Tears For Fears: Songs From The Big Chair Page 2
Bath Time
'What he did really was try and get us out of the synthesiser rut we were in', Orzabal told Radio One. 'We wanted everything programmed. He forced me to pick up a guitar and smash the hell out of it.' Taking that advice on board, Orzabal spent a month off at home in Bath, midway through recording, writing more material. He came back to the studio with the bare bones of 'Shout', 'Everybody Wants To Rule The World' and 'I Believe'.
The first of those tracks would prove to be the Top 5 single that launched the album, after Orzabal presented keyboard player Ian Stanley and producer Chris Hughes with the chorus, and they worked up the verse and other aspects of the song in the studio. Orzabal admitted that the song's initial beat was 'stolen off a Talking Heads track from Remain In Light. It was that rhythm, plus me and a Prophet synthesiser in a big echoey room. I went into a semi-hypnotic state and "Shout"' just popped in from the ether'. The songwriter described it as the sound of The Hurting growing up.
World Beater
While many would take 'Shout' as the latest example of Tears For Fears' focus on the importance of emotional expression as a therapeutic tool, Orzabal pointed out that it's as much about the need to make our voices heard in the face of injustice and pressing issues, such as the growing nuclear threat that was dominating thinking at the time.
'I Believe' was more in line with previous themes: 'If I'm crying while I write these words, is it absurd? Or am I being real?'. The song was inspired, Orzabal has said, by 'the vulnerability of Robert Wyatt's music', to the point where 'You could almost hear him sing it'. In fact, Orzabal did consider offering it to the musician, but eventually kept it for his own band.
Yet it was the last song recorded for the album that would turn out to be its biggest hit, after a long gestation process was followed by a relatively straightforward production.
Orzabal had played his late wife Caroline a song that then featured the line 'everybody wants to go to war', in keeping with a lyric alluding to the selfish, short-termist attitudes its author saw around him. But such a brutal slogan jarred with the sunny guitar and singalong chorus, so he didn't consider it ready for public consumption until that line was changed to something a touch more subtle.
Musical Therapy
'Everybody Wants to Rule the World' was 'probably the most straightforward recording on the record', Chris Hughes would tell Mix magazine. 'Other tracks were recorded onto two 24-tracks, then we would do edits on tape, and any piece of technology that could have gone wrong or held us up probably did.
'But "Everybody Wants To Rule The World" was so simple and went down so quickly, it was pretty effortless, really. In fact, as a piece of recording history, it's bland as hell.'
As a piece of pop, though, it's sublime. And along with the rest of Songs From The Big Chair, it's among the best 42 minutes of musical therapy you're ever likely to find.