*** Welcome to piglix ***

Run2me

"Run2me"
Single by The Smashing Pumpkins
from the album Monuments to an Elegy
Released October 22, 2015
Recorded 2014
Genre Synthpop, alternative rock
Length 4:09
Label BMG/Martha's Music
Songwriter(s) Billy Corgan
Producer(s)
The Smashing Pumpkins singles chronology
"Drum + Fife"
(2014)
"Run2me"
(2015)
"Drum + Fife"
(2014)
"Run2me"
(2015)

"Run2me" is a song by The Smashing Pumpkins, released as the fourth single from the band's ninth studio album Monuments to an Elegy. The accompanying music video was premiered on Vulture.com on October 22, 2015.

Most music critics noted the song's deviating from the band's traditional guitar sound. In his review of the album, Spin's Andrew Unterberger compared the song to the work of synthpop duo Erasure. Speculating on possible influences, the Rolling Stone's Dan Hallman characterised the song as "Killers-ish". In similar vein, Drowned In Sound's Andrzej Lukowski described the track as a "blippy homage to Corgan’s beloved New Order". In contrast, Consequence of Sound's Michael Roffman likened the track to the band's previous album Oceania.

The song was featured on several preliminary track listings for the album posted on the band's website.

The final version that appears on the album seems to be considerably different from its early demo version. In an update on the recording process posted on the band's website on 14 April 2014, band leader Billy Corgan described the song's sound as being more Big Country than The Smashing Pumpkins, with producer Howard Willing criticising the "80s drums" on the track, triggering a process of "deconstruction". In a later update on 16 May, Corgan described "stripping away previous guitars so that all that was left were [..] drums and [...] bass", then adding an "arpeggiated figure" reminiscent of The Who's "Baba O'Riley" as well as strings reminiscent of the band's own song Tonight, Tonight. On 18 June 2014, Corgan announced the song as being "done" in another recording update on the band's website.

Directed by longtime Corgan collaborator Linda Strawberry, the music video features "magical orbs, eerie incantations, and mysterious hooded women". Starberry elaborated on the video's narrative: "The Magician is symbolic of transition and inspiration, while the protagonist in the video is afraid of who she is about to become, she learns, accepts and then lets go of whatever was holding her back."


...
Wikipedia

...