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Wednesday, January 18, 2012

XTC - Dear God (poverty slideshow)



"Dear God" is a song on XTC's 1986 album Skylarking. It was not a part of the original Skylarking album, but after DJs across America picked up the song, Geffen Records decided to replace "Mermaid Smiled" with "Dear God." The song was inspired by a series of books with the same title, seen by lead singer Andy Partridge as an exploitation of children

The first verse and closing line are sung by the then eight-year-old Jasmine Veillette, the daughter of a friend of producer Todd Rundgren. In the video a boy lip-syncs her vocals. The lyrics are addressed to God, and vividly describe the range of human suffering, which the narrator attributes to God. The singers conclude every verse with the line "I can't believe in you." Despite the prayer-like quality, the lyrics strongly imply doubt about God's benevolence ("The wars you bring, the babes you drown, those lost at sea and never found."), God's existence ("Did you make mankind after we made you?"), and the value of the Bible as God's word ("Us crazy humans wrote it [...] Still believin' that junk is true / well, I know it ain't and so do you")

The song riled believers because of its anti-God sentiment which might be interpreted as either dystheism or misotheism, yet is also includes lines of doubting Satan's existence as well, such as in the two lines, "I wont believe in Heaven or Hell/No saints, no sinners, no devil as well." In the UK, when the song was originally released as a single many record shops refused to stock the track, fearing a religious backlash.

It is ranked #62 on VH1's 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders of the 80s despite the fact the song never charted on the Billboard Hot 100 and despite peaking at #37 on the Billboard Album Rock Chart, the band had larger hits on both charts and the later Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.

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