Butterfly (Lloyd Cole Song)
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"Butterfly" is a song by English singer, songwriter and musician Lloyd Cole, released in 1991 as the third and final single from his second studio album ''
Don't Get Weird on Me Babe ''Don't Get Weird on Me Babe'' is the second solo album by the English musician Lloyd Cole, released in 1991. The title comes from a Raymond Carver expression. Unlike the original release, the American version of the album leads with the "rock" ...
''. The song was written by Cole, and produced by Cole, Fred Maher and Paul Hardiman.


Background

Cole wrote "Butterfly" on the piano. It was the last track on his second studio album ''Don't Get Weird on Me Babe'' for which he recorded the vocals. The lyrics for the song were left incomplete until towards the end of the album's recording sessions. In a 1991 interview on the Irish TV show ''An Eye on the Music'', Cole said, "I hadn't written
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because there just hadn't been time, I'd been doing something else all the time. We had three days left so I said o the others in the studio 'Go do something for a while, leave me in here' and I actually wrote the whole lyric in about half an hour which is quite quick by my standards." The song's lyrics have been described as "a dark, twisted tale of possession and pain masquerading as love". Speaking of the song, Cole told the '' Chicago Tribune'' in 1991, "The actual sound of 'Butterfly' is pretty aggressive once it gets going. Those chords are not pretty chords. I think it's very nice to juxtapose lyrics like that against a scenario of music which people tend to associate with
Barry Manilow Barry Manilow (born Barry Alan Pincus; June 17, 1943) is an American singer and songwriter with a career that spans seven decades. His hit recordings include "Could It Be Magic", " Somewhere Down the Road", " Mandy", "I Write the Songs", " Can ...
. A lot of people heard my orchestral side and thought, 'Oh, he's gone soft.' I think 'Butterfly'
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of the hardest things I've ever done."


Release

Cole had originally agreed to Polydor's wishes for " She's a Girl and I'm a Man" to be the lead single from ''Don't Get Weird on Me Babe'' on the condition that "There for Her" or another track from the album's "orchestral side" would be the second single. The label ultimately decided to release the more commercial " Weeping Wine" as the second single instead without Cole's input. In early 1992, Polydor decided to release "Butterfly", one of the album's orchestral tracks, as a single and Cole agreed to their request of commissioning someone to remix the track. Polydor chose Adam Peters who, in turn, created a near seven-minute version of the track titled "The Planet Ann Charlotte Mix", which was included on the 12-inch and CD formats of the single. Cole later recalled of Peters' remix, "I thought what he did with 'Butterfly' was wonderful and completely unexpected – he didn't even keep the piece in the same key. He was thinking outside the box, or at least outside my box." He added to ''Hearsay Magazine'' in 2000, "At the time I wanted to go further with being less like myself and what he'd done with something I'd written was far more radical than anything I had done." Cole was so impressed with the remix that he invited Peter to come to New York and work with him. Peters would serve as producer among other roles on Cole's 1993 album '' Bad Vibes'' and his 1995 album ''
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''.


Critical reception

Upon its release as a single, John Mulvey of '' NME'' felt that, on "Butterfly", Cole "practises his hard bastard fantasies while an orchestra swirls and broods behind him" and added that he come across "not half as mean as he hopes, of course, but still effectively sullen". Mulvey felt that Adam Peters' "Planet Ann Charlotte Mix" was "a failure, but a noble one", commenting that he "tries to pull off an ' Unfinished Sympathy'-style coup by adding a techno pulse and a soulful female vocal to all the strings and surly suffering". In a review of ''Don't Get Weird on Me Babe'', Jon Wilde of ''
Melody Maker ''Melody Maker'' was a British weekly music magazine, one of the world's earliest music weeklies; according to its publisher, IPC Media, the earliest. It was founded in 1926, largely as a magazine for dance band musicians, by Leicester-born ...
'' described the song as "preposterously melodramatic". Diana Valois of '' The Morning Call'' noted its "strong drum beat" and " Chris Isaak-meets- Marc Almond sense of romantic surrealism".


Track listing

7–inch single (UK and Europe) #"Butterfly" – 3:02 #"
Jennifer She Said "Jennifer She Said" is a song by British band Lloyd Cole and the Commotions, released in 1987 as the second single from their third and final studio album ''Mainstream'' (1987). The song was written by the band and produced by Ian Stanley. It pe ...
" (Recorded live at the Hammersmith Odeon, 26 October 1991) – 3:20 12–inch single (UK and Europe) #"Butterfly" (The Planet Ann Charlotte Mix) – 6:50 #"Butterfly" – 3:02 #"Jennifer She Said" (Live) – 3:20 CD single (UK and Europe) #"Butterfly" – 3:02 #"Jennifer She Said" (Live) – 3:20 #"Butterfly" (The Planet Ann Charlotte Mix) – 6:50 CD single (France) #"Butterfly" – 3:02 #"Jennifer She Said" (Live) – 3:20


Personnel

Credits are adapted from the ''Don't Get Weird on Me Babe'' CD album liner notes and the UK CD single. "Butterfly" * Lloyd Cole – vocals, piano, organ, guitar * Fred Maher – drums * Bashiri Johnson – percussion Additional musicians on "The Planet Ann Charlotte Mix" * Ann Charlotte Vensgaarde – additional vocals Production * Lloyd Cole – producer, mixer ("Butterfly") * Fred Maher – producer, mixer ("Butterfly") * Paul Hardiman – producer, mixer, engineer ("Butterfly") * Tim Young – mastering ("Butterfly") * Adam Peters – remixer ("The Planet Ann Charlotte Mix") * Pete Dauncey – producer ("Jennifer She Said") * Chris Sheldon – mixing ("Jennifer She Said") * Dave Mulkeen – engineer ("Jennifer She Said")


Charts


References

{{authority control 1991 songs 1992 singles Lloyd Cole songs Songs written by Lloyd Cole Song recordings produced by Fred Maher Polydor Records singles Capitol Records singles