Modern English I Melt With You 1 Hour











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Modern English - I Melt With You (1 Hour) • I Melt with You is a song by the British new wave band Modern English. The song, produced by Hugh Jones, was the second single from their 1982 album After the Snow. It became the band's most successful single, largely in the United States, where it was featured in the film Valley Girl and on MTV. It reached number seven on Billboard's Mainstream Rock chart in 1983 and a re-release reached number 76 on its Hot 100 chart in 1990 (after reaching number 78 in 1983). • Background • Modern English formed in 1979 in Colchester, Essex, England.[2] The group signed with 4AD, a British independent record label, in 1980. • The band's vocalist, Robbie Grey, described England at the time of the song's writing to be a bleak place, due to an ongoing economic downturn: There was no money. There'd be no power—you'd be at home with candles. [4] These conditions and his fears of a nuclear war inspired I Melt with You . The song depicts a couple making love while an atomic bomb is dropped.[5][6] In an interview, he described the song as a love song , but more about the good and bad in people [...] The last thing we wanted was to write a song where boy meets girl, they go to the cinema and make love, and that's the end of it. [7] • Musically, the song came together in the band's rehearsal space in London while recording their second album, After the Snow. Producer Hugh Jones encouraged Grey to softly sing the vocal track, as opposed to his natural inclination to shout. He subsequently employed a softer vocal technique on the rest of the album.[7] • The original 4:11 album version features no call-and-response vocals in the second verse, and features a synthesizer break that begins at the second chorus. The more commonly known version of the song is the 3:50 single mix, in which the synthesizer riff is audible during the first chorus, an octave lower than on subsequent choruses, along with contrasting background vocals in the second verse - You should know better sung before Dream of better lives..., etc. Eight bars from the instrumental break after the second chorus are cut in the single version, such that only the second rendering of the line the future's...open wide (lyrics sung twice on the album version) is present and the guitar riff leading up to this line thus fades in a bit more abruptly, accounting for the time difference between the album and single versions. The latter version was mixed down to mono from its original stereo recording. While both the album and single versions have circulated on radio, the true stereo mix of the single version has rarely been available since. • Commercial performance • The song was released in the United Kingdom, in May 1982, by label 4AD. The song was mainly a success in the United States,[7] having become a sleeper hit before becoming Modern English's and 4AD's first chart hit.[8] It first began receiving radio airplay as an import single, and bounced from station to station, gaining momentum.[9] In April 1983, the song peaked at number 7 on the US Billboard Mainstream Rock chart[10] and number 78 on the main Billboard Hot 100.[11] I Melt with You was particularly popular in dance clubs and on MTV,[6][12] peaking at number 60 on Billboard's Dance/Disco Top 80 in March 1983.[13] The single's success drastically altered the band's experience, according to Grey: Someone picked up an import from England and started playing it on mainstream radio in America, and it just went like wildfire. We used to play to 200 people in art college; the next thing we knew, we were in Daytona Beach playing to 5,000 people who knew all the words [to the song]. [7] • Modern English re-recorded the song for their 1990 album Pillow Lips. The song re-appeared on the Hot 100, peaking at number 76 in July,[14] and re-appeared on the Dance charts, peaking at number 25 in August.[15] The reformed original line up of the band re-recorded it again in 2010 in a completely reworked style for inclusion in the movie I Melt With You. • The song is among the top 500 songs ever played on U.S. radio.[8] The group received a lifetime achievement award at the BMI Awards in 2017, celebrating 3 million plays of the song.[16] It is ranked #39 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 80s.[17] As Modern English's only major hit song, they are generally considered one-hit wonders, despite not reaching the Top 40 of the U.S. Hot 100 during either of its runs on that chart.[2][6] It was ranked #7 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s

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