Walking on Thin Ice
1981 single by Yoko Ono From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Walking on Thin Ice" is a song by Yoko Ono, released in 1981. She and John Lennon concluded the recording of the song on December 8, 1980. It was upon their return from the recording studio to The Dakota (their home in New York City) that Lennon was murdered by Mark David Chapman. Lennon was clutching a tape of a final mix of the song before it was mastered when he was shot. The song was both a critical and commercial success for Ono.
"Walking on Thin Ice" | ||||
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Single by Yoko Ono | ||||
B-side | "It Happened" | |||
Released | February 6, 1981 (US) February 20, 1981 (UK) March 25, 2003 (remix) | |||
Recorded | December 4–8, 1980 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 6:00 | |||
Label | Geffen | |||
Songwriter(s) | Yoko Ono | |||
Producer(s) | John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Jack Douglas | |||
Yoko Ono singles chronology | ||||
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Alternative cover | ||||
![]() The cover of ONO's "Walking on Thin Ice" 2003 remix single. |
Background
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Perspective
Lennon's lead guitar work on the track, which he recorded on December 4, 1980, was his final creative act.[3] According to producer Jack Douglas, Lennon used his famous Beatles-era 1958 Rickenbacker 325 Capri to record all the guitar parts. Douglas worked the Bigsley Tremolo bar for Lennon during the solo.[4] It was rumored he used his new red Fender Stratocaster.[5]
The lyrics talk of the unpredictability of life and death—of "throwing the dice in the air"—and reach the conclusion, "when our hearts return to ashes, it will be just a story....". On the version included on 1992's Onobox, a new intro was added, where John Lennon can be heard remarking "I think you just cut your first number one, Yoko."
The B-side, "It Happened", was a slower, mellow track about acceptance from Ono's vaults that was originally recorded for A Story and had already seen limited release in Japan as the B-side to "Yume O Moto", but was remixed for inclusion on the single.[6] Much like the A-side, the lyrics have a retrospectively haunting quality given Lennon's murder: "It happened at a time of my life/When I least expected... And I know there's no return, no way". In the essay on the back of the single, Ono talks about how Lennon picked out this track from her old tapes and marked it as a hit. She said "No way!" to which he responded "I'll make it a hit". He was murdered hours later.
Release and reception
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At the end of January 1981, "Walking on Thin Ice" was released as a single and became Ono's first chart success, peaking at number 58 in the US and gaining major club/underground airplay. The single was released in February 1981 in the UK and reached number 35 on the chart. The critical reception was favorable: NME rated it in the best tracks of year 1981 at number 10.[7]
Ultimate Classic Rock critic Michael Gallucci rated it as Ono's best song, saying "it's a great New Wave song from the era and a testament to Ono's growing influence on other outre artists who followed."[8] Record World said that "Yoko's existential lyrics are delivered over a driving rhythm – led by Tony Levin's spunky bass – that spews Lennon's molten guitar leads."[9]
The song is on the experimental compilation album called Disco Not Disco (2000). In 2003, riding on the success of several Ono club remixes including "Open Your Box" and "Kiss Kiss Kiss", "Walking on Thin Ice" was released as a maxi-single with remixes by dance artists including the Pet Shop Boys, Danny Tenaglia and Felix Da Housecat. It spent many weeks on the US dance chart before reaching number one, beating out Madonna and Justin Timberlake. In the UK, it reached number 35 on the chart, exactly the same position as the original reached in 1981.
Music videos
Yoko Ono herself directed a music video for "Walking on Thin Ice", released in February 1981, featuring footage of her in New York City's Times Square and Central Park, interspersed with archival video of her and John Lennon. In 2003, Mike Mills and Arya Senboutaraj (one half of the directing duo Rainbows & Vampires) directed an animated video featuring the "Pet Shop Boys Electro Mix Edit" of the song.
Track listings
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Perspective
1981
Promo 7" single[10]
- A. "Walking on Thin Ice" (edit) – 3:23
- B. "Walking on Thin Ice" (long version) – 5:58
7" / 12" single
- A. "Walking on Thin Ice" – 5:59
- B. "It Happened" (Remix) – 5:08
Promo 12" / Cassingle
- A. "Walking on Thin Ice" – 5:59
- B1. "It Happened" (Remix) – 5:08
- B2. "Hard Times Are Over" – 3:26
2003
CD Maxi
2×12" single
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UK 12" single
US 12" single
UK CD1
UK CD2
UK CD promo
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iTunes single
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2007
- "Walking on Thin Ice" (with Jason Pierce of Spiritualized) – 5:07
- "Toyboat" (with Antony of Antony and the Johnsons and Hahn Rowe) – 4:24
2013
Pt. 1
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Pt. 2
Pt. 3
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Pt. 4
Soundcloud exclusive
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Awards and nominations
Year | Awards | Work | Category | Result | Ref. |
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1982 | Grammy Awards | "Walking on Thin Ice" | Best Rock Vocal Performance, Female | Nominated | [12] |
Charts
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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Covers
- Elvis Costello and The Attractions (ft. the TKO Horns) recorded a version on the album Every Man Has a Woman (1984).
- We've Got a Fuzzbox and We're Gonna Use It (aka Fuzzbox) released it as a single in 1989, peaking at #76 on the UK charts.[23]
- The Picketts also recorded a version,[24] (1985) as did Tila Tequila on her EP Welcome to the Dark Side (2010).
- Siouxsie Sioux performed it live with original guitarist Earl Slick and tabla player Talvin Singh, at Ono's Meltdown Festival in London in 2013.[25]
See also
References
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