Beautiful Horses

Album: I Wanna Run Barefoot Through Your Hair (2024)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Christopher Owens' third album, Chrissybaby Forever, landed in May 2015 as the final installment in a three-album contract. The record label promptly dropped him, leaving Owens in a state of professional and personal freefall.

    In the years leading up to his fourth album, Owens endured a motorbike crash, homelessness, the death of his former Girls bandmate Chet "JR" White, and the end of an engagement. But from the ashes of heartbreak and upheaval came I Wanna Run Barefoot Through Your Hair, an album that turns pain into poetry and desolation into something close to hope.

    The song is Owens' first attempt at envisioning a positive romantic future after his previous heartbreak and personal struggles.
  • In writing "Beautiful Horses," Owens was wondering what he needs from somebody to have a good relationship. He asserts his readiness for a new romance while also setting boundaries and expectations.

    "In that song I was imagining how I would possibly imagine being in another relationship," Owens told Uncut magazine. "How things would have to be, what I would require from someone else. I guess in my previous relationship I'd felt I was looked at like somebody who would be great if only they would change this or that. Like a project. Once I started to write Beautiful Horses it was like a declaration of 'I need somebody to just accept me as-is. I think once somebody does that for somebody does that for you. It's such an act of grace that you just on your own want to be your best person."
  • "Beautiful Horses" is one of the brighter spots on an album that didn't initially seem destined for light. Owens admits the songs he first wrote - tracks like "No Good" and "White Flag" - were, in his words, "really depressing." His listening habits at the time leaned heavily on rap, which may have influenced the initial darker tone. But then he wrote "Two Words," a song that marked a shift in his outlook, and suddenly, hope began to seep in. From that point, the record grew more positive.
  • The album title came from a memory hiccup - Owens believed the phrase came from It's a Wonderful Life (1946) but it actually hails from the 1933 film Bombshell. No matter - it's the sentiment that counts. The imagery of running barefoot through someone's hair conjures intimacy, liberation, and a yearning for connection, themes that resonate deeply throughout the record.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Peter Lord

Peter LordSongwriter Interviews

You may not recognize his name, but you will certainly recognize Peter Lord's songs. He wrote the bevy of hits from Paula Abdul's second album, Spellbound.

Justin Timberlake

Justin TimberlakeFact or Fiction

Was Justin the first to be Punk'd by Ashton Kutcher? Did Britney really blame him for her meltdown? Did his bandmates think he was gay?

Joan Armatrading

Joan ArmatradingSongwriter Interviews

The revered singer-songwriter talks inspiration and explains why she put a mahout in "Drop the Pilot."

Supertramp founder Roger Hodgson

Supertramp founder Roger HodgsonSongwriter Interviews

Roger tells the stories behind some of his biggest hits, including "Give a Little Bit," "Take the Long Way Home" and "The Logical Song."

Colin Hay

Colin HaySongwriter Interviews

Established as a redoubtable singer-songwriter, the Men At Work frontman explains how religion, sobriety and Jack Nicholson play into his songwriting.

Billy Steinberg - "Like A Virgin"

Billy Steinberg - "Like A Virgin"They're Playing My Song

The first of Billy's five #1 hits was the song that propelled Madonna to stardom. You'd think that would get you a backstage pass, wouldn't you?