We Didn't Start the Fire

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"We Didn't Start the Fire"
Image:BillyJoel Fire.JPG
Single by Billy Joel
From the album Storm Front
Released 1989
Format 7" single, 12" single, CD
Recorded
Genre Rock
Length 4:49
Label Columbia Records
Producer Mick Jones, Billy Joel
Chart positions #1 US
Billy Joel singles chronology
"A Matter of Trust"
(1986)
"We Didn't Start the Fire"
(1989)
"I Go to Extremes"
(1990)

"We Didn't Start the Fire" is a song by Billy Joel which chronicles 120 well-known events, people, things, and places widely noted during his lifetime, from 1949 to 1989, when the song was released on his album Storm Front. Joel explained that he wrote this song due to his interest in history; he commented that he would have wanted to be a history teacher had he not become a rock and roll singer. Unlike most of Joel's songs, here, the lyrics were written before the melody, owing to the song's somewhat unusual style. Nevertheless, the song was a huge commercial success and provided Billy Joel with his third Billboard #1 hit.

Table of contents

1 Historical items referred to in the song

2 Criticism in pop culture

3 External links


Historical items referred to in the song

The lyrics of "We Didn't Start the Fire" are essentially a chronological list of specific events, names, and places, beginning in Joel's year of birth. Stream of consciousness in style, the song could be considered a natural successor to songs such as "Subterranean Homesick Blues", "Life Is a Rock (But the Radio Rolled Me)" and "It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)", as it consists of a series of unrelated images in a quick-fire, half-rapped, half-sung vocal style. This song represents events from 1949 to 1985.

Many students in elementary and middle schools are assigned projects on the song as a lesson in mid-20th century history. Many times kids team up and work together to write their own version of the song, following the same beat, of events that have happened in their lifetime.

The following are the lists as they appear in the song's lyrics, though in the actual song they are occasionally punctuated by the chorus. Events from a variety of contexts, such as popular entertainment, foreign affairs, and sports, are intermingled, giving an impression of the culture of the time as a whole.

The song and video have been interpreted as a rebuttal to criticism of Joel's Baby Boomer generation, from both its preceding and succeeding generations, for being responsible for much of the world's problems. The song's title and refrain imply that the world has been in a frenzied and troubled state since his generation's birth.

1949

1950

1951

1952

1953

1954

1955

1956

1957

1958

1959

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964–1989

Of the individuals mentioned by name in the song, the following were still alive in 2005: Doris Day, Queen Elizabeth II, Brigitte Bardot, Fidel Castro, Chubby Checker, Bob Dylan, John Glenn, Floyd Patterson (but not Sonny Liston), Sally Ride, and Bernhard Goetz. Johnnie Ray became the first still-living person mentioned in the song to die, on February 24, 1990.

Criticism in pop culture

  • Although the song ranked #1 in the US, and #7 in the UK, Blender magazine ranked "We Didn't Start the Fire" on its list of the "50 Worst Songs Ever". "We Didn't Start the Fire" also appeared on VH1's 50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs Ever, a collaboration with Blender.
  • A popular parody circulating around the Internet is "Pet Names for Genitalia", a song listing increasingly absurd euphemisms for "penis". Though commonly misattributed to "Weird Al" Yankovic or Tom Green, the true authorship of the parody--like so many Internet phenomena--is unknown.
  • The Simpsons also did a parody of this song in the episode "Gump Roast" showing various stills from seasons 1-13 (the season of the show when it first aired) It relived popular moments in the show from "Mr. Plow" to Burns being "blown away." The title of this song is "They'll Never Stop The Simpsons".

External links