“Golden Brown” is a baroque pop new wave song that was released by The Stranglers back in 1982. If the title doesn’t seem familiar, I’m sure you’ve heard it regardless. The song features the harpsichord in a distinctive fashion. And once you hear it, you can’t forget it.
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The tune was quite a hit in the UK back in the 80s. It peaked at No. 2 on the UK Singles Chart. In fact, “Golden Brown” is The Stranglers’ highest-charting single in the UK. And what a song to be known for. This tune is absolutely stunning, and it’s wild to think that something this vintage-sounding came from a punk rock band in the 1980s.
And with that vintage sound, “Golden Brown” is a baroque pop masterpiece that continues to age well. In fact, the song has been making the rounds on TikTok and Instagram. With rumors that medieval aesthetics are coming back in style, it’s not exactly shocking that “Golden Brown” is getting a revival. I, for one, would love a baroque pop revival in the 2020s. It might just happen.
The Story Behind “Golden Brown” by The Stranglers
“Golden Brown” by The Stranglers is absolutely beautiful and ethereal. It’s also written entirely about h*roin. This always seems to happen to me with songs that I absolutely love. Don’t even get me started on the time I found out what “Pumped Up Kicks” by Foster The People was actually about.
Singer and guitarist Hugh Cornwell made the song’s subject matter very clear in the 2001 book The Stranglers Song By Song.
“’Golden Brown’ works on two levels,” Cornwell wrote in the book. “It’s about h*roin and also about a girl… Both provided me with pleasurable times.”
Questionable lyrics aside, “Golden Brown” is a baroque pop masterpiece. But the band’s label, EMI, didn’t want to release it. That’s not because of the drug references in the song, either. According to Stranglers bassist Jean-Jacques Burnel, the label told them that “this song, you can’t dance to it, you’re finished.”
According to Burnel, the label though that the song would “drown in the tsunami of Christmas sh*t” at the time.
“But it didn’t,” he continued. “It developed legs of its own, it became a worldwide hit.”
And today, it’s still a hit. It takes some serious talent to produce a song that still inspires fresh interest, decades after it first debuted.
Photo via Shutterstock
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