I Wanna Be Sedated
"I Wanna Be Sedated" is a song by the American punk rock band the Ramones. It is one of the band's best known songs. It was originally released on their fourth album, Road to Ruin, in September 1978 and was the B-side of the UK single "She's the One" released on September 21,1978. The song was later released as a single in the Netherlands in 1979, then in the U.S. in 1980 by RSO Records from the Times Square soundtrack album.
History
"I Wanna Be Sedated" was written by Joey Ramone. In an interview about the song, Joey explains the chorus:Music video
The music video for the song, directed by Bill Fishman, was released in September 1988, about ten years after the song was originally released, to promote the compilation album Ramones Mania. The iconic video features the Ramones sitting at a table, nonchalantly reading and eating corn flakes. Meanwhile, the background room erupts into a meeting place for nuns, acrobats, ballerinas, monsters, cheerleaders, clowns, doctors, fetish nurses, and smoking schoolgirls. The film is intentionally sped up to show the excitement of the background, while the band's actions are in regular motion. This was achieved by having the band members move very slowly, while the crowd moved normally, and then speeding up the film. One of the video's characters is a young Courtney Love.A still from the video was featured in the liner notes of the band’s 1989 album Brain Drain, though the song itself does not appear on that album.
Reception
"I Wanna Be Sedated" was number 145 on the Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. Marky Ramone is the drummer on this track.In 1999, National Public Radio included the song in the "NPR 100", in which NPR's music editors sought to compile the one hundred most important American musical works of the 20th century.
Cover versions
- The Adicts covered the song in the mid-80s when they were on Sire although it wasn't released until the 1992 compilation Totally Adicted. It was later included as a bonus track on some versions of Sound of Music.
- Operation Ivy covered the song in their Ramones EP.
- Mötley Crüe singer Vince Neil recorded a version of the song as bonus track for his first solo album Exposed in 1992.
- Shonen Knife has recorded a version of the song for the 1995 Japanese re-release of Burning Farm.
- Tiltwheel recorded the song for the tribute album Ramones Maniacs in 2001.
- Juliana Hatfield's band Blake Babies recorded a cover for their 2002 EP Epilogue.
- Canadian singer/songwriter Bruce Cockburn performed the song live with his side project Bambi and the Deerhunters in 2002.
- The Offspring covered the song for the 2003 Ramones tribute album We're a Happy Family. The band also performed the song in the film Idle Hands.
- Tyson Ritter of the All-American Rejects covered the song for the UK series Rock School.
- moe. covered the song on their live album Warts and All.
- The heavy metal band Viper covered the song on the album Maniacs in Japan.
- Brazilian rock singer Rita Lee covered this song in her 2004 album MTV Ao Vivo.
- The instrumental version by Belgian electroband Neven features in the movie I Could Never Be Your Woman by Amy Heckerling.
- The Go-Go's covered this song in their DVD Live Go-Go's in Central Park.
- Superhumanoids recorded the song as a single in 2012.
- New Found Glory covered the song on their 2013 Ramones tribute EP Mania.
- Kirsty MacColl covered the song in Titanic Days.
- The Sun King covered the song in his 3.12.21 EP.
- Finnish singer Mirel Wagner covered the song for the trailer of the 2016 Gore Verbinski film A Cure for Wellness.
In popular culture
- The song appears on the soundtrack to the 1980 movie Times Square.
- The song is performed by a cover-band at a High School Halloween Ball in the 1999 comedy-horror movie Idle Hands.
- On the show My So-Called Life, Rayanne makes a disastrous debut as the singer of a band while covering this song. Just before she is to come in, she panics and races off the stage, leaving Jordan to take over.
- The song briefly plays in the season 3 Gilmore Girls episode, "Application Anxiety".
- The song is featured on the trailer and the soundtrack for the comedy Scary Movie.
- The song is played briefly during a scene in the 2003 movie Daddy Day Care.
- The song makes an appearance on the soundtrack featured in '. The game was released less than 2 weeks before Johnny Ramone's death.
- The song is featured in the 2005 music video game Guitar Hero, as well as in the second installment of the Jam Sessions series and Rock Band 3, five years later.
- The character Spike from Buffy the Vampire Slayer is a big fan of the Ramones. This song is featured in the episode "Crush". Spike manipulates Buffy into a date and partly sings the chorus while they are sitting in his car, afterwards he proceeds to ask Buffy if she likes the Ramones.
- The video has appeared on Beavis & Butt-head. It is extremely well received by the two and they say hardly anything the whole video out of enjoyment of the song so much.
- An episode from the third season of Entourage is named after the song; in it, an old-school Hollywood producer pitches a script about the Ramones to E.
- In the song 'Overstayer' by Every Time I Die, front man Keith Buckley sings "'I want to be sedated' / Just like Joey said".
- The song is featured in the 2015 film Terminator Genisys, where Sarah Connor listens to it in one scene in 1984, and later listens to it on a headset while she, Kyle Reese and the T-800 are arming themselves in an underground bunker. It was also mentioned in the novelization of ' as one of the songs that John Connor listens to.
- The song is featured in the pilot episode of the 2015 sitcom, The Jim Gaffigan Show.
- The song is featured in the 1996 film Carpool.
- The song is featured in the trailer for the 2019 film .
- Ramones Time: At 12:00 am on December 31, 2019, many people posted that it was, "2020, 24 hours to go."
- The song was featured in the penultimate episode of The Magicians which aired on March 25, sung by most of the cast during a heist operation in a musical episode.
Certifications