Rotterdam (Or Anywhere) Explained

Rotterdam (Or Anywhere)
Cover:The Beautiful South - Rotterdam.jpg
Type:single
Artist:the Beautiful South
Album:Blue Is the Colour
B-Side:
  • "A Minute's Silence"
  • "Pollard"
Released:[1] [2]
Length:3:40
Label:Go! Discs
Producer:Jon Kelly
Prev Title:Pretenders to the Throne
Prev Year:1995
Next Title:Don't Marry Her
Next Year:1996

"Rotterdam (Or Anywhere)" is a song by English pop rock music group the Beautiful South, taken from their fifth studio album, Blue Is the Colour (1996). It was written by Paul Heaton and Dave Rotheray, was produced by Jon Kelly, and features Jacqui Abbott on lead vocals. Released in September 1996 by Go! Discs, the song reached number five on the UK Singles Chart and stayed in the UK top 40 for nine weeks.

Background

Paul Heaton told The Guardian: "I wrote the lyrics [sic] to Rotterdam (Or Anywhere) sitting in a bar on the north end of Lijnbaan, Rotterdam's main shopping street. The bar was modern-looking and not friendly at all. It was in January 1996, about three in the afternoon. I'd probably been up all night drinking, I probably smelled, and I'd walked into their bar and plonked my bag down. I wasn't the sort the owners wanted in there. They probably thought: 'Oh God, we don't want this bloke to be our regular. Let’s make sure he never comes back.' So they were trying to think of different excuses to move me on, like: 'You can't sit there, there's a private party coming in.' I got really pissed off – and I wrote a short story that became a very bitchy song, scribbling it down while sitting there."[3]

Critical reception

Jennifer Nine from Melody Maker wrote that the song "is prancingly nagging; maybe it's its unprovoked attack on poor old Rotterdam; maybe it's Jacqueline's voice, a less subtle instrument than her predecessor Brianna's, treacling off into Eddie Reader-land."[4]

Music video

The music video for "Rotterdam" features Jacqui Abbott walking along an empty British motorway, carrying a vintage Shell fuel can, followed by a series of miscellaneous costumed extras, including a dance troupe, beekeepers, cowboys, a man with a sandwich board, snorkellers and a pantomime cow, with successive groups changing with each verse of the song. Abbott walks on, seemingly oblivious to the following crowd. The rest of the band wait for Abbott while sitting on the back of a vintage blue Chevrolet GMC pick-up truck. Abbott told The Guardian: "The Rotterdam video had a circus theme, and it was filmed on a stretch of disused motorway where they road-tested vehicles. All day, I walked up and down, miming and holding a petrol can, with jugglers and unicyclists behind me. I think the people watching just thought – as we did: 'What the hell is going on?'"[3] Towards the end of the video all of the figures following Abbott give up on the parade with an air of resigned disappointment.

Track listings

  1. "Rotterdam"
  2. "A Minute's Silence"
  1. "Rotterdam"
  2. "A Minute's Silence"
  3. "Pollard"

Personnel

The Beautiful South

Additional musicians

Technical

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1996–1997)Peak
position
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[9] 30
Iceland (Íslenski Listinn Topp 40)[10] 19

Year-end charts

Usage in sports

The song gained prominence as a terrace chant for association football in the United Kingdom. The lyrics at the end of the chorus would be changed to say that the opposing team "get battered, everywhere they go". English supporters were noted to sing this around Wembley Stadium during UEFA Euro 2020, changing the lyrics to "Scotland get battered, everywhere they go". The two countries, which already had a football rivalry, were drawn into the same group during the tournament.[13] West Ham United, while often using the song to deride rivals Tottenham Hotspur or Chelsea F.C., would change the lyrics to "West Ham are massive, everywhere we go" to reflect the club's improved progress during the 2021–22 season.[14]

External links

Notes and References

  1. New Releases: Singles. Music Week. 43. 21 September 1996. 2 July 2021.
  2. Web site: Rotterdam. Amazon. 2 July 2021.
  3. Web site: The Beautiful South: how we made Rotterdam (Or Anywhere). Yates. Henry. 30 March 2020. The Guardian. 4 January 2022.
  4. Jennifer. Nine. Albums. Melody Maker. 9 November 1996. 51. 28 May 2024.
  5. Rotterdam. The Beautiful South. 1996. UK 7-inch single sleeve. Go! Discs. GOD 155, 850 728-7.
  6. Rotterdam. The Beautiful South. 1996. UK cassette single sleeve. Go! Discs. GODMC 155, 850 728-4.
  7. Rotterdam. The Beautiful South. 1996. European CD single liner notes. Go! Discs. 850 728-2.
  8. Rotterdam. The Beautiful South. 1996. UK CD single liner notes. Go! Discs. GODCD 155, 850 729-2.
  9. Eurochart Hot 100 Singles. Music & Media. 13. 44. 2 November 1996. 16. 25 September 2020.
  10. News: Íslenski Listinn Topp 40 (14.11. – 20.11. '96). Dagblaðið Vísir. is. 16. 15 November 1996. 2 October 2019.
  11. Top 100 Singles 1996. Music Week. 25. 18 January 1997.
  12. Web site: Najlepsze single na UK Top 40–1996 wg sprzedaży. pl. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20150604144645/http://hosting1642755.az.pl/sp%20uk%20best%201996.html. 4 June 2015. 28 March 2019.
  13. Web site: Mitten . Andy . We're in a golden era of chants, so let's forget the cliched and unoriginal ones . . March 30, 2022 . March 14, 2024 . subscription. March 30, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230330220537/https://theathletic.com/3215963/2022/03/30/were-in-a-golden-era-of-chants-so-lets-forget-the-cliched-and-unoriginal-ones/ . live.
  14. Web site: Thomas . Roshane . How West Ham became 'massive' – the origin of the chant that became the soundtrack to a season . . March 24, 2022 . March 14, 2024. subscription. June 9, 2023. https://web.archive.org/web/20230609202011/https://theathletic.com/3204459/2022/03/24/how-west-ham-became-massive-the-origin-of-the-chant-that-became-the-soundtrack-to-a-season/ . live.