"Insomniac" | |||||||||
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Single by Echobelly | |||||||||
from the album Everyone's Got One | |||||||||
Released | March 1994 | ||||||||
Format | CD | ||||||||
Genre | Britpop | ||||||||
Length | 4:15 | ||||||||
Label | Fauve, Rhythm King | ||||||||
Writer(s) | Sonya Madan, Glenn Johansson | ||||||||
Echobelly singles chronology | |||||||||
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"Insomniac" is a song by the Britpop band Echobelly. It was released as a single in March 1994 and was included on the band's album, Everyone's Got One. The song, written by Sonya Madan and Glenn Johansson, is primarily about drug abuse.
The single received positive critical reviews and peaked at #47 on the UK music charts. It was featured on the soundtrack for the film Dumb and Dumber.
"Insomniac" was composed by band members Sonya Aurora Madan and Glenn Johansson. It is based on a 4/4 alternating verse/chorus structure and may be a musical homage to one of Echobelly's major influences, Morrissey.
Billboard wrote that the song is a "gentle warning of the dangers of snorting too much speed". However, according to Britpop and the English Music Tradition, the song might be a "dig" at Britpop's cocaine-driven lifestyle at the time (which is highlighted by the lines "Whatever turned you on/You put it up your nose" and "No sleep at all/Carry me home").
"Insomniac" was released as a single in March 1994 with the b-side "Talent". It was then included as the seventh track of Echobelly's debut album, Everyone's Got One, which was released in August 1994. The song was also included on the band's 2001 compilation album I Can't Imagine the World Without Me and their 2008 release The Best Of Echobelly.
The single received positive reviews from music critics, who called it "stunning" and "one of the best singles of 1994". According to author John Harris, "Insomniac" was one of Echobelly's two best songs, along with "Bellyache".Allmusic's Ned Raggett wrote that "at the band's best ... Madan grapples with personal politics and dreams full on -- "Insomniac" and "Close...But," with its pictures of relationships fracturing on all fronts and resolution to look beyond them for something better, make for entertaining blasts of inspiration."
"Insomniac" charted at #47 in the UK for the week ending on April 2, 1994. This was the single's only appearance on the music charts.