"Superman's Dead" | ||||
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Single by Our Lady Peace | ||||
from the album Clumsy | ||||
Released | December 16, 1996 | |||
Format | CD | |||
Recorded | 1996 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 4:16 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Arnold Lanni | |||
Our Lady Peace singles chronology | ||||
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"Superman's Dead" is a song by Canadian alternative rock group Our Lady Peace. It was released in December 1996 as the lead single from their second album Clumsy. This has become one of Our Lady Peace's most popular songs in both Canada and the U.S., as well as many other parts of the world.
The song has become the definitive example of Our Lady Peace's staple sound, highlighted by vocalist Raine Maida's unusual yet powerful falsetto. This song, in contrast to many others on the album, is very heavy, especially in comparison to tracks like "Automatic Flowers" and "Clumsy".
Our Lady Peace producer Arnold Lanni recalls that late in the recording of Clumsy, he and the band were working on tracking a song called "Hello Oskar", when they decided to take a break for a few minutes.
"From the bathroom I heard Raine playing something on an acoustic guitar. When I came out I asked him what it was. He told me that it was just something he was toying around with. I really liked what he was doing so for the next day or so the band and I worked on developing what became "Superman's Dead." ~Arnold Lanni
"Superman's Dead" was seen by the band as a dark statement on how much television kids watch and the content of it. It looks at the dark expectations that are garnered from media images:
Raine Maida stated, "I grew up with the old Superman, the black-and-white one. There was something so honest about it, and it's evolved into Beavis and Butthead". He also says of youthful TV pleasures, "Their images are defined by television: How they should think or what they should wear. It's kind of sad that way"
Three music videos have been made for this song - the Canadian version of a child (played by Ryan Dennis) trapped in the box, which was co-directed by George Vale and the band, the U.S. version which featured an unusual array of characters including clowns and goblins, and another U.S. version which simply showed the band playing the song. The original video was filmed over the first couple of days of January 1997 in an abandoned warehouse in Toronto. That version premiered on MuchMusic on January 20, 1997. This version also won the award for "Favourite Video" at the 1997 MuchMusic Video Awards. It is interesting to note that in the U.S. music videos, Raine Maida is shown playing the guitar in some parts, while in the original Canadian version he is not.