The Boy in the Bubble explained

The Boy in the Bubble
Cover:The Boy in the Bubble.jpg
Border:yes
Type:single
Artist:Paul Simon
Album:Graceland
Recorded:October 1985
Label:Warner Bros.
Producer:Paul Simon
Chronology:Paul Simon
Prev Title:Graceland
Prev Year:1986
Next Title:Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes
Next Year:1987

"The Boy in the Bubble" is a song by the American singer-songwriter Paul Simon. It was the third single from his seventh studio album, Graceland (1986), released on Warner Bros. Records. Written by Simon and Forere Motloheloa (an accordionist from Lesotho), its lyrics explore starvation and terrorism, juxtaposed with wit and optimism.

The single—released in February 1987—performed well on charts worldwide. In the United States, it was mainly successful on the Album Rock Tracks chart, where it peaked at No. 15. Outside the U.S., "The Boy in the Bubble" was a top 20 hit in the Netherlands, and top 30 in the United Kingdom and Belgium.

Background

The song retains the only lyric Simon managed to compose on his South African trip: "The way the camera follows us in slo-mo, the way we look to us all." The imagery in the video, directed by Jim Blashfield,[1] was inspired by film clips of the John F. Kennedy assassination, as well as Ronald Reagan's attempted assassination.[2] Adrian Belew was asked to play guitar synthesizer on the song and recalled that Simon only had a few lyrics complete by the time he first met with Belew.[3]

The song's title was inspired by the medical cases of David Vetter and Ted DeVita.[4] [5] Similar to "Graceland," "The Boy in the Bubble" took between three and four months to complete.

Critical reception

Cash Box said it was "another brilliant cross-cultural gem. African rhythms, zydeco spice and Simon's intelligent, penetrating lyrics are near perfection."[6] In its review of the 25h anniversary edition of Graceland, Pitchfork wrote thought the song was "a thriller that ties together threads of technological progress, medicine, terrorism, surveillance, pop music, inequality, and superstition with little more than a series of sentence fragments, all tossed off in the same deadpan delivery."[7]

Personnel

Chart performance

"The Boy in the Bubble" performed on singles charts in several territories worldwide. In the U.S., the song reached a peak of No. 86 on the Billboard Hot 100 on March 21, 1987; it spent four weeks on the chart as a whole. It performed better on the magazine's Album Rock Tracks chart, where it placed at No. 15 on March 28, 1987, where it spent nine weeks total.

In the United Kingdom, the song premiered on the UK Singles Chart on November 30, 1986 at number 81,[8] and rose over the following weeks to a peak of No. 26 on January 11, 1987. On the Dutch Nationale Top 100, it reached a peak of No. 16. On Belgium's Ultratop 50, it hit No. 28, and in New Zealand, it peaked at No. 43.

Charts

Chart (1987)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[9] 46
US Album Rock Tracks (Billboard)[10] 15

Notes

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Music Videos Directed by Jim Blashfield. Blashfield Studio.
  2. David Fricke. David Fricke. October 23, 1986. African Odyssey. Rolling Stone. New York City. Wenner Media LLC. 485. 77–80. 0035-791X.
  3. Web site: Prasad . Anil . Adrian Belew - The Love Bubble . May 20, 2024 . Innerviews: Music Without Borders . en.
  4. Web site: David Vetter's Legacy. American Experience. PBS.
  5. Book: The Art and Science of Interface and Interaction Design (Vol. 1). Christa Sommerer . Lakhmi C. Jain . Laurent Mignonneau. 2008. vii. Springer.
  6. Single Releases. Cash Box. February 14, 1987. 2022-08-08. 9.
  7. Web site: Tangari . Joe . August 1, 2012 . Paul Simon: Graceland: 25th Anniversary Edition . May 20, 2024 . Pitchfork . en-US.
  8. Web site: Archive Chart: 1986-11-30" . Official Charts Company. August 13, 2015.
  9. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970 - 1992. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book. St Ives, NSW. 1993. 0-646-11917-6.
  10. [{{BillboardURLbyName|artist=Paul Simon|chart=Mainstream Rock Tracks}} Paul Simon - Chart history]. August 13, 2015. Billboard. Prometheus Global Media.