officiel). IMDb. 18 March 2024.
  20. (2009)