O Superman

Album: Big Science (1981)
Charted: 2
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This half sung, half spoken epic was taken from Anderson's 7-hour multi media project "United States 1-V."
  • The vocal was spoken through a vocoder to get the distorted sound. Vocoders are devices that can turn analog sounds into a digital output, completely transforming the input signal. They were popular in the '70s and '80s among musicians looking for a futuristic effect. You can hear it on "Mr. Blue Sky" by Electric Light Orchestra and "Radio Ga Ga" by Queen.

    Anderson told Uncut magazine about her use of the vocoder. "It's one of my favorite instruments," she said. "I guess I've just always been a geek, and I do love that it's so mellifluous and I liked especially that it was a coding device in World War II, that's its origin. And O Superman was a kind of code. It used a lot of slogans, of the 'have a nice day' and the US Postal slogan variety."
  • The 8 minute single release became a hit in the UK after being championed by BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel. To date it is the only hit record by a performance artist.
  • Anderson based this song on an aria from the 1885 opera Le Cid by Jules Massenet. She got the idea after listening to a recording of the aria made by Charles Hilland, an African-American tenor.
  • This song addresses issues of technology and communication, in particular planes and arms. Anderson told Mojo magazine June 2008 that she wrote this song in a similar time to now. She explained: "In this case it was the Contra affair and defeat as we were experiencing a series of techno disasters- helicopters trying to rescue hostages and crashing in the desert. Oh, and as well as now, yet another war that is endless-or as the same war. The same conflict with Islam." It should be noted that whilst this was written in 1981, the reporting of the Iran-Contra affair (a weapons for hostages deal) occurred in the mid 1980s. Maybe Anderson used the wrong term for the original Iran hostage crisis in 1979-80.
  • In the same interview Anderson told Mojo how the song's success didn't really affect her: "I was kind of in the art world, but I did have a good time with that, because I realized how unreal it was and how utterly absurd. As an anthropologist I found it really fun, but not something I wanted to repeat or be repeatable. Just not my scene. And I've seen it be a trap for other people. As a kid I was from a family with money. I was very grateful for that, mainly because it taught me very early as a child that it didn't help to have money. It didn't make you happier, it didn't make you smarter, it didn't make you freer. It often did the opposite of these things."
  • Laurie Anderson was married to the American rock singer-songwriter Lou Reed from April 2008 until his death in October 2013.
  • Laurie Anderson told Uncut in 2021 it felt a little unusual when she was writing "O Superman."

    "It was part of a fairly long work I was writing called United States, and that was the result of spending so much time away from this country, and working elsewhere," she said. "Then you look back and you can see things from a different point of view. And so it was part of trying to get some distance. I would really love to be able to do that now."

Comments: 3

  • Josh from Champaign, IlThat last passage about "Mom" struck me as profound (as I'm sure it's intended). Realizing that as much as we'd like to separate ourselves from technology, war... the artificial and evil activities found on Earth, perpetuated by human beings... without those things, it's quite possible that many of us wouldn't be alive. I often think about the American "Civil War" (which was really a war of secession) and the multitudes of generations of humans that were never born because of the war, how different our society would be. Not only might there have been more great inventors, but also think of the people our ancestors didn't have to compete with for survival later, maybe a murderer wasn't born that would have stopped the lineage that you or I came from. In the same way, technology enables greater resources, such as food, to expand civilization in ways that it couldn't have been otherwise and so we may very well have been born as a result of these advances technologically. In some very real way, these things are our kin, as uncomfortable as it may be to think about.
  • Karl from Ingatestone, United Kingdomi love Laurie Anderson, O Superman is a really good song and the dance crew Legs N Co were really good on TOTP performing this song.
    David Bowie's 1997 version was horrendous
  • Mark from London, EnglandThis song became a hit in the UK after being championed by late-night DJ, the late great John Peel. At that time, it was available on the indie One-Ten label as an import but Warner Bros. later re-released it due to the proverbial popular demand. Note: the album track, exactly teh same as the single, is called: "O Superman (For Massenet)".
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Dave Mason

Dave MasonSongwriter Interviews

Dave reveals the inspiration for "Feelin' Alright" and explains how the first song he ever wrote became the biggest hit for his band Traffic.

Donnie Iris (Ah! Leah!, The Rapper)

Donnie Iris (Ah! Leah!, The Rapper)Songwriter Interviews

Before "Rap" was a form of music, it was something guys did to pick up girls in nightclubs. Donnie talks about "The Rapper" and reveals the identity of Leah.

Hawksley Workman

Hawksley WorkmanSongwriter Interviews

One of Canada's most popular and eclectic performers, Hawksley tells stories about his oldest songs, his plentiful side projects, and the ways that he keeps his songwriting fresh.

George Harrison

George HarrisonFact or Fiction

Did Eric Clapton really steal George's wife? What's the George Harrison-Monty Python connection? Set the record straight with our Fact or Fiction quiz.

Michael Glabicki of Rusted Root

Michael Glabicki of Rusted RootSongwriter Interviews

Michael tells the story of "Send Me On My Way," and explains why some of the words in the song don't have a literal meaning.

Jason Newsted (ex-Metallica)

Jason Newsted (ex-Metallica)Songwriter Interviews

The former Metallica bassist talks about his first time writing a song with James Hetfield, and how a hand-me-down iPad has changed his songwriting.