Iris (song)
"Iris" is a song by American alternative rock band Goo Goo Dolls. Originally written for the soundtrack of the 1998 film City of Angels, the song was later included on the band's sixth album Dizzy Up the Girl. The song's time signature alternates between 4/4 time| and Duple and quadruple metre|, and features an unusual guitar tuning in which all of the strings are tuned to D, with the exception of the lowest string which is a B, lending the guitar a chorus-like effect.
"Iris" has contributed greatly to the band's success. Besides becoming one of the biggest alternative rock staples of its time, "Iris" also remains one of the biggest crossover hits in the history of popular music, crossing over from modern rock radio to pop and adult contemporary radio, reaching number one on all of these formats and becoming the most played song of 1998 for all formats. The song reached number one in Australia, Canada and Italy, number three in the United Kingdom, number nine on the US Billboard Hot 100, and has become one of Ireland's best-selling singles of all time. "Iris" is the Goo Goo Dolls' signature song and has received critical acclaim, being described as an "ubiquitous" staple for the band's live sets.
Composition
After completing the first-edit on the film City of Angels, co-producer Bob Cavallo and his music producer son Rob Cavallo decided to take along musical artists to a viewing to create the sound track. Bob took Alanis Morissette whilst Rob took the Goo Goo Dolls. The following morning Morissette called Rob, and asked him to produce the song "Uninvited" which she had written afterwards as a demo. Shortly afterwards that same day, John Rzeznik called Rob with a song he had written called "Iris", a power ballad. In a 2013 interview with Songfacts, lead singer Rzeznik explained how he wrote the song:Rzeznik named the song after country folk singer-songwriter Iris DeMent, after he noticed her name in a concert listing in the LA Weekly newspaper.
Recording
The original demo recorded by Rzeznik had a different to standard guitar tuning on the acoustic guitar to make the basic sound, and a declining catch line. In rehearsal, Rob Cavallo and the band refined the tuning so that all of the strings are tuned to D, with the exception of the lowest string which is a B, lending the guitar a chorus-like effect. They also created the intro in rehearsal, and knew that they wanted an orchestral input within the recordingCavallo, who had studied techniques used both by Jimi Hendrix and Jimmy Page, used a three way input from the acoustic guitar, and got Rzeznik to play with a Fender light pick closer to the bridge, a classical music technique known as sul ponticello. In mixing with the recording engineer, Cavello then created a curve-mix on the guitars spectrum, turning down all the mid range whilst adding both brighter high and more bass. The majority of the electric guitar parts were play on Cavallo's "glass-guitar", a hard-tail Fender Stratocaster with a bridge mini-humbucker pickup feed directly to a 100W head unit.
Cavallo and the band started recording the song in Record One Studio B in Sherman Oaks, CA, whilst Dr Dre used Stuio A to produce his stable of hip-hop artists. During the evening of the first day of recording, Allen Sides comments that Dean Parks was working with Dr Dre in Studio A, using a Mandolin. Cavallo approached Parks to add some mandolin material to the recording, but Parks was booked up for the following months, and refused. The second engineer then suggested using fellow session guitarist Tim Pierce, who turned up the next day. Within an hour, the team had recorded both the introduction mandolin section, and got Pierce to noodle around the basic track playing counter-melodies. Cavallo then asked Pierce to attempt the sol guitar section, which he did using a slide on the guitar.
Cavallo then took the recording to composer David Campbell, who mimicked Pierce's guitar play with sharp injected orchestration.
Commercial performance
Upon its release, "Iris" became second of a string of hits from the film's soundtrack, .. The song debuted at number 66 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart on April 18, 1998, and eventually spent a record of 18 weeks at number one in Hot 100 Airplay. However it was not allowed to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 because no commercial single had been released. In December 1998, just after the song's airplay had peaked, the rules changed to allow airplay-only songs onto the chart. As a result, the song debuted and peaked at number nine and stayed on the chart for 14 weeks. On the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart, "Iris" peaked at number eight. The song was the band's 2nd number one hit on the Modern Rock Tracks chart, following their 1995 hit "Name." "Iris" stayed at number one for five weeks on the Alternative Songs chart and also hit number one on the Mainstream Top 40 chart for four weeks. The song spent a then-record 17 weeks at number one on the Billboard Adult Top 40 chart. The Goo Goo Dolls performed "Iris" on October 20, 2001, at Madison Square Garden as part of The Concert for New York City to raise money for victims of the September 11 attacks."Iris" was also a major international hit. It peaked at number five on the Irish Singles Chart and has since become the 19th biggest-selling single of all time in Ireland. The song initially peaked at number 50 in the United Kingdom in August 1998 before rising to number 25 the following year. On October 2, 2011, after performances by auditionees on The X Factor, the song re-entered the UK Singles Chart at number three. In May 2013, the song charted at number 12 after it was covered by Britain's Got Talent contestant Robbie Kennedy. Elsewhere, the song became a number-one hit in Italy, Australia and Canada, and it reached the top 10 in Flemish Belgium and the Netherlands.
Accolades
Besides the song's success on the charts, "Iris" enjoyed critical acclaim. At the 41st Grammy Awards, "Iris" received nominations for "Record of the Year" and "Pop Performance by a Duo or Group." The song also garnered Johnny Rzeznik a "Song of the Year" nomination. The single was certified quadruple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America on February 28, 2018.The song was ranked at number 39 on Rolling Stones list of the 100 greatest pop songs.
In October 2012, "Iris" was ranked number one on Billboards "Top 100 Pop Songs 1992–2012" chart, which ranked the top songs of the first 20 years of the Mainstream Top 40/Pop Songs chart. The list also featured the Goo Goo Dolls' hits "Slide", ranking at number nine, and "Name" at number 24. The Goo Goo Dolls are the only musicians to have three songs on the list, two breaking the top 10 and all three falling within the top 25. They are also the only musicians that have back to back singles featured on the list.
Track listing
- CD1
- "Iris" – 3:35
- "Lazy Eye" – 3:45
- "I Don't Want To Know" – 3:37
- CD2
- "Iris" – 4:51
- "Slide" – 3:34
- "Iris" – 3:26
- "Slide" – 3:15
Charts and certifications
Weekly charts
Chart | Peak position |
Chart | Peak position |
Chart | Peak position |
Chart | Peak position |
Chart | Peak position |
Year-end charts
Chart | Position |
Belgium | 20 |
Netherlands | 46 |
Netherlands | 55 |
US Billboard Hot 100 | 94 |
US Adult Top 40 | 20 |
All-time charts
Certifications
Cover versions and appearances in media
- Ronan Keating covered the song for his 2006 album Bring You Home.
- Kathy Brier performed the song on One Life to Live.
- Boyz II Men recorded a version of the song for their 2009 covers album Love.
- Leona Lewis covered the song for her extended play .
- New Found Glory covered the song for their second covers album From The Screen To Your Stereo Part II.
- Sleeping with Sirens also covered the song for their first EP, If You Were a Movie, This Would Be Your Soundtrack.
- Sawyer Fredericks performed this song on The Voice season 8.
- Twenty One Pilots performed the song on The Bandito Tour along with openers Max Frost and AWOLNATION.
- Selkii performed the song on the 16th season of The Voice.
- Motionless in White performed a cover of the song in their earlier days as a band.
- Rock musician Diamante and American hard rock band Breaking Benjamin released a cover on July 10, 2020.