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Don't Lose Your Head (INXS song)

"Don't Lose Your Head"
DontLoseYourHead.jpg
Single by INXS
from the album Elegantly Wasted
Released 27 June 1997 (Europe, Australia); December 1997 (Japan)
Format CD single
Recorded 1997
Genre Rock
Length 3:30
Label Mercury
Songwriter(s) Michael Hutchence, Andrew Farriss
Producer(s) Bruce Fairbairn
INXS singles chronology
"Everything"
(1997)
"Don't Lose Your Head"
(1997)
"Searching"
(1997)
"Everything"
(1997)
"Don't Lose Your Head"
(1997)
"Searching"
(1997)

"Don't Lose Your Head" is the third single from the album Elegantly Wasted by INXS. Released in Europe (Germany and The Netherlands) and Japan at the end of 1997. No official release for this in USA. The song was written by Michael Hutchence and Andrew Farriss and recorded by the band in Dublin during the summer of 1996.

Although it was never officially released as a single in USA, INXS released "Don't Lose Your Head" as a promo tie-in with Paramount's 1997 film Face/Off starring John Travolta and Nicolas Cage. A Radio Edit version of the single was remixed by Tom Lord-Alge to clean up the opening lyrics; "You wake up in the morning with a starfuck for a friend" to "You wake up in the morning with a dealer for a friend".

According to an interview in the News of the World Sunday Magazine, the lyrics for "Don't Lose Your Head" were aimed squarely at "Oasis" frontman Liam Gallagher who Hutchence had many disagreements with over the years.

Nicolas Cage was spotted at INXS' Montreal show for the Elegantly Wasted Tour on 25 September 1997. Hutchence dedicated "What You Need" and "Don't Lose Your Head" to the actor, and also climbed up to Cage's balcony during "Time".

In addition to being used as a promotional tie-in song for Face/Off, the song itself plays on Castor Troy's (John Travolta) car radio as he is driving through Sean Archer's neighborhood for the first time with his new face.

"Don’t Lose Your Head" was pressed as UK promo single but, upon Hutchence's death, it was immediately withdrawn. Around 500 copies were originally pressed but destroyed almost instantly. Although the single did appear commercially in other territories such as Japan, its purpose for the UK market was primarily as a marketing tool for Face/Off. Again the single continued with the band's unique UK catalogue numbering system and received the number INXDJ31. With so few copies pressed in the first place, followed by the stock’s destruction, an extremely small number – estimated to be lower than 50 – actually escaped the burner, thus making this perhaps the rarest INXS pressing.


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