City's Burning
"City's Burning" is a song by the American rock band Heart, released in 1982 as the opening track on their sixth studio album Private Audition. It was written by Ann Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sue Ennis, and produced by the Wilsons, Ennis and Howard Leese.[1] The song reached No. 15 on the US Billboard Rock Albums & Top Tracks chart.[2] A music video was filmed to promote the song.[3]
"City's Burning" | |
---|---|
Song by Heart | |
from the album Private Audition | |
Released | 1982 |
Length | 4:25 |
Label | Epic |
Songwriter(s) | Ann Wilson Nancy Wilson Sue Ennis |
Producer(s) | Ann Wilson Nancy Wilson Sue Ennis Howard Leese |
Music video | |
"City's Burning" on YouTube |
"City's Burning" was inspired by the 1980 murder of John Lennon. In a 1985 interview with Bob Andelman, Ann Wilson revealed: "It was a story we made up. A couple – they get the news about John on the radio or TV, and it tells about each of their reactions."[4] The song was later re-recorded for the band's sixteenth studio album, Beautiful Broken, released in 2016.[5]
Reception
Upon release Billboard noted Ann Wilson's vocals on the song, describing them as having a "Plant-like rasp".[6] Joe Konz of The Indianapolis Star wrote: ""City's Burning" promises to be one of the most powerful songs of the year. Its deficient lyrical clout is more than offset by an instrumental tour de force, a ravaging display of heavy metal rock. Equipped with the same harsh phrasing, shrill vocals and heavy-metal guitar licks that powered the hits "Magic Man" and "Barracuda", "City's Burning" runs roughshod over everything else on the band's new LP."[7]
Eric Davis of The Marion Star described the song as one of the album's "loud ones that should satisfy the power bugs". He added: "It's an improvement over previous power jettings by the band, as it includes an interesting tempo and mood change midway through, followed by a wailing, but soulful, lead guitar solo."[8] Mike Diana of Daily Press commented: ""City's Burning" is the only all-out rocker on the album, and even though it pales before what other female rockers have been doing of late, the cut gets the album off with a bang."[9] In a review of one of the band's 1982 concerts, Larry Rhodes of the Daily Press described the song as a "heavy metal screamer about crime-ridden, chaotic city life".[10]
In a retrospective review of the album, Jim Smith of AllMusic stated: "Private Audition starts tough with "City's Burning," possibly the band's most underrated song, but it's dragged down by the trite songwriting that follows."[1]
Charts
Chart (1982) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Billboard Top Rock Tracks[2] | 15 |
Personnel
Heart
- Ann Wilson – lead vocals
- Nancy Wilson – acoustic guitar, backing vocals
- Howard Leese – electric guitar, synthesizer, Moog drum
- Steve Fossen – bass
- Michael DeRosier – drums
Production
- Connie and Howie (Ann Wilson, Nancy Wilson, Sue Ennis, Howard Leese) - producers
- David Thoener, Shelly Yakus - engineers
- Rob Perkins - assistant engineer
- Brian Foraker - assistant engineer, mixing
- Steve Marcantonio - mixing
- David Thoener - mixing, mastering
- Greg Calbi - mastering
References
- AllMusic Review by Jim Smith. "Private Audition - Heart | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- "Heart Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- "Heart - City's Burning". YouTube. 2010-05-17. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- Mr. Media® Interviews-Bob Andelman (2016-06-19). "Heart's Ann Wilson on Nancy, songs and Mr. T! | Mr. Media® Interviews". Mrmedia.com. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek (2016-07-08). "Beautiful Broken - Heart | Songs, Reviews, Credits". AllMusic. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- "Billboard - Google Books". 1982-05-29. Retrieved 2019-02-11.
- The Indianapolis Star - Heart's new LP is 'disheartening' - Joe Konz - August 29, 1982 - page 7E
- The Marion Star - Change of 'Heart' improves music - Eric Davis - July 11, 1982 - page 19
- Daily Press - Don't call for 'Private Audition' - Mike Diana - July 16, 1982 - page 23
- Daily Press - 'Heart' rates high at concert - Larry Rhodes - October 19, 1982 - page 13