Decadence Dance

Album: Pornograffitti (1990)
Charted: 36
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Songfacts®:

  • Extreme were well aware of rock star clichés and did what they could to avoid them. "Decadence Dance" is song that looks at how the lifestyle can quickly spiral out of control:

    It's hard to stop once the music gets started

    Written by lead singer Gary Cherone and guitarist Nuno Bettencourt, it opens the Pornograffitti album with an orchestral soundscape where we hear a mother yelling, "Francis, be careful!" as the guitars and drums kick in.

    "Pornograffitti evolved into a loose concept record," Cherone said in a Songfacts interview. "I was writing those lyrics at a certain point in time, so there were running themes going throughout. 'Decadence Dance' was the overture of the record and it was setting up a theme of a loss of innocence. A young boy leaving home and going into the decadent world and being tempted by all the things that go on in life."
  • Extreme released their first (eponymous) album in 1989, but they had been at it since 1985, playing a lot of gigs in the Boston area before signing with A&M Records. They weren't very decadent compared to other hair metal bands; there was no way they could compete with the likes of Guns N' Roses and Mötley Crüe in terms of hedonism. They certainly looked the part, though, and musically they could more than hold their own, with Cherone's clarion vocals and a supershredder guitarist in Bettencourt.

    They didn't sing about groupies or drugs, so it helped them to have a concept like they did on Pornograffitti. Their next album, III Sides To Every Story, had a far more developed concept, with each side representing a different variation of truth and having a different sound.
  • "Decadence Dance" was the first single from Pornograffitti. It went nowhere, and the follow-up, "Get The Funk Out," also died on the vine. It looked like Extreme might be left for dead, but then A&M issued the acoustic balled "More Than Words" as the next single, and it went to #1. They followed with another ballad, "Hole Hearted," which was also a hit. This gave the band new life but led to a disconnect because those songs didn't represent their sound.
  • The song runs 6:49 on the album but the single is cut down to 4:31, omitting the opening sound collage.
  • The music video opens with stodgy guy in a bowtie from "parents for a wholesome America" with tips on how kids can have some good, clean fun. Tip #1 is "learn a music instrument," at which point we see the band rocking out.

    Extreme had been making videos before they even had a record deal. In 1985 they made a video for their song "Mutha (Don't Wanna Go To School Today)" that aired on a Boston UHF station devoted to music videos.

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