Sunny Came Home

"Sunny Came Home"
Single by Shawn Colvin
from the album A Few Small Repairs
Released June 24, 1997 (1997-06-24)
Format CD
Recorded 1996
Genre Folk rock[1]
Length 4:24 (album version)
3:46 (radio edit)
Label Columbia
Writer(s)
Producer(s) John Leventhal
Shawn Colvin singles chronology
"Get Out of This House"
(1996)
"Sunny Came Home"
(1997)
"You and The Mona Lisa"
(1997)

"Sunny Came Home" is a folk-rock song by American musician Shawn Colvin. It is the theme song to her 1996 concept album A Few Small Repairs, and it was released as a CD single on June 24, 1997.

"Sunny Came Home" was a commercial success, reaching number seven on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The song was also a critical smash, winning both Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Song of the Year and was nominated for Best Female Pop Vocal Performance.

Background and composition

The song tells the story of a woman named Sunny who burns down her house to escape her past.[2] It is one of several "story songs" on A Few Small Repairs, a method of songwriting Colvin began experimenting with while writing for the album. The title of the song comes from the opening lyrics.

The song's bright, calm and warming music, fronted by a distinctive mandolin strum, contrasts very sharply with the destructive lyrics, particularly the haunting bridge: "Get the kids and bring a sweater; dry is good, and wind is better. Count the years; you always knew it / Strike a match; go on and do it".[3] The title of the album, A Few Small Repairs, also appears in the third line of the second verse of the song, "'It's time for a few small repairs,' she said."

"Sunny Came Home" is written in the key of B minor in common time with a tempo of 84 beats per minute.[4] Colvin's vocals span from F3 to B4 in the song.[5]

Track listing

  1. "Sunny Came Home" (Colvin, John Leventhal) (4:24)
  2. "What I Get Paid For" (Colvin, Neil Finn) (3:23)

Chart performance

"Sunny Came Home" is Colvin's biggest hit. At the 1998 Grammy Awards, it was named Song of the Year and Record of the Year. The Grammy Awards presentation was the occasion for an interruption by rapper Ol' Dirty Bastard stating that his group, Wu-Tang Clan, "is for the children. We teach the children. You know what I mean?", while Colvin was about to receive her award.[6] It peaked at #7 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the US, and likely would have achieved a higher peak had it been released commercially sooner to correspond with the song's airplay maximum: it was #1 on the Hot 100 Airplay chart for four weeks and also #1 on the Adult Contemporary chart for four weeks. On the Hot 100 Single Sales chart, however, it peaked at #29. Colvin's record label did not plan to release the track as a retail single until it became an airplay favorite on CHR as well as AC and Adult Alternative radio stations and the label deduced that the song appealed to a younger audience who might be willing to buy the single.

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1997) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[7] 44
Canada (RPM) 3
Canada Adult Contemporary (RPM) 1
Germany (Official German Charts)[8] 12
UK Singles (The Official Charts Company) 29
US Billboard Hot 100[9] 7
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[10] 1
US Adult Top 40 (Billboard)[11] 1
US Mainstream Top 40 (Billboard)[12] 4

Year-end charts

Chart (1997) Position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100[13] 39

Charts succession

Preceded by
"One Headlight" by The Wallflowers
Billboard Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks
number-one single

June 29 - August 9, 1997
Succeeded by
"All for You" by Sister Hazel
Preceded by
"Go the Distance" by Michael Bolton
Billboard Hot Adult Contemporary Tracks
number-one single

August 9–30, 1997
Succeeded by
"How Do I Live" by LeAnn Rimes

Awards succession

Preceded by
"Change the World" by Eric Clapton
Winner of Grammy Award for Record of the Year and Song of the Year
1998
Succeeded by
"My Heart Will Go On" by Celine Dion

References

  1. "Here is a List of Every GRAMMYs Song of the Year Winner Ever". CBS Interactive. February 9, 2015. Retrieved August 6, 2016.
  2. "Bio." Shawn Colvin. Accessed April 17, 2010.
  3. Colvin, Shawn, and Leventhal, John. Lyrics. "Sunny Came Home". A Few Small Repairs. CD. Columbia. 1996.
  4. BPMDatabase.com. "BPM Database - Search". www.bpmdatabase.com. Retrieved 2016-08-04.
  5. Leventhal, John. "Shawn Colvin "Sunny Came Home" Sheet Music in B Minor (transposable) - Download & Print". Musicnotes.com. Retrieved 2016-08-04.
  6. "Grammy Gold - The Bastard Interrupts the Show". Time. February 28, 2009. Retrieved 4 April 2013.
  7. "Australian-charts.com – Shawn Colvin – Sunny Came Home". ARIA Top 50 Singles.
  8. "Musicline.de – Shawn Colvin Single-Chartverfolgung" (in German). Media Control Charts. PhonoNet GmbH.
  9. "Shawn Colvin – Chart history" Billboard Hot 100 for Shawn Colvin. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  10. "Shawn Colvin – Chart history" Billboard Adult Contemporary for Shawn Colvin. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  11. "Shawn Colvin – Chart history" Billboard Adult Pop Songs for Shawn Colvin. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  12. "Shawn Colvin – Chart history" Billboard Pop Songs for Shawn Colvin. Retrieved 2010-09-30.
  13. "Billboard Top 100 - 1997". Retrieved 2010-08-28.
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