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Blue Savannah

1990 single by Erasure From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Blue Savannah

"Blue Savannah" is a song by English synth-pop duo Erasure from their fourth studio album, Wild! (1989). Written by members Vince Clarke and Andy Bell, the song was released as a single in Japan on 25 January 1990 and was issued in the United Kingdom the following month. Alfa Records released it in Japan as the album's lead single, Mute Records released it in Europe as the album's third single, and Sire Records released it in the United States as the album's second single. It has been described as an uplifting love song.

Quick Facts Single by Erasure, from the album Wild! ...
"Blue Savannah"
Thumb
Single by Erasure
from the album Wild!
B-side
  • "Runaround on the Underground"
  • "No G.D.M."
Released25 January 1990 (1990-1-25)
GenrePop
Length4:23
LabelMute
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Erasure singles chronology
"You Surround Me"
(1989)
"Blue Savannah"
(1990)
"Star"
(1990)
Music video
"Blue Savannah" on YouTube
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Following the song's release, "Blue Savannah" became Erasure's eighth top-10 hit in the United Kingdom, where it peaked at number three on the UK singles chart. In Ireland, it reached the same position, making it Erasure's 10th top-10 hit there. Elsewhere, the song reached number seven in Denmark and number 12 on the US Billboard 12-inch Singles Sales chart. The music video for the song was directed by Kevin Godley, featuring a mysterious blue hand painting Bell and Clarke completely blue.

Release

"Blue Savannah" peaked at number three on the UK Singles Chart. It also was a top-10 hit in Denmark and Ireland and returned the band to the top 20 in West Germany, where the song peaked at number 13. The release of the single brought about the usual array of remixes and B-sides. In 2004, HiBias Records of Canada started their Retro:Active – Rare & Remixed CD series and the 'Out of the Blue' mix received its first official release, on volume one. In 2016, the remix was included on the Erasure 30th-anniversary anthology From Moscow to Mars, making its first-ever official release on an Erasure album.

Critical reception

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Ned Raggett from AllMusic declared the song as a "strong number", remarking its "relatively low key pulse, which sounds like a light motorik/Kraftwerk number given the appropriate Erasure sparkle."[1] Bill Coleman from Billboard described it as an "NRG-etic number"[2] and a "lilting, easy-paced gem."[3] Ernest Hardy from Cashbox commented, "Here, Erasure completely shake off their old drag for some Kraftwerk attire, then a Kraftwerk-meets-hip-hop groove thang. It's better than the original."[4] Scottish Dundee Courier complimented the song as "such sterling work".[5]

In a retrospective review, Chris Gerard from Metro Weekly named it "perhaps Erasure's best sounding track—put it on now and it's so fresh that it sounds like it could have been recorded yesterday." He described it as "audio daydream; a sublimely beautiful melody, sung with real feeling by Andy Bell, over some of Vince Clarke's loveliest keyboard work. That amazingly vibrant piano part just pops out of the speakers. This is what great pop music is all about—it makes you feel warm just listening to it."[6] Darren Lee from The Quietus noted "the lush electro-splendour" of "Blue Savannah", stating that it is one of "the most gloriously effervescent pop anthems ever recorded."[7] Christopher Smith from Talk About Pop Music called it "joyous" and "Erasure at its very best." He noted that Bell's voice across the first verses and chorus "are both haunting and sensual in equal measure."[8]

Music video

The accompanying music video for "Blue Savannah" was directed by English singer, songwriter, musician and music video director Kevin Godley. It shows Clarke and Bell performing the song in a large, white room, which gets painted blue as the video progresses. A mysterious blue hand is coming down from above. Reaching the room, it holds a paint brush in view. The camera follows the hand as it paints Clarke and a shirtless Bell until they both are completely blue. Eventually gold-coloured leaves, similar to those shown on the Wild! album cover, blow in and cover the duo as they perform. Danny Scott from Select praised "the splendid colours" of the Godley-directed video.[9]

Track listings

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Charts

More information Chart (1990), Peak position ...
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Release history

More information Region, Date ...
Region Date Format(s) Label(s) Ref.
Japan 25 January 1990 Mini-CD Alfa [36]
United Kingdom 26 February 1990
  • 7-inch vinyl
  • 12-inch vinyl
Mute [37]
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References

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