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Destroyer (The Kinks song)

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1981 single by The Kinks
"Destroyer"
Single by The Kinks
from the album Give the People What They Want
B-side"Back to Front"
Released28 September 1981 (US)
RecordedMay 1979 – June 1981
StudioPower Station, New York City
Genre
Length3:47
LabelArista AS 0619
Songwriter(s)Ray Davies
Producer(s)Ray Davies
The Kinks US singles chronology
"You Really Got Me (live)"
(1980)
"Destroyer"
(1981)
"Better Things"
(1981)

"Destroyer" is a song by British rock band the Kinks, written by Ray Davies. It was released as a track on the group's nineteenth album, Give the People What They Want, in August 1981, and was the album's lead single in the US. It was not released as a single in the UK.

The song features references to the band's earlier hits, including the riff from 1964's "All Day and All of the Night" and lyrics inspired by 1970's "Lola". Like other Kinks songs of the period, "Destroyer" features a heavier, rock-based sound. After being abandoned during the Low Budget sessions, the song was finally released on Give the People What They Want.

Background

"Destroyer" was initially planned to appear on the band's previous album, Low Budget, appearing in early track listings of the in-progress album. However, the song was dropped from Low Budget because the band could not create a satisfactory mix.

"Destroyer" was ultimately recorded at the Power Station studio. Drummer Mick Avory attributed the song's dense sound to the studio's audio dynamics; he said, "We recorded that at the Power Station in New York in the ambient room, which had a great drum sound. The sound of the room can really affect what you’re doing. When you hear that sound slapping around that big room, you want to cut loose. That’s what I did."

Music and lyrics

"Destroyer" features callbacks to previous Kinks songs, both lyrically and musically. The track borrows the main riff from The Kinks' 1964 song, "All Day and All of the Night", which was one of the band's first hits. The lyrics feature the return of the transvestite title character from The Kinks' 1970 hit song, "Lola"; in "Destroyer", the singer brings Lola to his place where he becomes increasingly paranoid.

According to Modern Drummer's Patrick Berkery, the song features a "metallic" sound that reflects the band's "louder and more riff oriented" sound during the late 1970s and early 1980s. Berkery notes Mick Avory's "trashier fills" and "bigger sound that was miles removed from the lighter touch of his early days."

Record World said that it's "perhaps the first heavy metal rap song" and uses "the basic riff from 'All Day and All of the Night.'"

Release and reception

The track was chosen as the lead single from the album in the US ("Better Things" was the lead single in the UK), although it was released after the album in September. In 1982, the single reached #3 on the Billboard Rock Top Tracks chart and #85 on the Billboard Hot 100.

In the UK, the track was available only when the album was released there in January 1982.

References

  1. Hinman, Doug. All Day and All of the Night. p. 230.
  2. ^ Berkery, Patrick. "10 Reasons to Love the Kinks' Mick Avory". Modern Drummer.
  3. "Destroyer by the Kinks". SongFacts.
  4. "Single Picks" (PDF). Record World. 17 October 1981. p. 10. Retrieved 1 March 2023.
  5. "The Kinks US Charts". AllMusic.
The Kinks
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Concert tours
Related articles
The Kinks singles discography
1960s singles
(UK & US)
1964
"Long Tall Sally"
"You Still Want Me"
"You Really Got Me"
"All Day and All of the Night"
1965
"Tired of Waiting for You"
"Ev'rybody's Gonna Be Happy"
"Set Me Free"
"See My Friends"
"Who'll Be the Next in Line"
"A Well Respected Man"
"Till the End of the Day"
1966
"Dedicated Follower of Fashion"
"Sunny Afternoon"
"Dead End Street"
1967
"Mister Pleasant"
"Waterloo Sunset"
"Death of a Clown" (Dave Davies solo)
"Autumn Almanac"
"Susannah's Still Alive" (Dave Davies solo)
1968
"Wonderboy"
"Days"
"Lincoln County" (Dave Davies solo)
1969
"Starstruck"
"Hold My Hand" (Dave Davies solo)
"Plastic Man"
"Drivin'"
"The Village Green Preservation Society"
"Shangri-La"
"Victoria"
1970s singles
(UK & US)
1970
"Lola"
"Apeman"
1971
"God's Children"
"20th Century Man"
1972
"Supersonic Rocket Ship"
"Celluloid Heroes"
1973
"One of the Survivors"
"Sitting in the Midday Sun"
"Sweet Lady Genevieve"
"Where Have All the Good Times Gone"
1974
"Money Talks"
"Mirror of Love"
"Mirror of Love" (band version)
"Holiday Romance"
"Preservation"
1975
"Everybody's a Star (Starmaker)"
"Ducks on the Wall"
"You Can't Stop the Music"
1976
"I'm in Disgrace"
"No More Looking Back"
1977
"Sleepwalker"
"Juke Box Music"
"Father Christmas"
1978
"A Rock 'n' Roll Fantasy"
"Live Life"
"Black Messiah"
1979
"(Wish I Could Fly Like) Superman"
"A Gallon of Gas"
"Catch Me Now I'm Falling"
"Moving Pictures"
"Pressure"
1980s singles
(UK & US)
1980
"Lola" (live)
"You Really Got Me" (live)
1981
"Better Things"
"Destroyer"
"Predictable"
1982
"Come Dancing"
1983
"Don't Forget to Dance"
1984
"Good Day"
"Do It Again"
1985
"Living on a Thin Line" (radio promo only)
"Summer's Gone"
1986
"Rock 'n' Roll Cities"
"How Are You"
1987
"Lost and Found"
1988
"The Road"
1989
"Down All the Days (Till 1992)"
1990s singles
(UK & US)
1990
"How Do I Get Close"
1993
"Only a Dream"
"Scattered"
Other singles
(non-UK/US)
1966
"Dandy" (Europe)
1969
"Picture Book" (Australia)
"Australia" (Australia)
1983
"State of Confusion" (Germany)
1991
"Did Ya" (Europe)
Other songs
"So Mystifying"
"Bald Headed Woman"
"Stop Your Sobbing"
"Dancing in the Street"
"I Need You"
"I Go to Sleep"
"I'm Not Like Everybody Else"
"Big Black Smoke"
"Party Line"
"Rosy Won't You Please Come Home"
"Love Me Till the Sun Shines"
"David Watts"
"Two Sisters"
"Polly"
"She's Got Everything"
"Do You Remember Walter?"
"Johnny Thunder"
"Last of the Steam-Powered Trains"
"Big Sky"
"Sitting by the Riverside"
"Animal Farm"
"Village Green"
"Phenomenal Cat"
"All of My Friends Were There"
"Wicked Annabella"
"Monica"
"People Take Pictures of Each Other"
"Berkeley Mews"
"Mr. Churchill Says"
"Strangers"
"This Time Tomorrow"
"Rats"
"Got to Be Free"
"Have a Cuppa Tea"
"Oklahoma U.S.A."
"Muswell Hillbilly"
"Sitting in My Hotel"
"The Hard Way"
"Life Goes On"
"Misfits"
"Attitude"
"Low Budget"
"Give the People What They Want"
"Heart of Gold"
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