"Pumpkin Soup" | ||||
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Single by Kate Nash | ||||
from the album Made of Bricks | ||||
B-side | "Pistachio Nut (Poem)" "Pumpkin Soup (Live at Cardiff Solus)" |
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Released |
17 December 2007 18 December 2007 |
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Format | CD, 7" & digital download | |||
Genre | Pop, indie pop | |||
Length | 2:59 (album version) | |||
Label | Fiction | |||
Songwriter(s) | Kate Nash, Paul Epworth | |||
Kate Nash singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Pumpkin Soup" on YouTube |
"Pumpkin Soup" is a song by Kate Nash that is featured on her fourth single, the third to be lifted from her debut album Made of Bricks. It was released on 17 December 2007, making it a contender for the Christmas number one and entered the charts at number 58 on the UK Top 75 based on downloads only, then reached number 40 with a physical release the following week. It reached a peak of number 23 on 6 January, equalling the peak of previous single "Mouthwash".
Nash stated in an interview on BBC Radio 1 that the title "Pumpkin Soup" was a working title she had saved on her computer when writing early versions of the song, and that her record company had originally intended to name it "I Just Want Your Kiss" after the main lyric in the song.
Pitchfork Media wrote "Pumpkin Soup is one of the few Made of Bricks tracks that finds Nash's acutely enunciated words complimented with just the right amount of swirling sonic accoutrements".
All songs written by Kate Nash, except "Pumpkin Soup", written by Kate Nash and Paul Epworth.
Side B has no music, but an etched print instead.
The music video for "Pumpkin Soup" was directed by Kinga Burza and sees Nash in an over-sized novelty world inhabited by giant cats and bright colours, and is titled as by "Little Red Productions", a reference to the final track of Made of Bricks, "Little Red".
The video also features her and a boy in a kissing booth, which reflects the chorus lyric "I just want your kiss, boy," and main props include Love Hearts and bears. The character of "Boy" is played by Nash's real-life friend, photographer Wesley Goode. The song spent total 10 weeks on UK Single Charts before falling off.