Only God Knows

Album: T2 Trainspotting (2017)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This is one of three songs that Edinburgh-based multiracial hip-hop trio Young Fathers contributed to the T2 Trainspotting soundtrack. The movie is based on Irvine Welsh's book Porno, which describes the characters of Trainspotting ten years after the events of the earlier book.
  • The song features vocals from the Leith Congregational Choir. The Edinburgh choral group had preciously jumped onto Young Fathers' remix of Paul Weller's "Saturn's Pattern."
  • T2 Trainspotting director Danny Boyle described this as one of the songs that forms the movie's "heartbeat".

    He said: "Trainspotting, the original book is like a modern Ulysses. It's unsurpassed I think, and reading it is still like the 'rush of ocean to the heart'. You're always looking for the heartbeat of a film. For Trainspotting it was Underworld's 'Born Slippy'. For T2 It's Young Fathers. Their songs are my heartbeat for the film. And 'Only God Knows' is that rush again. The ocean. The heart."
  • Speaking to NME, Young Fathers said the song came about organically. "We did it when we were out in LA," Kayus Bankole explained. "It just felt like it fit the whole vibe of the film, so we gave it to Danny [Boyle], and he put it just at the end sequence bit of the film. That's it – it stands alone with the film."

    Bankole added regarding the lyrical content: "It was just vibes in the moment – it was the first thing that came to us when we were recording the song. It felt right and we just went for it. There was no pre-meditated agenda, it was just 'this is how I'm feeling at the moment – let's f---ing go for it.'"

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Shawn Mullins

Shawn MullinsSongwriter Interviews

"Lullaby" singer Shawn Mullins on "Beautiful Wreck," beating the Devil, and his writing credit on the Zac Brown Band song "Toes."

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in Rock

Does Jimmy Page Worship The Devil? A Look at Satanism in RockSong Writing

We ring the Hell's Bells to see what songs and rockers are sincere in their Satanism, and how much of it is an act.

Matthew Wilder - "Break My Stride"

Matthew Wilder - "Break My Stride"They're Playing My Song

Wilder's hit "Break My Stride" had an unlikely inspiration: a famous record mogul who rejected it.

Judas Priest

Judas PriestSongwriter Interviews

Rob Halford, Richie Faulkner and Glenn Tipton talk twin guitar harmonies and explain how they create songs in Judas Priest.

La La Brooks of The Crystals

La La Brooks of The CrystalsSong Writing

The lead singer on "Da Doo Ron Ron" and "Then He Kissed Me," La La explains how and why Phil Spector replaced The Crystals with Darlene Love on "He's A Rebel."

In The Cards

In The CardsSong Writing

Songwriters have used cards and card games to make sense of heartache, togetherness, and even Gonorrhea.