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Californication (song)

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Californication

| cover = Californicationsingle.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = Red Hot Chili Peppers

| album = Californication

| B-side =

| released =

| recorded =

| studio =

| venue =

| genre = Alternative rock

| length =

| label = Warner Bros.

| writer =

| producer = Rick Rubin

| prev_title = Otherside

| prev_year = 2000

| next_title = Road Trippin'

| next_year = 2000

| misc =

}}

"'Californication'" is a song by American rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers from their seventh album, 'Californication' (1999). Released as a single in June 2000, it reached number 69 on the US 'Billboard' Hot 100, number 16 on the UK Singles Chart, and number one on the 'Billboard' Mainstream Rock Tracks and Modern Rock Tracks charts. It was the third number-one 'Californication' single in Iceland.

"Californication" has remained one of the band's most popular and most performed live songs, appearing in almost every setlist since its live debut and making it the band's third-most performed song, with over 500 performances.

Recording



In Kiedis's book, 'Scar Tissue', the author reveals that the band had enormous difficulty in putting the song together. Kiedis had written the lyrics, which he felt were some of the best he had written, but the band could not decide how the song should sound musically.

As they struggled with the song it seemed like they would not be able to finish it in time to include it on the album, until one day Frusciante walked into the studio and exclaimed that he had "figured it out." He played the song as he visualised it, and it went from being a song that could have been an afterthought to becoming one of the Red Hot Chili Peppers' greatest hits, similar to the way "Under the Bridge" was conceived.

In Rick Rubin's podcast "Broken Record", Chad Smith revealed that for quite some time, the song was "like reggae, like Bad Brigade" and "that the melody was there, but the music...." After a while, everybody thought it was not coming together and the song was nearly thrown out before John came in with a new arrangement.

Composition



The song explores the dark side of Hollywood and the export of culture through the movie industry. The song begins "Psychic spies from China try to steal your mind's elation." Kiedis says in his book 'Scar Tissue' that he took the inspiration for the line from hearing a woman on a New Zealand street ranting about "psychic spies in China".

The track also makes references to topics such as pornography ("hardcore soft porn") and plastic surgery ("pay your surgeon very well to break the spell of aging") and even some pop culture references including Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain and David Bowie. The "spheres" are a reference to Music of the Spheres, an ancient philosophical concept that regards proportions in the movements of celestial bodies as a form of music ("Cobain, can you hear the spheres singing songs off 'Station to Station'?"). Other cultural references include the Beach Boys ("They're just another Good Vibration"), 'Star Wars' ("and Alderaan's not far away") and 'Star Trek' ("Space may be the final frontier but it's made in a Hollywood basement"). The phrase "First-born Unicorn" refers to Dorothy Stratten, whose life was covered in the book 'The Killing of the Unicorn'.

The song begins in the key of A minor with Frusciante picking the chords of Am and F for twelve measures, before picking the chords of C-G-F-Dm then going back and picking Am and F for 8 more measures before picking C-G-F-Dm again. For the pre-chorus Frusciante then strums a combination of Am and Fmaj7 chords for twelve measures, until the chorus when he strums the chords C-Gmaj7-Dm9-Am, then C-G-Dm9. It is notable for its sparse combination of guitar and bass notes in the main riff; Frusciante drew inspiration from "Carnage Visors" by The Cure.

After the second chorus, a 16-measure guitar solo is played by Frusciante, along with a modulation to A major. After the solo, the key returns to the original A minor, and a third verse and final chorus is played.

Music video



The video, directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, takes the form of a fictional open world video game that depicts each of the band members on some sort of adventure in a California setting, particularly San Francisco, which ends when the world is ravaged by an earthquake and the avatars are replaced by the live action band members. The music video for "Californication" is the group's most watched video on YouTube, with 950 million views..

Video game

On March 1, 2022, Spanish game developer Miquel Camps Orteza created a video game based on the song's music video. The player plays as one of the four band members. The game has seven different levels, each based on a scene from the music video. Orteza wrote, I wanted to play that game so bad! Its 2022 and I havent seen anyone made the game so I challenged myself to create it. I have selected some epic moments from the video and turned into 7 levels each one with different game mechanics, I hope you like this game."

Live performances



"Californication" is the band's third-most performed song and has been performed at almost every show since 1999.

Formats and track listings



'CD single' 1

# "Californication" 5:21

# "I Could Have Lied" (Live) 4:26

# "End of Show Brisbane" (Live) 8:11

'CD single 2'

# "Californication" 5:21

# "I Could Have Lied" (Live) 4:26

# "End of Show State College" (Live) 9:27

'EP'

# "Californication" 5:21

# "End of Show Brisbane" (Live) 8:11

# "I Could Have Lied" (Live) 4:26

# "End of Show State College" (Live) 9:27

Personnel



'Red Hot Chili Peppers'

* Anthony Kiedis lead vocals

* John Frusciante electric guitar, backing vocals, keyboard

* Flea bass

* Chad Smith drums

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Certifications



Release history



References



Category:1999 songs

Category:1999 singles

Category:Animated music videos

Category:Kurt Cobain

Category:Number-one singles in Iceland

Category:MTV Video Music Award for Best Direction

Category:Music videos directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris

Category:Red Hot Chili Peppers songs

Category:Songs about musicians

Category:Song recordings produced by Rick Rubin

Category:Songs about California

Category:Songs about Los Angeles

Category:Songs written by Anthony Kiedis

Category:Songs written by Chad Smith

Category:Songs written by Flea (musician)

Category:Songs written by John Frusciante

Category:Warner Records singles

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