Song Lyric Sunday – New Wave Music

The genre for this week’s Song Lyric Sunday is New Wave. Thank you to our host, Jim Adams, for the prompt. New Wave Music really came into its own in the early 80s with a rush of new bands. It was cool and chic and the bands had a definite new look and sound. The use of synthesizers became more prominent. One of my favorite bands at that time was Tears For Fears. Their biggest and most recognizable song is “Everybody Wants To Rule The World”. It has been covered many times over the 30 plus years since its release, by different artists and featured in TV shows and movies, Most recently it was featured in the Budweiser video for The FIFA World Cup theme “The World is Yours To Take” by Lil Baby and Tears For Fears (See end of post for video)

The Song

This song is about the quest for power, and how it can have unfortunate consequences. In an interview with Mix magazine, the band’s producer Chris Hughes explained that they spent months working on “Shout,” and near the end of the sessions, Roland Orzabal came into the studio and played two simple chords on his acoustic guitar, which became the basis for the song. Said Hughes: “‘Everybody Wants to Rule the World’ was so simple and went down so quickly, it was effortless, really. In fact, as a piece of recording history, it’s bland as hell.”

This was the first US #1 hit for Tears for Fears. “Shout” went to #1 two months later.

“Everybody Wants To Rule The World” is a line from the 1980 Clash song “Charlie Don’t Surf.” Did Tears for Fears lift it? Joe Strummer of The Clash thought so. He recounted a story to Musician magazine about confronting Roland Orzabal in a restaurant, informing Orzabal that “you owe me a fiver.” Strummer said that Roland reached in his pocket and produced a five pound note, ostensibly as compensation for poaching the line for his hit title.

Although musically this is quite a jangly and catchy song, its lyrical theme is actually pretty dark. “The concept is quite serious – it’s about everybody wanting power, about warfare and the misery it causes,” Curt Smith of Tears For Fears explained on the band’s website.

Dennis Miller used this over the closing credits of his HBO TV show, which ran from 1994-2002.

Curt Smith did a solo, acoustic version of this for the soundtrack to The Private Public, a 2001 movie where he made his acting debut.

The song was covered by Lorde for the Hunger Games: Catching Fire soundtrack, which was released by Republic. She reworked Tears for Fears’ tune into a haunting dirge, bringing out its inherent darkness. The label’s executive VP Tom Mackay explained to Billboard magazine that the New Zealand singer-songwriter was wrapping her Pure Heroine album at the time tracks were being solicited for the soundtrack. “There was not time for her to write a demo, submit it and come back after changes [are requested],” Mackay said. “Like a lot of songs on this album, it’s an artistic leap. When we heard it, we were amazed how she reshaped it-it’s hard not to think about President Snow and the Capitol in the film and in the book.”

In a season 2 episode of the TV series Mr. Robot, the character Angela Moss (Portia Doubleday) sings a plaintive karaoke version of this song as she struggles through a moral crisis. “You really have a desire to rule the world?” a guy asks her when she comes to the bar. “Oh, my desires go way beyond that,” she replies.

The band had trouble getting into the original incarnation of the song, which featured the lyric “everybody wants to go to war.” When it was changed to the title phrase, everything clicked. “Once we got those lyrics, it was a joyful song,” Orzabal explained.

Tears For Fears spent most of 1985 touring in support of the Songs From The Big Chair album. It took so much out of them physically and emotionally, they didn’t go back to work until a few years later, finally emerging in 1989 with their album The Seeds Of Love. Curt Smith explained in Outlook magazine: “We soon realized that touring isn’t much fun with a bunch of drum machines and sequencers. We didn’t get into the music business to be computer programmers. I did it to be a musician! On that tour, I just went out and did the album for nine months. If people wanted to hear the album, they could’ve stayed home and listened to it.”

This was used in the 1985 movie Real Genius, about a group of teen geniuses, led by Val Kilmer, who try to foil their professor’s plot to sell their high-powered laser to the military. It was also featured in the 1997 comedy Romy and Michele’s High School Reunion, starring Lisa Kudrow and Mira Sorvino, the 2015 NWA biopic  Straight Outta Compton and the ’80s-themed Steven Spielberg film Ready Player One (2018).

This was featured in several TV shows, including ER (“Sharp Relief,” 1998), Cold Case (“Greed,” 2004), Malcolm in the Middle (“Lois Battles Jamie,” 2005), Numb3rs (“Hot Shot,” 2006), Brothers & Sisters (“States of the Union,” 2007), The Wire (“React Quotes,” 2008), Medium (“But for the Grace of God,” 2008), Psych (“A Nightmare on State Street,” 2014), and Riverdale (“Chapter Thirty-Nine: The Midnight Club,” 2018).

Because “Shout” was the group’s first single in the rest of the world, Tears For Fears thought it should also be their first release in the US, but the record label insisted “Everybody Wants To Rule The World” was better suited for their American debut. “Which is interesting in retrospect,” Smith told Consequence of Sound, “because it was one of those times when the record company was right and we were wrong, because for America, yes, it was a better first single.”

The 30th anniversary re-release of the album contains a few different versions of the song, including a live performance from Canada’s Massey Hall, an alternate single, and an instrumental rendition. Smith said of the instrumental: “When you strip a vocal off a track, you get to then appreciate how that track was built because you’re just listening to the elements of the music behind it.”

Gloria Gaynor and the Glee Cast are among the artists to cover this song. Weezer included it on their 2019 covers collection known as The Teal Album.

In 2016, the musician Ted Yoder played this in his backyard on a hammered dulcimer. Streamed to Facebook Live, it got over 100 million views, earning Yoder the title, “Dulcimer Dad.”

Courtesy of Songfacts

The Lyrics

Welcome to your life
There's no turning back
Even while we sleep
We will find you

Acting on your best behaviour
Turn your back on mother nature
Everybody wants to rule the world

It's my own design
It's my own remorse
Help me to decide
Help me make the most

Of freedom and of pleasure
Nothing ever lasts forever
Everybody wants to rule the world

There's a room where the light won't find you
Holding hands while the walls come tumbling down
When they do I'll be right behind you

So glad we've almost made it
So sad they had to fade it
Everybody wants to rule the world

I can't stand this indecision
Married with a lack of vision
Everybody wants to rule the world
Say that you'll never, never, never, never need it
One headline why believe it?
Everybody wants to rule the world

All for freedom and for pleasure
Nothing ever lasts forever
Everybody wants to rule the world
Writer/s: Christopher Merrick Hughes, Ian Stanley, Roland Orzabal 
Publisher: BMG Rights Management, Songtrust Ave, Tratore, Universal Music Publishing Group, Warner Chappell Music, Inc.
Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind

  7 comments for “Song Lyric Sunday – New Wave Music

  1. January 29, 2023 at 8:25 pm

    Great song, and always one of my favorites!

    • Christine Bolton
      January 30, 2023 at 9:22 am

      Thanks John ☺️

  2. January 29, 2023 at 8:51 am

    I guess this is why people get involved in politics, as I have no desire to put my life on public display, but some people love this. Nice choice Christine.

    • Christine Bolton
      January 30, 2023 at 9:14 am

      Thanks Jim! ☺️

  3. January 29, 2023 at 6:58 am

    What a great choice brilliant song, I remember the older two boys were in the scouts and they went away camping ….they made a presentation about their times , they had written a brilliant song which they sang while acting out what happened and all to the tune of everybody wants to rule the world. I remember the chorus was ” There’s a room that you dry your clothes in while the rain comes tumbling down!”
    I have never forgotten that and it must 36years ago and I still remember it especially when I hear this song! 💜💜💜

    • Christine Bolton
      January 30, 2023 at 9:21 am

      How interesting Willow! Isn’t it funny how those things stick with you? ☺️ Whenever I hear the intro to the song it just puts me straight back in the 80s. I was still livi g in England when it came out.

      • January 30, 2023 at 9:38 am

        It’s amazing how evocative music can be. Did you read in my post how my youngest actually worked for a record company and they handled their come back … Late 90s early 00s

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