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Dani California - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dani California

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Dani California”
“Dani California” cover
Single by Red Hot Chili Peppers
from the album Stadium Arcadium
B-side "Million Miles of Water"
"Whatever We Want"
"Lately"
Released April 4, 2006 (Latin America)
April 28, 2006 (Europe)
May 1, 2006 (UK)
May 2, 2006 (US)
Format CD single
Digital Download
Recorded March - December 2005 at The Mansion in Los Angeles, California
Genre Alternative rock
Length 4:42
Label Warner Bros. Records
Writer(s) Kiedis/Frusciante/Flea/Smith
Producer Rick Rubin
Red Hot Chili Peppers singles chronology
"Fortune Faded"
(2003)
"Dani California"
(2006)
"Tell Me Baby"
(2006)

"Dani California" is the first single from the American alternative rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers' ninth studio album, Stadium Arcadium. The single was first made available at the iTunes Music Store and then was officially released on May 2, 2006. The international radio premiere was April 3, 2006, when Don Jantzen from the Houston radio station KTBZ-FM, played "Dani California" continuously for his entire three hour show.[1]

The single debuted on the The Billboard Hot 100 at #24 and peaked at #6, becoming the band's third single (after "Under the Bridge" and "Scar Tissue") to surpass the top-ten. In addition, "Dani California" became the second song in history to debut at #1 on the Billboard Modern Rock chart, after R.E.M.'s 1994 hit "What's the Frequency, Kenneth?", and also charted at #1 on the Mainstream Rock charts.[2] The song won two Grammy Awards, one for Best Rock Song and the other for Best Rock Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocal. The song was also nominated for Best Short Form Music Video.[3]

Contents

[edit] Origins

In the song, lyricist Anthony Kiedis laments the early death of Dani, a poor, young girl from Mississippi who lived in California, became a mother and lived a hard, fast life. However, Kiedis uses the name "Dani" to represent every girl he has ever came into contact with, whether in love or as a friend. This song shows his emotions towards the many girls he has known in his life as he represents them with the name Dani. It tells a tale of the life of Dani from her birth in Mississippi, to her death in California, as represented by the main chorus lyrics: "California, Rest in Peace." The character Dani also appeared in the Red Hot Chili Peppers' 2002 single "By the Way", as well as the song "Californication" as it alludes to a "Teenage bride with a baby inside/Gettin' high on information"; although there is no mention of her. The character's story comes to an end in "Dani California", with her death.[4] "When this funky groove came up it struck me as a perfect place to actually tell a story. It sort of revealed itself to me that it's been the same character, just kind of developing. At first I didn't realize that I was writing about the same girl."[4]

Guitarist John Frusciante utilized various instruments and effects devices in order to achieve the textures and treatments used throughout the song, including Mellotron, Moog effect pedals, and a Doepfer modular synthesizer, used for the filtering and processing of pre-recorded tracks. Although it is sometimes low in the mix, the main riff, (which is heard primarily in the first verse) plays throughout as an underlying tone. The chorus of the song offers an arena rock-styled chord progression that recalls the band's earlier work.

[edit] Reception

Shortly after its release, the originality of the song was questioned on the Dan Gaffney Morning Show on Delaware based news/talk radio station WGMD 92.7 FM.[5] Two of the station's talk show hosts Dan Gaffney and Jared Morris alleged that the red hot Chili Peppers had plagiarized Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' 1993 hit "Mary Jane's Last Dance". To demonstrate, they presented audio snippets of both songs, both side by side and simultaneously (i.e. on top of each other) several times. They stated that the chord progression, key, and the lyrical theme of the songs (both produced by Rick Rubin) showed "startling similarities" and urged listeners to "decide for themselves."[5]

Although the chord progressions sound similar, they do in fact differ as "Mary Jane's Last Dance" follows "Am, G, D, Am" (A Dorian mode), while "Dani California" follows "Am, G, Dm, Am" (A minor). University of Chicago musicologist Travis Jackson said the songs' chord progressions were similar, but were a "pretty standard groove" in music and not necessarily evidence of copying.[6]

In an interview with Rolling Stone magazine, Petty denied rumors that he planned to sue the Chili Peppers and said, "I seriously doubt that there is any negative intent there. And a lot of rock & roll songs sound alike." Petty went on to say that The Strokes admitted that they took Tom Petty's riff for "American Girl" and used it in their song "Last Nite".[7]

Dani California peaked at #6 on the Billboard Hot 100 (remaining for two weeks at that position) and #1 on the Modern Rock Tracks, remaining at the location for over 10 weeks.[2] In the UK, the song fared even better, finding itself at the number 2 spot for one week, and eventually remaining on that chart for over 15 weeks.

The song is among the few tracks the Red Hot Chili Peppers recorded which have broken the top 10 on the Billboard Hot 100.[2] It was a success, with "Dani California" accumulating over 500 weeks collectively on over 20 charts.[2]

Dani California is featured as a playable song in the popular video game, Rock Band. It also served as both the ending theme for the film Death Note and the opening for its sequel, Death Note: The Last Name.

[edit] Music video

A frame of the "Dani California" video showing Anthony Kiedis and Flea honoring funk.
A frame of the "Dani California" video showing Anthony Kiedis and Flea honoring funk.

The music video for "Dani California" premiered on MTV on April 4, 2006. Directed by Tony Kaye (who was only accepted after initial choice, Mark Romanek declined), director of American History X, the video is a quasi-chronology of the evolution of rock music; the band performs the song on a stage, but in a variety of outfits representing important figures and movements in the history of rock music.[4]

Flea affirmed that "[The band] mainly did eras, not actual people: rockabilly, British Invasion, psychedelia, funk, glam, punk, goth, hair metal, grunge, and ourselves being the sum of all those parts."[4] The video finishes with the Red Hot Chili Peppers as themselves again, occasionally flashing back to the imitated artists featured earlier in the film. While the band's appearance was intentionally generic in each scene, obvious nods were made to certain specific artists, including Elvis Presley, The Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, George Clinton and Bootsy Collins, David Bowie, Sex Pistols, The Misfits-era Glenn Danzig, Mötley Crüe, Van Halen (early EVH guitar seen with John Frusciante in hair metal scene) and Nirvana.[8]

The video received seven nominations at the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards, but only won the award for Best Art Direction, failing to win its six other nominations for Video of the Year, Best Group Video, Best Rock Video, Best Direction, Best Editing and Best Cinematography. The video was also nominated for an MMVA for best international video.

[edit] Track listing

CD single 1
  1. "Dani California" – 4:42
  2. "Million Miles of Water" – 4:06
CD single 2
  1. "Dani California" – 4:40
  2. "Whatever We Want" – 4:48
  3. "Lately" – 2:56
7" picture disc single
  1. "Dani California" – 4:40
  2. "Whatever We Want" – 4:48
12" Picture disc single
  1. "Dani California" – 4:40
Promotional single
  1. "Dani California" – 4:42

[edit] Chart performance

Chart (2007) Peak
position[9]
Argentina Top 40 Singles 1[10]
Danish Single Chart 1
Australian Top 40 Digital Tracks Chart 2
Latvian Airplay Top 2
Swedish Singles Chart 2
UK Singles Chart 2
Chilean Airplay Top 100 4
Italian Single Chart 4
Swiss Singles Chart 4
Norwegian Singles Chart 5
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 6
Chart (2006) Peak
position[11]
New Zealand Chart 7
Irish Singles Chart 7
Austrian Singles Chart 7
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 8
Dutch Top 40 8
Israeli Single Chart 8
Belgian Singles Chart 9
German Singles Chart 12
Peru Top 100 12[12]
French Singles Chart 57

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
"World Wide Suicide" by Pearl Jam
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number-one single
April 22, 2006
Succeeded by
"Steady, As She Goes" by The Raconteurs


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