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1991 single by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Pandora's Box" (subtitled "It's a Long, Long Way" for the US release) is a song by English electronic band Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark (OMD), released by Virgin on 24 June 1991 as the second single from their eighth studio album, Sugar Tax (1991). The song, which deals with the less glamorous side of celebrity, was inspired by silent film actress Louise Brooks and is named after the 1929 film Pandora's Box in which she starred.
"Pandora's Box" | ||||
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Single by Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark | ||||
from the album Sugar Tax | ||||
B-side | "All She Wants Is Everything" | |||
Released | 24 June 1991[1] | |||
Length |
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Label | Virgin | |||
Songwriter(s) | OMD | |||
Producer(s) | OMD | |||
Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Orchestral Manoeuvres In The Dark - Pandora's Box" on YouTube |
The single was a top-10 hit in the United Kingdom and throughout Europe. Three remixes were made for this release, remixed by Danny Griffiths, Carl Segal, and Steve Anderson respectively. Anderson's shorter remix is the main single version. Additional remixes and edits appear on promotional and limited editions.
Andy McCluskey wrote "Pandora's Box" about the silent film actress Louise Brooks. He told the Edinburgh Evening News in 1991, "I've been fascinated by her for eight or nine years now. The more I learned the more fascinated I became. [She's] absolutely the sort of woman you'd fall in love with on first sight and absolutely the sort of person that you desperately shouldn't go anywhere near."[2]
Upon its release, David Quantick of NME remarked, "OMD this week don't know if they are a jovial Hazell Dean group or some wistful Enoesque melancholy merchants. It is this that gives them their force, that occupation of the dichotomous territories between art and pop."[3] Andrew Hirst of the Huddersfield Daily Examiner picked "Pandora's Box" as the "Single of the Week", observing a "slice of synthesizer sophistication" whose "peculiar guitar twang really makes it".[4] Alan Jones, writing for Music Week, called it a "melodic, bouncy pop song" that is "entrancing and addictive" and "should easily maintain their renewed impetus".[5] KROQ ranked it the 21st-greatest song of 1991,[6] while MTV Europe placed it 55th.[7] In a retrospective review for AllMusic, critic Dave Thompson noted a "fabulous dance-fired arrangement", a "jubilant melody" and a "bounding rhythm that defies efforts not to dance along". He added that the upbeat sound belies the "tragic tale" of its lyrics, which handle the "downside of fame and fortune".[8]
The music video for "Pandora's Box" is in black and white and features Louise Brooks and singer Andy McCluskey. According to the video intro, all of the scenes of Brooks in the video are from the original 1929 film.
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