"Deanna" is a song by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds.[2][3] It is the second single from their 1988 album Tender Prey.[4]
"Deanna" | ||||
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Single by Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds | ||||
from the album Tender Prey | ||||
B-side | "The Girl at the Bottom of My Glass" | |||
Released | 5 September 1988 | |||
Genre | Garage rock[1] | |||
Length | 3:45 | |||
Label | Mute | |||
Songwriter(s) | Nick Cave, Mick Harvey | |||
Nick Cave and the Bad Seeds singles chronology | ||||
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Biographer Ian Johnston claimed that Deanna was a woman Nick Cave had recently had a "passionate, intense relationship with".[5] Cave later said the song is "seen as a particularly brutal act of betrayal, and thirty years on I still haven’t been fully forgiven. I console myself with the thought that I was unflinching in my duties as a songwriter, even though it broke a heart (or two) in the process."[6]
The B-side of "Deanna" is "The Girl at the Bottom of My Glass", recorded for but not released on Tender Prey.[7] It remained unreleased on an album until 2005, with the release of B-Sides & Rarities.
AllMusic called the song, "a garage rock-style rave-up that lyrically is everything Natural Born Killers tried to be, but failed at -- killing sprees, Cadillacs, and carrying out the work of the Lord, however atypically".[8] Stereogum noted, "the irresistible, danceable sway of the organ and drumbeat distract - if only momentarily - from such lines as 'I cum a death’s head into your frock'".[9]
The Quietus wrote, "The rousing garage pop of "Deanna" would quickly become one of Cave's best-known songs (it was almost 'radio friendly') and a live favourite. The track was based on a version of Edwin Hawkins' "Oh Happy Day". The lyrics were particularly memorable."[10]
Chart (1988) | Peak position |
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UK Indie Chart[11] | 4 |
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