Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1983


Here Comes the Rain Again

Buy Here Comes the Rain Again now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Here Comes the Rain Again

| cover = Eurythmics HCTRA.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = Eurythmics

| album = Touch

| B-side = Paint a Rumour

| released = 12 January 1984

| recorded = 1983

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = * New wave

* synth-pop

| length = 4:54 (album version)
5:05 (single version)
4:43 (video version)
3:50 (7" promo version)

| label = RCA

| writer =

| producer = David A. Stewart

| prev_title = Right by Your Side

| prev_year = 1983

| next_title = Sexcrime (Nineteen Eighty-Four)

| next_year = 1984

| misc =

}}

"'Here Comes the Rain Again'" is a 1983 song by British duo Eurythmics and the opening track from their third studio album 'Touch'. It was written by group members Annie Lennox and David A. Stewart and produced by Stewart. The song was released on 12 January 1984 as the album's third single in the UK and in the United States as the first single. It became Eurythmics' second Top 10 U.S. hit, peaking at number 4 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100. "Here Comes the Rain Again" hit number eight in the UK Singles Chart, becoming their fifth consecutive Top 10 single in their home country.

Song information



Stewart explained to Songfacts that creating a melancholy mood in his songs is something at which he excels. He said: "'Here Comes the Rain Again' is kind of a perfect one where it has a mixture of things, because I'm playing a b-minor, but then I change it to put a b-natural ('sic' the song is in A minor) in, and so it kind of feels like that minor is suspended, or major. So it's kind of a weird course. And of course that starts the whole song, and the whole song was about that undecided thing, like here comes depression, or here comes that downward spiral. But then it goes, 'so talk to me like lovers do.' It's the wandering in and out of melancholy, a dark beauty that sort of is like the rose that's when it's darkest unfolding and bloodred just before the garden, dies. And capturing that in kind of oblique statements and sentiments."

Stewart also said he and Lennox wrote the song while staying at the Mayflower Hotel in New York City. It was an overcast day, and Stewart was playing "melancholy A minor-ish chords with the B note in it" on his Casio keyboard. Lennox came over, looked out the window at the gray skies and the New York skyline, and spontaneously sang, "Here comes the rain again". The duo worked out the rest of the song based on that mood.

The string arrangements by Michael Kamen were performed by members of the British Philharmonic Orchestra. However, due to the limited space in the studio, the Church, the players had to improvise by recording their parts in other parts of the studio. The song was then mixed by blending the orchestral tracks on top of the original synthesized backing track.

The running time for "Here Comes the Rain Again" is in actuality about five minutes long and was edited on the 'Touch' album (fading out at approximately four-and-a-half minutes). Although it was edited even further for its single and video release, many U.S. radio stations played the full-length version of it. The entire five-minute version did not appear on any Eurythmics album until the U.S. edition of 'Greatest Hits' in 1991.

'Cash Box' said that "Lennox sounds familiarly sultry and wispy, while Dave Stewarts minor-key composition is laced with pizzicato strings and chiming, open chord guitar work."

In the UK, the single became Eurythmics' fifth Top 10 hit, peaking at #8. It was the duo's second top ten hit in the United States, peaking at #4 in March 1984.

Music video



The music video, featuring both Annie Lennox and Dave Stewart, was directed by Stewart, Jonathan Gershfield and Jon Roseman, and released in December 1983, a month before the single came out. The video opens with a passing aerial shot of the Old Man of Hoy on the Island of Hoy in the Orkney Islands before transitioning to Lennox walking along the rocky shore and cliff top. She later explores a derelict cottage while wearing a nightgown and holding a lantern. Stewart stalks her with a video camera. In many scenes the two are filmed separately, then superimposed into the same frame.

Track listings



;7"

*A: "Here Comes The Rain Again" (7" Edit) 3:53

*B: "Paint A Rumour" (Long Version) 8:00

;12"

*A: "Here Comes The Rain Again" (Full Version)* 5:05

*B1: "This City Never Sleeps" (Live Version, San Francisco '83) 5:30

*B2: "Paint A Rumour" (Long Version)* 8:00

* both (Versions) are longer than the ones found on the 'Touch' album

;Other versions

* "Here Comes The Rain Again" (Freemasons Vocal Mix) 7:17 / (2009)

* "Here Comes The Rain Again" (Freemasons Radio Edit) 4:41 / (2009)

*Here Comes The Rain Again (Disconet Extended Version) -6:57 / (1984)

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Certifications



Personnel



'Eurythmics'

*Annie Lennox - vocals, keyboard

*Dave Stewart - guitar, keyboard

'Additional personnel'

*Michael Kamen - conductor

*British Philharmonic - strings

Sampling



*The song's opening was used in the Belgium Dance act Oxy's 1992 single "The Feeling."

* George Nozuka sings the same note when he says "Talk to me" with a slight stutter on his hit single, "Talk to Me". Another hit by Nozuka, "Last Night", features a riff that is inspired by "Sweet Dreams".

*The line "Talk to me" is interpolated in Alice DeeJay's song "Better Off Alone".

* The lyrics of the chorus were interpolated in the 1995 song "Tragedy" by RZA from the Wu-Tang Clan.

* The lyrics "Walk with me, like lovers do/Talk to me, like lovers do" were used in Platinum Weird's song "Taking Chances" which incidentally, was co-written by Stewart. "Taking Chances" was later covered by Celine Dion and released as the title track of her 2007 album.

* The lyrics of the chorus were sampled in Jamaican singer's Nadirah X song "Here It Comes" in 2010 on her debut album 'Ink'.

* Madonna sampled the song on her Sticky & Sweet Tour in 20082009 with her own song Rain as a video interlude.

References




Buy Here Comes the Rain Again now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1983



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1100371057.