SPCodex:Social media/1979: Difference between revisions

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|original_date=1996-01-23
|original_date=1996-01-23
|hour_of_day=5
|hour_of_day=5
|needs_review=No
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{{Social media/Instagram|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It is the second single from Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and features loops and samples uncharacteristic of previous material. It is The Smashing Pumpkins' most successful single to date, written as a nostalgic coming of age story.
{{Social media/Instagram|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It is the second single from Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and features loops and samples uncharacteristic of previous material. It is The Smashing Pumpkins' most successful single to date, written as a nostalgic coming of age story.
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The song was written and recorded using a 1960s-era Kimberly Bison guitar that Corgan bought for $60 at a pawn shop. Nicknamed "Kimberly Kay", this is the same 'secret weapon' guitar that was used on "Mayonaise" and "Panopticon".
The song was written and recorded using a 1960s-era Kimberly Bison guitar that Corgan bought for $60 at a pawn shop. Nicknamed "Kimberly Kay", this is the same 'secret weapon' guitar that was used on "Mayonaise" and "Panopticon".


"1979" reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100, and at #1 on both the US Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. In Canada and Iceland it reached #2 nationally, and charted in the top 40 in at least a dozen other countries, reaching the 1996 year-end chart in four countries. It is certified Gold in the US and Italy and Silver in the UK. It was nominated for the Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal at the 1997 Grammy Awards, and was voted the #2 best SP song by Rolling Stone readers. At ~629 plays, it is the 7th most-performed song in live SP history.
"1979" reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100, and at #1 on both the US Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. In Canada and Iceland it reached #2 nationally, and charted in the top 40 in at least a dozen other countries, reaching the 1996 year-end chart in four countries. It is certified Gold in the US and Italy, and in 2023 became certified Gold in the UK. It was nominated for the Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal at the 1997 Grammy Awards, and was voted the #2 best SP song by Rolling Stone readers. At ~{{play count|1979}} plays, it is the 7th most-performed song in live SP history.


<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/1979</nowiki>
https://spcodex.wiki/1979
|photo1=https://instagram.fphl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t51.2885-15/e35/140832715_898271364243358_6335047514022749018_n.jpg?_nc_ht=instagram.fphl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net&_nc_cat=110&_nc_ohc=gS3UJe_UiocAX8sQsN7&edm=ALQROFkBAAAA&ccb=7-4&ig_cache_key=MjQ5MjQxMzQ0MzMyMjYyMzIzMw%3D%3D.2-ccb7-4&oh=00_AT-2ss215ZYNhq64NFVAFolp-ERDT2J1doHjnjMqw-FGgQ&oe=61F117BA&_nc_sid=30a2ef
|photo1=https://spcodex.wiki/images/8/80/SmashingPumpkins-1979.jpg
|tags1=smashingpumpkins, wpccodex
|tags1=smashingpumpkins, wpccodex
|photo2=https://instagram.fphl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net/v/t51.2885-15/e35/141025950_131913275420702_185889866506298568_n.jpg?_nc_ht=instagram.fphl1-1.fna.fbcdn.net&_nc_cat=102&_nc_ohc=qbDTKETO_e0AX-B7Ss8&edm=ALQROFkBAAAA&ccb=7-4&ig_cache_key=MjQ5MjQxMzQ0MzI5NzI2OTAxMA%3D%3D.2-ccb7-4&oh=00_AT_ZV7PRNKpEzJ69GFl9TPG-4RBjY-81tmi3Og_aI4L0tg&oe=61F18052&_nc_sid=30a2ef
|photo2=https://i.discogs.com/dh6W3nM4aPJC9AXOE-x9x-JXu4cydDZjop-l_w_ehOs/rs:fit/g:sm/q:90/h:600/w:600/czM6Ly9kaXNjb2dz/LWRhdGFiYXNlLWlt/YWdlcy9SLTE2MDEw/NjYtMTQ4MjIxNDY4/NS00ODc5LmpwZWc.jpeg
}}
}}
{{Social media/Facebook|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It is the second single from Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and features loops and samples uncharacteristic of previous material. It is The Smashing Pumpkins' most successful single to date, written as a nostalgic coming of age story.
{{Social media/Facebook|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It is the second single from Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness and features loops and samples uncharacteristic of previous material. It is The Smashing Pumpkins' most successful single to date, written as a nostalgic coming of age story.
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The song was written and recorded using a 1960s-era Kimberly Bison guitar that Corgan bought for $60 at a pawn shop. Nicknamed "Kimberly Kay", this is the same 'secret weapon' guitar that was used on "Mayonaise" and "Panopticon".
The song was written and recorded using a 1960s-era Kimberly Bison guitar that Corgan bought for $60 at a pawn shop. Nicknamed "Kimberly Kay", this is the same 'secret weapon' guitar that was used on "Mayonaise" and "Panopticon".


"1979" reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100, and at #1 on both the US Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. In Canada and Iceland it reached #2 nationally, and charted in the top 40 in at least a dozen other countries, reaching the 1996 year-end chart in four countries. It is certified Gold in the US and Italy and Silver in the UK. It was nominated for the Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal at the 1997 Grammy Awards, and was voted the #2 best SP song by Rolling Stone readers. At ~629 plays, it is the 7th most-performed song in live SP history.
"1979" reached #12 on the Billboard Hot 100, and at #1 on both the US Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts. In Canada and Iceland it reached #2 nationally, and charted in the top 40 in at least a dozen other countries, reaching the 1996 year-end chart in four countries. It is certified Gold in the US and Italy, and in 2023 became certified Gold in the UK. It was nominated for the Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal at the 1997 Grammy Awards, and was voted the #2 best SP song by Rolling Stone readers. At ~{{play count|1979}} plays, it is the 7th most-performed song in live SP history.


<nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/1979</nowiki>
https://spcodex.wiki/1979
}}
}}
{{Social media/Twitter|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It was SP's most successful single. Written as a nostalgic coming of age story, it features loops and samples unlike previous material. It hit #12 in the US overall and at #1 on both the Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts https://spcodex.wiki/wiki/1979
{{Social media/Twitter|"1979" released January 23, 1996! It was SP's most successful single. Written as a nostalgic coming of age story, it features loops and samples unlike previous material. It hit #12 in the US overall and at #1 on both the Alt Rock and Mainstream Rock charts <nowiki>https://spcodex.wiki/1979</nowiki>


"1979" was the last song written for MCIS and was almost dropped. Flood gave Corgan a day to finish it or it was off the album. Corgan finished it in just 4 hours. The next day, Flood heard it once and decided to include it. Everything except the vocals are from the same 12 hours
"1979" has a sample of Corgan's voice repeated throughout. He was singing "today" as the melody line, so he and Flood recorded him singing to a tape and electronically manipulated samples and looped them against a drumbeat. This is the 'ooh-ahh' sound you hear at every verse.
The song was written and recorded using a 1960s-era Kimberly Bison guitar that Corgan bought for $60 at a pawn shop. Nicknamed "Kimberly Kay", this is the same 'secret weapon' guitar that was used on "Mayonaise" and "Panopticon". https://spcodex.wiki/Kimberly_Kay
"1979" charted in the top 40 in at least 13 countries, reaching the 1996 year-end chart in 4 countries. It is certified Gold in the US and Italy, and in 2023 became certified Gold in the UK. It earned SP noms for Record of the Year and Best Rock Performance at the 1997 Grammy's
}}
}}

Latest revision as of 19:37, 23 January 2024

This page defines the social media posts for 1979.

This post is scheduled to deliver on January 23 at 5:00 UTC.

NOTE: The structure must follow the guide at SPCodex:Social media exactly for the automated posts to work.

  • [1]
    • smashingpumpkins, wpccodex
  • [2]