Mirror in the Bathroom | |
Cover: | Mirror in the Bathroom (The Beat single) cover art.jpg |
Caption: | One of UK vinyl editions |
Type: | single |
Artist: | The Beat |
Album: | I Just Can't Stop It |
B-Side: | Jackpot |
Released: | [1] |
Genre: | |
Label: | Go-Feet |
Producer: | Bob Sargeant |
Prev Title: | Hands Off...She's Mine |
Prev Title2: | Twist and Crawl |
Prev Year: | 1980 |
Next Title: | Best Friend |
Next Title2: | Stand Down Margaret |
Next Year: | 1980 |
Mirror in the Bathroom (Mark "Spike" Stent Remix) | |
Type: | single |
Artist: | the Beat |
Recorded: | 1980, 1995 |
Genre: | |
Label: | |
Prev Title: | Ackee-1-2-3 |
Prev Year: | 1983 |
Next Title: | Mirror in the Bathroom CD2 |
Next Year: | 1996 |
"Mirror in the Bathroom" is a single by the British ska band the Beat, released as a single in 1980 from their debut studio album I Just Can't Stop It. It reached number 4 on the UK Singles Chart and consequently was their highest charting release in the UK until 1983. It was released again in 1995 as a 12" single and early in 1996 as a CD single (both containing contemporary club remixes) to promote . The reissued single reached number 44 in 1996.
The song was ranked at #3 among the top ten "Tracks of the Year" for 1980 by NME.
According to composer and singer Dave Wakeling, the song originated when he was working on a building site and he got up for work one winter morning after "a couple of drinks" and found his clothes still wet on the bathroom floor. While shaving, he says,On his way to work on his motorbike, he thought about the idea of "The door is locked, just you and me"; and reflected on the nature of narcissism:When he first heard David Steele's "revolutionary" 2/2 bassline, he thought, "Wow, that poem I was writing on the motorbike fits it like a glove."
The title of the song led some to believe, mistakenly, that it was about drawing lines of cocaine on a mirror. Wakeling says that "in America in the early '80s, everybody gave me knowing winks and said, 'Oh, I know what that one's about, then, Dave.' And it wasn't that mirror in the bathroom at all, it was the one on the wall, and not the one on your knee."
Jerry Dammers wanted the Beat to release "Mirror in the Bathroom" as their first single for his company 2 Tone Records, but Chrysalis Records, 2 Tone's parent company, refused to allow them to release it as a single. Instead, they released a ska version of the Smokey Robinson and the Miracles song "The Tears of a Clown". When that record was successful, the Beat formed their own label, Go-Feet Records, which released "Mirror in the Bathroom". It was released in April 1980 and reached No. 4 in the UK Singles Chart.[4]
"Mirror in the Bathroom" was ranked at No. 3 in the NME "Tracks of the Year" list for 1980,[5] and at No. 24 in Sounds magazine's "Singles of the Year" list for 1980. In 2003, Q magazine ranked the song at No. 517 in their list of the "1001 Best Songs Ever".[6] In 2002, Gary Mulholland included the song in his list This is Uncool: The 500 Best Singles Since Punk Rock.
The single was re-released on 21 April 2012 for Record Store Day 2012 as a limited edition 750 run of 7" copies. Its B-side is "Too Nice to Talk To".
Ranking Roger's album Pop Off the Head Top includes a new remix version of "Mirror in the Bathroom" produced by Gaudi.
The song is included in the soundtracks of the 1987 film Someone to Watch Over Me, the 1997 film Grosse Pointe Blank,[7] and the 1999 film SLC Punk!, by a project called Fifi.
12" single, 74321232061 (1995)
A promo 12" containing only the first two tracks (VAIN 001) was also released.
CD single, 74321232062 (January 8, 1996)