Pavement Cracks
| "Pavement Cracks" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Single by Annie Lennox | ||||
| from the album Bare | ||||
| Released | 2003 | |||
| Format | Promotional recording | |||
| Genre | Pop rock | |||
| Length |
5:10 (Album Version) 3:51 (Radio Edit) | |||
| Label |
BMG J Records | |||
| Writer(s) | Annie Lennox | |||
| Producer(s) |
Stephen Lipson Annie Lennox | |||
| Annie Lennox singles chronology | ||||
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"Pavement Cracks" is a song by Annie Lennox, released as a promotional-only single from her album Bare in 2003.
Music video
A music video was made for the single; it remains unreleased but can be found on YouTube.
Track listing
- "Pavement Cracks" (Mac Quayle Extended Mix) - 6:30
- "Pavement Cracks" (Goldtrix Club Mix) - 6:26
- "Pavement Cracks" (The Scumfrog Club Mix) - 8:21
- "Pavement Cracks" (Gabriel & Dresden Club Mix) - 9:56
- "Pavement Cracks" (The Scumfrog Knob Dub) - 6:45
- "Pavement Cracks" (Gabriel & Dresden Mixshow Edit) - 5:49
Chart performance
| Chart | Position |
|---|---|
| U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Club Play | 1 |
| U.S. Billboard Hot Singles Sales | 17 |
Personal
Credit and production
- Mixed By - Heff Moraes
- Producer - Stephen Lipson
- Written-By - Annie Lennox
Notes
- The song was released as a Promo only single.[1]
- Whether deliberate or instinctive, "Pavement Cracks" captured the mood of the US, perhaps the world, in the aftermath of the economic collapse that started in late 2001 / early 2002. Unemployment and homelessness spiked and remained high for several years, reaching a peak about the time the song was released. Literally millions of peoples' lives fell apart, and a mood of hoplessness began to permiate the country. I was one of the people deeply effected by the collapse, and I still remember where I was standing, and exactly how I felt, when I first heard Annie Lenox singing "Pavement Cracks". Haunting, mesmerizing, smooth and loving, eerie, and unstoppable, and very very sad, "Pavement Cracks" wrapped it's arms around a cold, scared, hopeless nation, and me, and told us that there was at least one person out there that understood what we were feeling. I consider it to be a very important piece of art and I appreciate the effort, the beauty, the genius, and the gesture. A belated; thank you Annie Lennox.
See also
References
External links
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