The World's Address
From This Might Be A Wiki
song name | The World's Address |
artist | They Might Be Giants |
releases | Lincoln, Then: The Earlier Years |
year | 1988 |
first played | February 3, 1987 (6 known performances) |
run time | 2:24 |
sung by | John Flansburgh, John Linnell harmonizes |
Trivia/Info
- John Linnell on the song's title in 2023 for Everything Sticks Like A Broken Record, a track-by-track breakdown of the Lincoln album featured in Bandbox Issue #103:
A forgivable pun, I hope. Because it's trying to be two things at once. It's the address of the planet Earth, which is a sort of peculiar concept — things have addresses on Earth, but what is the address of the world? Then the idea of the world as a dress... a place that's worn, but also a world that's worn out. That was the kind of wordplay that I was attracted to when I was that age.
- Despite being written by Linnell[1] and performed by him on the demo, the album version of this song is sung by John Flansburgh instead. A similar scenario also occurred with the song "Reprehensible"[2].
- Albert Einstein developed the special and general theories of relativity, and Nicolaus Copernicus provided the first modern formulation of a heliocentric (sun-centered) theory of the solar system.
Song Themes
Clothes, Criminal Activities, Lies And Deception, Mirrors And Reflections, People (Real), Puns, Recycled Material, References To Other Songs Or Musicians, Science, Self-Reference, The Senses, Sleep, Traded Tracks
Videos
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