"Something to Believe In" | ||||
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Single by Poison | ||||
from the album Flesh and Blood | ||||
B-side | "Ball and Chain" | |||
Released | September 4, 1990 | |||
Recorded | 1990 | |||
Genre | Glam metal, blues rock | |||
Length | 5:29 | |||
Label | Capitol | |||
Songwriter(s) | Michaels; DeVille; Dall; Rockett | |||
Producer(s) | Bruce Fairbairn | |||
Poison singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Something to Believe In" at YouTube.com |
"Something to Believe In" is a power ballad by American Glam metal band Poison, being the 2nd single from their 1990 (see 1990 in music) album Flesh & Blood. "Something to Believe In" was also released on the Best of Ballads & Blues album in 2003, with alternate lyrics (part 2).
The song peaked at number 4 in the US Billboard Hot 100, number 5 on the Mainstream rock charts, number 35 in the UK and #44 on the Australian charts. It was the last Top 10 on Billboard chart for the band to date.
This song was dedicated to James Kimo Maano, a security guard and best friend of Bret Michaels who had died some time earlier.
The cover art for the single depicts a tattoo on Bret Michaels's arm of a cross with the words "Something to Believe In". The tattoo artist, according to Michaels, had been drinking and spelled "believe" incorrectly putting the "e" before the "i". It was attempted to be corrected by adding a rose to the cross that covered the misspelling, but Michaels was never satisfied with the results. In the first season of the reality show Rock of Love, Michaels goes to a tattoo shop where the tattoo artist properly touches up the tattoo.
The song emphasizes several different events in footages, such as the televangelism scandals of the late 1980s, the thoughts of a crippled Vietnam veteran and how he can never get rid of the memories of "a war he can't forget", the recent death of a friend and seeing the homeless on a street at night, dimly lit by a neon sign that once spelled out "Jesus Saves" and how it seems that the lessons of yesterday are forgotten in the world of today.