Misplaced Pages

Wind-Up Toy (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.
This article does not cite any sources. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Wind-Up Toy" song – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (June 2011) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
1991 song by Alice Cooper
"Wind-Up Toy"
Song by Alice Cooper
from the album Hey Stoopid
LanguageEnglish
Released2 July 1991
RecordedBearsville Studios, New York, USA
Length5:27
LabelEpic
Songwriter(s)Alice Cooper, Vic Pepe, Jack Ponti, Bob Pfeifer
Producer(s)Peter Collins

"Wind-Up Toy" is the twelfth and final track on Alice Cooper's nineteenth studio album Hey Stoopid. Though the song was never released as a single (it does feature as the B-side to the "Hey Stoopid" single), the song is very popular among Cooper's fans, often favourite above all others by some. Guitar player Joe Satriani makes a guest appearance on the track.

Relation to Steven

The track is the first confirmed appearance of fictional character/alter ego Steven in more than 15 years. In the song, we learn that he is imprisoned in a lunatic hospital and that his only friends are the insects, rats and his toys on the floor. This tells us that he still has the mind of a small child. Obviously it upset Steven to become an adult. The song possibly suggests something happened that forced him to be like an adult, before he was ready for it. It might be that his parents rejected him;

Daddy won't discuss me
What a state I must be
Mommy couldn't stand living with a wind-up toy

Steven feels that he never had the chance to be a young boy and that he grew up too fast. Because of this, he acts like a child and probably thinks that he still is one:

Preacher crucifies me
Warden wants to fry me
I was never young
Never just a little boy

It is also hinted that Steven still is haunted by the nightmare from Cooper's 1975 album Welcome to My Nightmare, and possibly also the Curator from the album:

I'm lost in a nightmare

After the song ends, a little girl's voice can faintly be heard calling "Steven!"

Personnel

Releases on albums

Alice Cooper
Studio albums
with Alice Cooper (band)
as Alice Cooper (solo)
with Hollywood Vampires
Live albums
Singles
Compilations
and box sets
Videography
Tours
Related articles
Categories: