Divine Hammer

Album: Last Splash (1993)
Charted: 59
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Songfacts®:

  • "Divine Hammer" is a catchy indie-pop song that sounds like it should be about summer and roller skates - and then you actually listen to it and realize it's about existential despair. This is one of Kim Deal's great tricks: dressing up spiritual crisis in jangly guitars and sugary vocal lines and making it all sound like a popsicle melting in the sun while the universe slowly unravels behind you.
  • Released as the second single from Last Splash, "Divine Hammer" helped cement The Breeders' status as unlikely alt-rock heroes in the early '90s. It's catchy, chiming, and deceptively upbeat - something you could hum while having a minor meltdown in a supermarket aisle.
  • So what's it about? According to Kim Deal, it's a song about existential angst. "I'm just looking for some divinity to come down and, you know what, I don't think there is anything," she told Australia's Triple J in 1993.

    Deal expanded on that theme to Rolling Stone, saying: "When I grew up and went to Sunday school, they said it was going to be really great... I believed everything everybody told me. And that's why I'm so pissed off now."
  • The demo tape preceding the Pod album (known as "Pod Demos," 1988) includes a song titled "Stop Whispering" that has identical music with completely different lyrics. "Pod Demos" also features the first recorded version of "Driving on Nine." About five years later, "Divine Hammer" and "Drivin' on 9" were both released on the album Last Splash.
  • And where did that fuzzy, earwormy guitar lick come from? Not from the usual sources. Kim Deal revealed to Mojo magazine that it originated in a jam session with a friend of her brother and father, both of whom worked at the Air Force base in Dayton, Ohio.

    "At one point, it made me think I was in the Georgia Satellites," Deal said. "I like it now, but I wish it had a harp."
  • The music video for "Divine Hammer" was co-directed by Spike Jonze, Kim Gordon (of Sonic Youth fame), and Richard Kern. It's a surreal little trip that matches the song's oddball charm and spiritual shrug.
  • Last Splash went on to become The Breeders' breakout album, peaking at #33 in the US and reaching #5 in the UK. The album eventually went Platinum, tapping into the audience for deeply disillusioned indie-pop.

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