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The Statue Got Me High

"The Statue Got Me High"
The Statue Got Me High EP cover.gif
Single by They Might Be Giants
from the album Apollo 18
B-side "She's Actual Size"
Released February 20, 1992
Format CD single, 7", 12", cassette
Recorded September—October 1991
Studio The Magic Shop, NYC
Genre Alternative rock
Length 3:06
Label Elektra (U.S.)
Elektra / WEA (EU)
Songwriter(s) They Might Be Giants
Producer(s) They Might Be Giants
They Might Be Giants singles chronology
"Twisting"
(1990)
"The Statue Got Me High"
(1992)
"The Guitar (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)"
(1992)
"Twisting"
(1990)
"The Statue Got Me High"
(1992)
"The Guitar (The Lion Sleeps Tonight)"
(1992)

"The Statue Got Me High" is a song by American alternative rock band They Might Be Giants. The song was released as the lead single from the band's 1992 album, Apollo 18. The song reached number 24 on the Billboard Hot Modern Rock Tracks chart. The B-sides "I'm Def" and "Which Describes How You're Feeling" are both taken from the band's 1985 demo tape, which was recorded using low-quality equipment.

"The Statue Got Me High" was written by John Linnell. Of the meaning of the song's lyrics, Linnell said:

It's kind of a song about having an epiphany or something. The song actually started with completely different lyrics. That's what I was saying about dummy lyrics. I think the song was called 'The Apple of My Eye'. When I came up with the line 'the statue got me high', it amused me. It was taking two things and putting them together - not a non sequitur but something sort of interesting and odd about the juxtaposition of those two things. Part of it is that it's the idea that the statue would be in a public square, a monument. Not necessarily a work of art, but something that's just utterly immobile and represents something that's in the past - just the idea of that blowing somebody's mind. It seems like one of the least likely things to make the top of your head come off, and that's what happens in the song.

A music video was produced for the single, directed by Adam Bernstein. It premiered on MTV's 120 Minutes in February, 1992. The video features John Linnell and John Flansburgh among various space-themed sculptures and fully suited astronauts at the Sepulveda Dam. At certain points, the video depicts John Linnell's head over a red silhouette of flames. A second version of the video, which does not show the flames, was also produced, because, according to Flansburgh, flames are not allowed to be shown on British television.


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