(We Want) The Same Thing

"(We Want) the Same Thing"
Single by Belinda Carlisle
from the album Runaway Horses
Released October 2, 1990 (UK)
Format 7", 12", CD-single, cassette-single
Recorded 1989
Genre Pop
Length 3:59
Label Virgin
Writer(s) Rick Nowels, Ellen Shipley
Producer(s) Rick Nowels
Belinda Carlisle singles chronology
"Vision of You"
(1990)
"(We Want) The Same Thing"
(1990)
"Live Your Life Be Free"
(1991)

"(We Want) The Same Thing" is a song by the American singer Belinda Carlisle. Written by Rick Nowels and Ellen Shipley, it was produced by Nowels for Carlisle's third album Runaway Horses (1989). It was released as the album's sixth and final single in the UK on October 2, 1990. To help promote the single in the UK, Virgin Records released a deluxe 12" vinyl boxed set with free stickers, and a picture disc CD-single, in addition to standard formats. The single peaked at number six on the UK singles chart and spent ten weeks in the top 75.[1]

Single remix

The single version of "(We Want) The Same Thing" is drastically different from the original version found on the album Runaway Horses. While the album version has a heavily accented punk rock staccato sound, the single version was changed into a powerful pop anthem; one of her most successful to date. The intro of the single version is notable for its chants of 'Hey!' repeated four times before a drum piece introduces the song. In the Runaway Horses album booklet, the lyrics listed for "(We Want) The Same Thing" vary from the actual version on the album though they match the lyrics for the single version.

Track listing

CD single
  1. "(We Want) The Same Thing" (summer remix) 4:17
  2. "Circle in the Sand" (sandblast multi-mix)
  3. "Shades of Michaelangelo" 5:50
12-inch Record
  1. "(We Want) The Same Thing" (extended summer remix) 5:13
  2. "Circle in the Sand" (sandblast multi-mix)
7-inch Record
  1. "(We Want) The Same Thing" (extended summer remix) 5:13
  2. "Shades of Michaelangelo" 5:50
Versions

Charts

Chart (1990) Peak
position
Germany (Official German Charts)[2] 53
Ireland (IRMA)[3] 22
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[4] 6

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, August 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.