Pictures of Matchstick Men | |
Cover: | Pictures of Matchstick Men by Status Quo UK vinyl.jpg |
Caption: | A-side label of the UK vinyl release |
Type: | single |
Artist: | the Status Quo |
Album: | Picturesque Matchstickable Messages from the Status Quo |
B-Side: | Gentleman Joe's Sidewalk Café |
Studio: | Pye, London[1] |
Label: | Pye |
Producer: | John Schroeder |
Prev Title: | Almost but Not Quite There |
Prev Year: | 1967 |
Next Title: | Black Veils of Melancholy |
Next Year: | 1968 |
"Pictures of Matchstick Men" is the first hit single by British rock band The Status Quo. It was released on 5 January 1968.[2]
The song reached number seven on the UK Singles Chart, number eight in Canada, and number 12 on the US Billboard Hot 100, becoming their only top-40 single in the United States. Francis Rossi confirmed on DVD2 of the Pictures set, that it was originally intended to be a B-side to "Gentleman Joe's Sidewalk Cafe", but it was decided to swap the B-side and the A-side of the single.
There are two versions, one in stereo and another in mono, with significant differences: the original single was in mono and has the trademark wah-wah guitar in the breaks between lyrics, but this is omitted in stereo.
The song opens with a single guitar repeatedly playing a simple four-note riff before the bass, rhythm guitar, organ, drums and vocals begin. "Pictures of Matchstick Men" is one of a number of songs from the late 1960s which feature the flanging audio effect. The band's next single release, "Black Veils of Melancholy", was similar but flopped, which caused a change of musical direction.
Rossi (living in a prefab in Camberwell at the time)[3] later said of the song:
The "matchstick men" reference is to the paintings of Salford artist L. S. Lowry.
"Pictures of Matchstick Men" is featured in Men in Black 3, in a scene set in 1969 at Andy Warhol's Factory. It is also featured in the computer game Mafia III, set in 1968, where it can be heard on the radio. In the Sky documentary The United Way, the song was featured in the clips of triumphs of the Busby Babes and Manchester United.