Moving Pictures (The Kinks song)

"Moving Pictures"
Single by The Kinks
from the album Low Budget
B-side "In a Space"
Released 28 September 1979 (UK)[1]
Format 7" single
Recorded January 1979 - June 1979
Genre Pop rock, disco
Length 3:47
Label Arista
Writer(s) Ray Davies
Producer(s) Ray Davies
The Kinks singles chronology
"(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman"
(UK, 1979)
---
"Catch Me Now I'm Falling"
(US, 1979)
"Moving Pictures"
(UK, 1979)
"Pressure"
(UK, 1979)
---
"Lola (live)"
(US, 1979)
Low Budget track listing

"Moving Pictures" is the final track on The Kinks' 1979 album Low Budget. Like the other ten tracks on the album, it was written by Ray Davies.

Lyrics and music

The lyrics of "Moving Pictures" focus on how life passes people by. It laments on how life is "always moving" and that "nothing in life is a permanent fixture". It then goes on to analyze life in general, with lines such as "we live, we die, no one knows why" and " life can sometimes not be very nice, but then you make your choice so you must pay the price." It then warns that "Life is only what you make out so make the verses rhyme and all the pieces fit, there isn't any time to make much sense of it, it soon fades away." It also makes mention of racial problems, with the line "black girls, white girls oh what a mixture, looking as pretty as a picture."

The track, like "(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman" (the lead single from Low Budget), attempts a disco feel, with a steady drum beat opening the song. Also, like most Kinks tracks, Ray Davies handles the lead vocal, which is double tracked at certain points during the track.

Release and reception

"Moving Pictures" was released as the second U.K. single from Low Budget, backed with "In a Space", a track also from Low Budget.[2] It was not very commercially successful, as it did not make a dent in the charts. The single was not released in either the United States or Continental Europe.

The track was considered "blandly reflective" by Rolling Stone.[3] When released, Melody Maker described the track as "an amiable, proficient shuffle, but the lyrics hardly approach the timeless elliptical acuity of 1960s material like 'Fancy' or 'Wonder Boy'".[1]

References

  1. 1 2 Hinman, Doug. The Kinks: All Day and All of the Night. Backbeat Books. p. 233.
  2. "Moving Pictures single on rateyourmusic.com".
  3. "Rolling Stone review". Archived from the original on 2 October 2007.


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