Where Boys Fear to Tread: Difference between revisions
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to tread lightning, to ink the lavender skies | to tread lightning, to ink the lavender skies | ||
so get on the bomb | so get on the bomb | ||
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* [[W:Les Paul Junior|Les Paul Junior]] Reissue | * [[W:Les Paul Junior|Les Paul Junior]] Reissue | ||
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== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 03:35, 27 October 2020
"Where Boys Fear to Tread" is a song from The Smashing Pumpkins' third studio album, Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness. During the Infinite Sadness tour it was sometimes listed as "The Bomb" on setlists.
The song samples an explosion sound from the computer video game, Doom. This can be heard at the 1:20, 1:55, 2:29, 3:01 and 3:44 marks in the recording. This points to the relationship between Doom and The Smashing Pumpkins in the SPISPOPD joke.
Smashing Pumpkins Into Small Piles Of Putrid Debris
Smashing Pumpkins Into Small Piles Of Putrid Debris (or SPISPOPD) is part of a joke relating to the computer game Doom. It dates back to a Usenet post in early December 1993, where it was proposed to id Software (the company behind the game) that their next game be called Smashing Pumpkins Into Small Piles Of Putrid Debris. This initial quip was carried on, and a parody of the Doom FAQ was written called the SPISPOPD FAQ. The FAQ described a 3D game that ran on a computer with minimal specifications.
id Software gave a nod to the joke by planting it as a cheat code in the game. Typing "idspispopd" activates "no clipping" mode, which allows the player to walk through walls.
A second reference apparently sponsored by id Software appeared in the 1995 novelization of the video game series. The first book "Knee-Deep In The Dead" contains a passage in which one of the two major characters says "Smashing pumpkins into small pieces of putrid debris."
The Smashing Pumpkins perpetuated the gag by sampling the rocket launcher sound effect from Doom in "Where Boys Fear to Tread".
Two computer games were created based on the joke. Smashing Pumpkins into Small Piles of Putrid Debris is a 2D action game from Jamul Software (which later became Hamumu Software) where you collect candles and smash pumpkins with a red hammer. It was reportedly developed in 48 hours to capitalize on the joke. Hamumu Software later created a similar game called Amazin' SPISPOPD.
In Master of Magic, there is an item named "The Idspispopd", based on the Doom cheat code.
Lyrics
candy cane walks down
to build a bonfire, to break my fall
my baby, my sweet thing
just maybe we could lose ourselves this time
king of the horseflies, dark prince of death
his tragic forces are heaven sent
in sweet things, in a lovers breath
in knowing this was meant to be the last
a go-go-kids, a go-go-style
a suck suck kiss, a suck suck smile
as always, in young need
a veiled promise to never die
on dead highways, her black beauties roam
for june angels, so far from home
for a love lost, a faded picture
to tread lightning, to ink the lavender skies
so get on the bomb
Equipment
Billy Corgan
- Les Paul Junior Reissue
Availability
Title | Notes | Type |
---|---|---|
Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness | Disc two – Twilight to Starlight | Studio |
666 | Bootleg • Video | |
The Aeroplane Flies High | 2013 Reissue CD 6: Live Inside the Dark Globe | Box set |
Adore | 2014 Reissue CD 6: Kissed Alive Too | Studio |
The Friends & Enemies of Modern Music | Bootleg | |
The Original F.E.M.M Tape | Bootleg |
Tour stats
- Total plays: 183 plays (161 full, 22 tease, 7 soundcheck)
- First performance: The Smashing Pumpkins 1995-12-12 at Melkweg, Amsterdam, NL
- Last performance: The Smashing Pumpkins 2024-06-16 at Accor Arena, Paris, FR (tease)
- Last full performance: The Smashing Pumpkins 2013-05-07 at Red Hat Amphitheater, Raleigh, NC, US
References
- Mike Hommel (1993). "Smashing Pumpkins into Small Piles of Putrid Debris". Hamumu Software. Retrieved February 6, 2006.
- Mike Hommel (1999). "The History Of Hamumu Software". Hamumu Software. Retrieved February 6, 2006.
- Dafydd ab Hugh (1995) Knee-Deep in the Dead (Pocket Books, 1995), pg. 138.