Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams (song)

"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" is a song by the British band Tears for Fears, originally appearing as the B-side to their 1990 single "Advice for the Young at Heart" before being remixed by the techno producer/DJ band Fluke and released as a single in its own right in 1991. The remix was later included on the band's B-side compilation album Saturnine Martial & Lunatic.

"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"
UK single B-side label
Song by Tears for Fears
A-side"Advice for the Young at Heart"
Released19 February 1990 (B-side)
Genre
Length
  • 4:17
  • 4:19 (instrumental)
LabelFontana
Songwriter(s)Roland Orzabal
Producer(s)
  • Tears for Fears
  • Dave Bascombe
"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"
Single by Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams
Released21 January 1991
Genre
Length
  • 6:22 (Mix One)
  • 5:55 (Mix Two)
LabelFontana
Songwriter(s)Roland Orzabal
Producer(s)
  • Tears for Fears
  • Dave Bascombe
  • Fluke (remix & additional production)
Tears for Fears singles chronology
"Famous Last Words"
(1990)
"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"
(1991)
"Laid So Low (Tears Roll Down)"
(1992)

It became a number-one hit on the UK Dance Chart, while reaching number 70 on the UK Singles Chart. Although still a Tears for Fears track, the Fluke remix single was credited only as "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams". The cover of the single features a still photo of Keir Dullea as David Bowman from the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey.

Background edit

"The B-side for 'Advice for the Young at Heart' from the Seeds of Love album. The title was stolen from a book of the same name by Sylvia Plath. At the time, I was curious to hear the verse of 'Sowing the Seeds' sung as a rap and it was this combined with a Talking Heads-style chorus sung over the chord structure of 'Shout' that gave rise to the track. Due largely to the use of a rather fashionable (at the time) drumloop, the track received a fair bit of play in dance clubs where it caught the attention of a young band called Fluke who consequently remixed it into a much higher state. The remix was then released anonymously as a single in its own right and got to number 1 in the British dance chart."

- Roland Orzabal (Saturnine Martial and Lunatic booklet)

The song is named after "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams", a short story by Sylvia Plath that was posthumously published in 1977 in a collection of the same name.

The song features two sets of vocals. The original verses of the song are performed in a gospel style, alternating with the lyrics from Tears for Fears' 1989 hit "Sowing the Seeds of Love" which are performed as a rap by vocalist Biti Strauchn.[1] An instrumental version of the song (without the gospel verses or the rap) also appears on the CD-single of "Advice for the Young at Heart".

Track listing edit

  1. "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" (Mix One) – 6:22
  2. "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams" (Mix Two) – 5:55

Personnel edit

Credits are adapted from the liner notes of "Advice for the Young at Heart" and Tidal.[1][2]

  • Biti Strauchn – rap

Tears for Fears

  • Curt Smith – producer, bass guitar
  • Roland Orzabal – producer, songwriter, drum programming, electric guitar, keyboards, vocals

and

  • David Bascombe – producer

Studio personnel

  • Heidi Cannavo – assistant recording engineer
  • Lee Curle – assistant recording engineer
  • Steve Chase – engineer

"Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams (Fluke remix)" (1991)[3]

  • Fluke – remix, additional production
  • Stylorouge – technoart
  • Chris Craske – videoburst

Charts edit

Chart performance for "Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams"
Chart (1991) Peak
position
UK Singles (OCC)[4] 70

References edit

  1. ^ a b Fontana Records (1990). "Advice for the Young at Heart" (Media notes). Tears for Fears.
  2. ^ "Credits / The Seeds Of Love (Super Deluxe) / Tears For Fears". Mercury Records Limited. Retrieved 21 January 2024 – via Tidal.
  3. ^ Fontana Records (1991). "Johnny Panic and The Bible Of Dreams" (Media notes).
  4. ^ "Official Singles Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 27 November 2023.