Shiny Happy People | |
Cover: | R.E.M. - Shiny Happy People.jpg |
Alt: | A wood grain with the artist name and song title carved into it |
Type: | single |
Artist: | R.E.M. |
Album: | Out of Time |
B-Side: | Forty Second Song |
Released: | [1] |
Recorded: | September–October 1990 |
Genre: | |
Length: |
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Label: | Warner Bros. |
Producer: |
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Prev Title: | Losing My Religion |
Prev Year: | 1991 |
Next Title: | Near Wild Heaven |
Next Year: | 1991 |
"Shiny Happy People" is a song by the American rock band R.E.M., released as the second single from their seventh studio album, Out of Time (1991). It features guest vocals by Kate Pierson of the B-52's, who also appears in the music video.
"Shiny Happy People" was released as a single in May 1991 in the United Kingdom, and four months later in the United States by Warner Bros. Records. It reached number 10 on the US Billboard Hot 100, the fourth and last R.E.M. single to reach the top 10. It reached number six on the UK Singles Chart, becoming the first R.E.M. song to reach the top 10 in the UK and the only one to reach the top 10 in both countries. It is R.E.M.'s most successful song in Ireland, where it reached number two, and in Germany, where it reached number 10. Its music video, directed by Katherine Dieckmann, was inspired by the 1948 movie Letter From an Unknown Woman.[4]
R.E.M. performed the song with Pierson on Saturday Night Live on April 13, 1991.[5] It was used as the theme song for the unaired pilot of the sitcom Friends, before it was replaced by The Rembrandts' "I'll Be There for You". R.E.M. was ambivalent about being known for a pop song widely perceived as lacking gravitas.
"Shiny Happy People" is described as an accessible and optimistic pop song. It contains waltz-time strings, "rippling" guitars and "hippy" lyrics, and guest vocals from Kate Pierson.[6] Pierson said she felt the song was a "homage" to her band, the B-52s. R.E.M. had already recorded the song when she arrived, and gave her no direction, telling her "do whatever you want".
R.E.M.'s lead singer, Michael Stipe, described "Shiny Happy People" as a "really fruity, kind of bubblegum song".[7] Pierson interpreted the line "throw your love around" to mean "to share your love and grow your love with others. It's not mindless at all. It's a song about spreading love."[8]
According to some reports, the phrase "shiny happy people" was taken from Chinese propaganda posters used after the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests.[9] However, no statements from the band members have been found to support this.[10] Pierson said the song was "supposed to be shiny and happy ... So I can’t imagine that R.E.M. was thinking at the time, 'Oh, we want this song to be about Chinese government propaganda.'"
Larry Flick of Billboard wrote that "Shiny Happy People" took R.E.M. further into the mainstream. He praised Pierson's "splendid vocal harmonies" on the "infectious, sing-along" chorus.[11] Richard Wagamese of the Calgary Herald felt Stipe "sounds almost ebullient on the bouncy 'Shiny Happy People' and that alone is radical. R.E.M.'s guitar foundation is also replaced by the occasional bass clarinet, cello, and flugelhorn."[12] The Drogheda Independent declared it "unbelievably catchy",[13] while Scottish Dundee Courier described it as "sardonic but delicious disposable pop".[14] A reviewer from Evening Herald called it a "gilt-edged" pop hit.[15] Liverpool Echo felt the song "comes at you concealed as bubble gum pop in the guise of an opening string arrangement even Kylie Minogue wouldn't thank you for—before it throws off the cloak of conformity and gets down to a more resonant rendition of power pop".[16] In Melody Maker, David Fricke wrote that it contained a "bizarre" mix of features that "you can't but help but laugh along with",[17] and Paul Lester wrote that it's "not one of their best".[18]
Music & Media described the song as "heaven on earth",[19] noting that Pierson's voice is "as prominent" as it was on Iggy Pop's song "Candy".[20] Terry Staunton from NME complimented it as "a lilting waltz before breaking into a sun-drenched pop anthem, a warm and welcome blood relative to the B-52s' own 'Love Shack'."[21] People wrote that the guest singer "added some spark".[22] Mark Frith from Smash Hits remarked that the song is "very summery, optimistic and has some fine vocals" from Pierson. He added, "It's so good that it will make you too want to go around and give the world a great big hug. Summer's here and everything's groovy."[23] Celia Farber from Spin found that it "is the most accessible" song of the album, noting the waltz-time break in the middle of the song as one of "the least R.E.M.-like stuff", that works best on the album.[24] The Sunday Tribune felt that it "waltzes joyfully" with the added vocal attraction of Pierson,[25] and noted the "joyous" and "celebratory" noises, calling it "one of 1991's pure pop highlights".[26]
In a 2016 retrospective review, Justin Chadwick from Albumism described the song as "buoyant" and R.E.M.'s "most unabashedly pop-fueled composition of their career". He added further, "Regardless of the song's true inspirations or whether you care for the song or not, I suspect most can agree that the soaring backing vocals supplied by Kate Pierson ... are the unequivocal highlight."[27] In 1998, the Daily Vault's Christopher Thelen said it's the song "that dared to show a new side of R.E.M. — a, well, happy side. Who woulda thunk it? The song is a tad cornball, but is infectiously catchy, nonetheless."[28]
The accompanying music video for "Shiny Happy People" was directed by American film and music video director Katherine Dieckmann.[4] She was asked by the band to direct the video, and drew some inspiration from a scene in the 1948 movie Letter From an Unknown Woman by German director Max Ophuls. In this scene, a couple goes to a carnival with a railroad car attraction. Rotating landscape backdrops roll past their "window", and eventually we learn they're propelled by an old man pedaling a stationary bicycle behind the scenes. Dieckmann wanted to re-create this situation, using a large children's painting for the moving mural. Stipe suggested her to contact a friend that was schoolteacher, having her fifth-grade class create the backdrop.[4]
In its 2006 "Song of the Summer" countdown, CBC Radio's Freestyle named "Shiny Happy People" 1991's "Song of the Summer".[29] [30] By contrast, in 2006, the song received the No. 1 position on AOL Music's list of the "111 Wussiest Songs of All Time".[31] Blender magazine also ranked the song No. 35 on its list of the "50 Worst Songs Ever",[32] and Q included it in a list of "Ten Terrible Records by Great Artists" in 2005.[33]
When Stipe made an appearance on Space Ghost Coast to Coast in 1995, he said he hated the song. It was one of their few Warner-released singles not included on their 2003 greatest hits album In Time, and R.E.M. have rarely played it.[34] However, over time, Stipe's position on the song has softened. Speaking in 2011, Stipe said he was "always at peace" with it, but that it was "embarrassing" that it had become a hit. He said: In 2024, Mike Mills stated: "It started out as not the bubblegum epic that it became. I wrote the thing on acoustic guitar. We made it a song about kids. It's for kids. It's a great song, I'm proud of it, we don't hate it."[35]
All songs were written by Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, and Michael Stipe unless otherwise stated.
Personnel are adapted from the Out of Time liner notes.[43]
R.E.M.
Additional musicians
Chart (1991) | Peak position |
---|---|
Europe (Eurochart Hot 100)[44] | 16 |
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)[45] | 12 |
US Cash Box Top 100[46] | 8 |
Chart (1991) | Position | |
---|---|---|
Belgium (Ultratop)[47] | 62 | |
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[48] | 29 | |
Europe (European Hot 100 Singles)[49] | 66 | |
Europe (European Hit Radio)[50] | 36 | |
Germany (Official German Charts)[51] | 37 | |
UK Singles (OCC)[52] | 69 | |
US Billboard Hot 100[53] | 100 |