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Holland, 1945

"Holland, 1945"
Holland 45 single.jpg
Single by Neutral Milk Hotel
from the album In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
Released October 13, 1998
Recorded July–September 1997, at Pet Sounds Studio, Denver, Colorado
Genre
Label Blue Rose, Orange Twin
Writer(s) Jeff Mangum
Producer(s) Robert Schneider
Neutral Milk Hotel singles chronology
"Everything Is"
(1994)
"Holland, 1945"
(1998)
"You've Passed"/"Where You'll Find Me Now"
(2011)
Audio sample
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"Holland, 1945" is the second single and sixth track from the 1998 Neutral Milk Hotel album In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. The single was released in October 1998.

"Holland, 1945" is one of the album's louder, more upbeat songs, featuring overdriven and distorted guitars. The song also showcases fuzz noise on all of the instruments, a quality created by producer Robert Schneider.

The song was one of the last to be written for In the Aeroplane Over the Sea and remained untitled until art director Chris Bilheimer asked Jeff Mangum what to title the song in the liner notes for the album. Mangum told him to use either "Holland" or "1945" and Bilheimer suggested simply combining the two.

The single version of "Holland, 1945" was released in October 1998. It was the second single released by the band, and has since become the band's last official release before entering an indefinite hiatus. Orange Twin Records released some un-numbered versions through its website. A rare promo CD was released on October 19, 1998.

The single contains the b-side track "Engine", which was recorded live in a London Underground station underneath Piccadilly Circus.

In 2011, the single was re-issued as a 7" picture disc with a fold-out poster and a different version of "Engine".

The song contains references to Anne Frank. In 1945, World War II ended and Frank and her sister Margot died of typhus. The lyric "all when I'd want to keep white roses in their eyes" could be seen as a reference to the White Rose resistance group that existed in Nazi Germany in the early 1940s, though songwriter Jeff Mangum claims that he had never heard of the movement before In the Aeroplane Over the Sea was released.


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