Misplaced Pages

State of Confusion (song)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

1983 single by The Kinks
"State of Confusion"
Single by The Kinks
from the album State of Confusion
B-side"Labour of Love"
ReleasedDecember 1983
RecordedMarch 1983 at Konk Studios, Hornsey, London
GenrePop rock
Length3:41
LabelArista
Songwriter(s)Ray Davies
Producer(s)Ray Davies
The Kinks singles chronology
"Don't Forget to Dance"
(1983)
"State of Confusion"
(1983)
"Good Day"
(1984)

"State of Confusion" is a song written by Ray Davies and first released by The Kinks as the title track of their 1983 album State of Confusion. Although it was not released as a single in the United States, it reached #26 on Billboard's Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart. It was released as a single in Continental Europe.

Lyrics and music

The lyrics of "State of Confusion" depict numerous sources of frustration to the singer. Among these are technological failures, such as a television that's "on the blink," a clothes dryer that doesn't work and a video machine that breaks down. In addition, there are more domestic problems as the basement is flooded, the attic has woodworm and the ceiling has collapsed. To make matters worse, when the video machine breaks, the singer's girlfriend gets bored and leaves him. Later in the song, the singer is frustrated by trying to cross the street amidst traffic. The song ends with the singer unable to sleep due to financial worries and concluding that there is "no escape" from the world's "state of confusion." If anything, things get worse as you age.

Ray Davies commented on the song's meaning, "It was a difficult time: '83, '84. Songs like 'Definite Maybe', 'State of Confusion', it's all got this concern about it".

Musically, the music opens with Dave Davies playing guitar chords, onto which Ian Gibbons layers on keyboard part which Ray Davies's biographer Thomas Kitts describes as "thin" and "haunting." Dave Davies then starts playing the guitar riff, described by Kitts as "belligerent," after which Ray Davies lets out a "tormented" scream, before beginning to sing the lyrics of the song. The song's guitar riff is an extension of the riffs played by Dave Davies back to the earliest Kinks' hits, "You Really Got Me" and "All Day and All of the Night."

One theme of the song is the way technology can overwhelm human emotion. Kitts suggests that the word "state" in the song and in the title represents multiple meanings – a psychic state of confusion, as well as the state as the government promoting consumer consumption, as well as the state of popular music which traps the singer, particularly in the video. Music critic Johnny Rogan finds the song a continuation of Davies' "misfit persona" from earlier songs.

Recording

"State of Confusion" was recorded at Konk Studios in Hornsey in March 1983, late in the recording process for the album. The song replaced the original intended title track of the album, "Entertainment."

Music video

The Kinks shot a music video for MTV to support the song. The video depicts Ray Davies facing sources of frustration both at home and in the recording studio. Some of the sources of frustration in the video are different than those depicted in the song lyrics, such as difficulty using a computer and a razor at home, and difficulties with cue cards and a guitar strap in the studio. The video does not depict the girlfriend who moves out, but does show Davies struggling to cross the street. The video ends on a more triumphant note than the song lyrics: after Davies emerges from his dressing room for a performance, he leaps on stage with legs outstretched and the video ends with a freeze frame at the top of the leap. The energetic ending suggests transcending the earlier frustrations, perhaps as a result of the creative act of artistic performance.

Critical reception

Music critic Johnny Rogan considers "State of Confusion" a "fist-thrusting anthem," finding the singer's mishaps and the chaos he faces "amusing." Music critic Pete Bishop considers the song "solid rock with some dance beat." Author Rob Jovanic claims that it "dashes along with the best pop-rockers of the era, such as "Footloose."

Other appearances

After its initial release on State of Confusion, "State of Confusion" has appeared on a few Kinks compilation albums. It appeared on the 1996 US version of To the Bone, but not on the 1994 UK version.

References

  1. "State of Confusion Awards". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  2. ^ Kitts, T.M. (2008). Ray Davies: Not Like Everybody Else. Routledge. pp. 54–56. ISBN 978-0415977692.
  3. ^ Puterbaugh, P. (7 July 1983). "State of Confusion". Rolling Stone Magazine. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  4. ^ Rogan, J. (1998). The Complete Guide to the Music of The Kinks. Omnibus Press. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-7119-6314-6.
  5. Hasted, Nick (1 October 2017). You Really Got Me: The Story of The Kinks. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0-85712-991-8.
  6. ^ Hinman, D. (2004). The Kinks: All Day and All of the Night. Backbeat Books. pp. 262–263. ISBN 9780879307653.
  7. ^ Marten, N. & Hudson, J. (2007). Kinks (2nd ed.). Bobcat Books. p. 198. ISBN 978-0825673511.
  8. Bishop, P. (29 May 1983). "'State of Confusion': Kinks Offer Healthy Dose of Good Music". The Pittsburgh Press. p. G-6. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
  9. Jovanic, R. (2013). God Save the Kinks: A Biography. Aurum Press. p. 249. ISBN 978-1845136710.
  10. "State of Confusion". Allmusic. Retrieved 24 August 2012.
The Kinks
Studio albums
Live albums
EPs
Compilations
Unreleased projects
Concert tours
Related articles
The Kinks singles discography
1960s singles
(UK & US)
1964
"Long Tall Sally"
"You Still Want Me"
"You Really Got Me"
"All Day and All of the Night"
1965
"Tired of Waiting for You"
"Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy"
"Set Me Free"
"See My Friends"
"Who'll Be the Next in Line"
"A Well Respected Man"
"Till the End of the Day"
1966
"Dedicated Follower of Fashion"
"Sunny Afternoon"
"Dead End Street"
1967
"Mister Pleasant"
"Waterloo Sunset"
"Death of a Clown" (Dave Davies solo)
"Autumn Almanac"
"Susannah's Still Alive" (Dave Davies solo)
1968
"Wonderboy"
"Days"
"Lincoln County" (Dave Davies solo)
1969
"Starstruck"
"Hold My Hand" (Dave Davies solo)
"Plastic Man"
"Drivin'"
"The Village Green Preservation Society"
"Shangri-La"
"Victoria"
1970s singles
(UK & US)
1970
"Lola"
"Apeman"
1971
"God's Children"
"20th Century Man"
1972
"Supersonic Rocket Ship"
"Celluloid Heroes"
1973
"One of the Survivors"
"Sitting in the Midday Sun"
"Sweet Lady Genevieve"
"Where Have All the Good Times Gone"
1974
"Money Talks"
"Mirror of Love"
"Mirror of Love" (band version)
"Holiday Romance"
"Preservation"
1975
"Everybody's a Star (Starmaker)"
"Ducks on the Wall"
"You Can't Stop the Music"
1976
"I'm in Disgrace"
"No More Looking Back"
1977
"Sleepwalker"
"Juke Box Music"
"Father Christmas"
1978
"A Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy"
"Live Life"
"Black Messiah"
1979
"(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman"
"A Gallon of Gas"
"Catch Me Now I'm Falling"
"Moving Pictures"
"Pressure"
1980s singles
(UK & US)
1980
"Lola" (live)
"You Really Got Me" (live)
1981
"Better Things"
"Destroyer"
"Predictable"
1982
"Come Dancing"
1983
"Don't Forget to Dance"
1984
"Good Day"
"Do It Again"
1985
"Living on a Thin Line" (radio promo only)
"Summer's Gone"
1986
"Rock 'n' Roll Cities"
"How Are You"
1987
"Lost and Found"
1988
"The Road"
1989
"Down All the Days (Till 1992)"
1990s singles
(UK & US)
1990
"How Do I Get Close"
1993
"Only a Dream"
"Scattered"
Other singles
(non-UK/US)
1966
"Dandy" (Europe)
1969
"Picture Book" (Australia)
"Australia" (Australia)
1983
"State of Confusion" (Germany)
1991
"Did Ya" (Europe)
Other songs
"So Mystifying"
"Bald Headed Woman"
"Stop Your Sobbing"
"Dancing in the Street"
"I Need You"
"I Go to Sleep"
"I'm Not Like Everybody Else"
"Big Black Smoke"
"Party Line"
"Rosy Won't You Please Come Home"
"Love Me Till the Sun Shines"
"David Watts"
"Two Sisters"
"Polly"
"She's Got Everything"
"Do You Remember Walter?"
"Johnny Thunder"
"Last of the Steam-Powered Trains"
"Big Sky"
"Sitting by the Riverside"
"Animal Farm"
"Village Green"
"Phenomenal Cat"
"All of My Friends Were There"
"Wicked Annabella"
"Monica"
"People Take Pictures of Each Other"
"Berkeley Mews"
"Mr. Churchill Says"
"Strangers"
"This Time Tomorrow"
"Rats"
"Got to Be Free"
"Have a Cuppa Tea"
"Oklahoma U.S.A."
"Muswell Hillbilly"
"Sitting in My Hotel"
"The Hard Way"
"Life Goes On"
"Misfits"
"Attitude"
"Low Budget"
"Give the People What They Want"
"Heart of Gold"
Categories: