Land of Sunshine explained

Land of Sunshine
Cover:Faith No More Land Of Sunshine.jpg
Type:promo
Artist:Faith No More
Album:Angel Dust
Released:1992
Recorded:January–March 1992[1]
Studio:Coast Recorders & Brilliant Studios, San Francisco, California
Genre:Funk metal[2]
Label:Slash
Composer:
Lyricist:
  • Mike Patton
Producer:Matt Wallace

"Land of Sunshine" is the opening track to Angel Dust, the fourth studio album by the American rock band Faith No More. It was released as a promotional single in 1992 along with "Midlife Crisis" and has been compared in its opening style to "From out of Nowhere", the opening track and first single from the band's previous studio album, The Real Thing.[3] The song's lyrics contain, amongst other things, questions from Scientology personality tests, with one of them, the question "Does emotional music have quite an effect on you?", being described by Tom Sinclair of Rolling Stone as "the perfect tag line for Angel Dust.[4] The song was one of the three key songs picked out by Robert Christgau from the album in his review, the two others being "Midlife Crisis" and "Midnight Cowboy".[5]

Lyrical content

The lyrics for "Land of Sunshine" were written by Mike Patton alongside "Caffeine" during a sleep deprivation experiment and included lines taken almost directly from fortune cookies[6] and the Oxford Capacity Analysis personality test offered by the Church of Scientology. He also watched much late-night television to get into the right frame of mind.

There are three lines taken from the personality test, although a fourth appears in the lyric booklet with Angel Dust; question 179 "Do others push you around?".[7] Two of the questions used were shortened slightly for their use in the song; question 27, "Do you often sing or whistle just for the fun of it?"[8] had its end changed to "just for fun", and question 196, "Do you sometimes feel that your age is against you (too young or too old)?" was shortened to "Do you feel sometimes that age is against you?". The unchanged question 69, "Does emotional music have quite an effect on [9] is featured during the choruses along with the phrase "Here's how to order."

The lines taken from the fortunes in Chinese fortune cookies were virtually unchanged and appear throughout the first and second verses of the song. They are as follows, as they appeared on the fortunes:

"Life to you is a dashing bold adventure"

"Sing and rejoice, fortune is smiling upon you"

"You have a winning way, so keep it"

"You are an angel heading for a land of sunshine"

"Pat yourself on the back and give yourself a handshake"

Notes and References

  1. The Making of Angel Dust, Mike Bordin interview. MTV. Retrieved December 22, 2007
  2. Web site: May 21, 2015. 10 Essential San Francisco albums. May 30, 2022. Treble.
  3. Web site: Interview with Mike Bordin . August 29, 2008 . Moses . Peter . December 1992 . negele.org . dead . https://archive.today/20120712080347/http://negele.org/db/index.php3?band=2&year=1992&month=12&id=1260 . July 12, 2012 .
    - Web site: [{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r7080|pure_url=yes}} Angel Dust - Overview ]. December 17, 2008 . Raggett . Ned . allmusic.
  4. Web site: Faith No More: Angel Dust : Music Reviews . August 29, 2008 . Sinclair . Tom . September 3, 1992 . . https://web.archive.org/web/20080316072614/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/faithnomore/albums/album/321678/review/6068107/angel_dust . March 16, 2008 . dead .
  5. Web site: CG: Artist 449 . Christgau. Robert . December 17, 2008 . Robert Christgau.
  6. Faith No More: Angel Dust in the wind . https://archive.today/20120710145546/http://negele.org/db/index.php3?band=2&year=1992&month=6&id=980 . dead . July 10, 2012 . June 15, 2008 . Aswad . Jem . June 1992 . Reflex . 25 .
  7. Web site: Operation Clambake presents: Oxford Capacity Analysis . August 17, 2008 . Xenu.net.
  8. Theisen, Tiffany. "Do You Have Any Children? - What Is Your Religion? - How Old Are You? - And The Answer Is: - It's None of the Interviewer's Business", The Orlando Sentinel, May 8, 2002.
  9. Book: Corrigan, John. The Oxford Handbook of Religion and Emotion. 2008. Oxford University Press, USA. 978-0-19-517021-4. 128. John Corrigan.