Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 1994


Oblivion (Terrorvision song)

Buy Oblivion (Terrorvision song) 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 = Oblivion

| cover = Oblivion Terrorvision cover.jpg

| alt =

| caption =

| type = single

| album = How to Make Friends and Influence People

| B-side = What Do You Do That For?

| artist = Terrorvision

| released =

| recorded =

| studio =

| genre = Britpop

| length = 3:03

| label = Total Vegas, EMI

| writer = Terrorvision

| producer = Gil Norton

| prev_title = My House

| prev_year = 1993

| next_title = Middleman

| next_year = 1994

| misc =

}}

"'Oblivion'" is a song by English rock band Terrorvision. Written by the band and produced by Gil Norton, the song was included as the second track on the band's second studio album, 'How to Make Friends and Influence People' (1994). Like most Terrorvision songs, "Oblivion" contains political themes, but according to bass player Leigh Marklew, the messages were not taken seriously because of the song's doo-wop chorus. Released as the album's first single on 28 March 1994, the song peaked at number 21 on the UK Singles Chart and number 65 in Australia.

Release and reception



On 28 March 1994, "Oblivion" was issued as the lead single from 'How to Make Friends and Influence People'. When the album was released on 18 April 1994, "Oblivion" appeared as the second track. According to AllMusic reviewer Leslie Mathew, the song is a satirical critique on "squatter hippies". Upon the single's release, 'Music & Media' magazine likened the song to the Smithereens' "Top of the Pops" (1991) and called it "hard-to-forget" with "instant 'got-ya' quality". Danny Martin of WhatCulture praised the song's chorus, referring to it as "singalong perfection", as well as Tony Wright's vocals, calling them a "perfect vessel" for the track's offbeat lyrics.

On 3 April 1994, the single debuted at number 47 on the UK Singles Chart. The following week, it rose to its highest position of number 21, becoming Terrorvision's highest-charting single in the UK until February 1996, when "Perseverance" reached number five. "Oblivion" spent six weeks on the UK Singles Chart and is the band's second-longest-charting single in the UK, after 1999's "Tequila". Its British sales registered on the Eurochart Hot 100, peaking at number 72 on the issue dated 30 April 1994. In Australia, "Oblivion" is Terrorvision's only song to enter the top 100 of the ARIA Singles Chart, reaching number 65 in mid-1994.

Track listings



'UK CD1'

# "Oblivion"

# "The Model" (with Die Cheerleader)

# "Remember Zelda"

'UK CD2 and Australian CD single'

# "Oblivion"

# "Problem Solved" (by Die Cheerleader)

# "What Do You Do That For?"

# "Oblivion" (demo)

'UK 7-inch single'

:A. "Oblivion"

:B. "What Do You Do That For?"

'UK 12-inch single'

:A1. "Oblivion"

:A2. "The Model" (with Die Cheerleader)

:B1. "Remember Zelda"

:B2. "Problem Solved" (by Die Cheerleader)

'French CD and 7-inch single'

:A. "Oblivion"

:B. "The Model" (with Die Cheerleader)

Credits and personnel



Credits are adapted from the 'How to Make Friends and Influence People' booklet and the UK CD1 liner notes.

'Studio'

* Mixed at The Church (London, England)

'Personnel'

* Terrorvision writing, arrangement

** Tony Wright vocals

** Shutty drums

** Mark Yates guitars

** Leigh Marklew bass

* Anita Madigan backing vocals

* Gil Norton production, mixing

* Chris Sheldon mixing

* Elliot Ness mixing assistant

* John McDonnell mixing assistant

* Al Clay engineering

* Mike Cyr engineering assistant

* Mark Phythian programming

* Union Design artwork design

* Toby McFarlan Pond photography

Charts



References



Category:1994 singles

Category:1994 songs

Category:EMI Records singles

Category:Political songs

Category:Song recordings produced by Gil Norton

Category:Songs about hippies

Category:Satirical songs

Category:Terrorvision songs

Category:Britpop songs

Buy Oblivion (Terrorvision song) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 1994



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1084092129.