Bad Company (song)

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"Bad Company"
Single by Bad Company
from the album Bad Company
Released 1974
Recorded November 1973
Genre Hard rock
Length 4:50
Label Swan Song, Island
Writer(s) Simon Kirke, Paul Rodgers
Producer(s) Bad Company
Bad Company singles chronology
"Movin' On"
(1974)
"Bad Company"
(1974)
"Good Lovin' Gone Bad"
(1974)

"Bad Company" is a song by the hard rock band Bad Company. It was released as the third single from their debut album Bad Company in 1974, although it did not chart (in America). Co-written by the group's lead singer Paul Rodgers and drummer Simon Kirke, the song's meaning comes from a book on Victorian morals.[1] The song uses the same chords and piano figure as Joni Mitchell's song "Woodstock" from 1970.

It is also a rare instance of the artist, album, and song names being the same. Other examples include "Black Sabbath", Iron Maiden, "Motörhead", Electric Wizard, Pennywise, "Children of Bodom", Damn Yankees, Bang Camaro, Deicide, Iced Earth, The Highwaymen, and "Living in a Box".

Timothy McVeigh—the terrorist responsible for the April 19, 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City—was quoted as saying that, as he fled the site of the bombing, he thought of a specific "Bad Company" lyric: "...dirty for dirty", heard towards the end of the song. Many websites describe this, but confuse that short phrase within a song as the title for another song.[citation needed]

In popular culture

This song is heard in The CW series Supernatural, Season 1 Episode 11, titled "Scarecrow".

It is also heard in "Home Away From Homer", episode 20 of the sixteenth season of The Simpsons where Ned Flanders moves to a new town and becomes a "rebel" by keeping an untrimmed mustache.

Tori Amos performed the song at a number of concerts in 1994 and 1996.[2]

Bill Champlin did a cover of the song that was featured in season 2, episode 9 of The Young Riders (1990). The title of the episode is "Bad Company".

In the beginning of the 7th book of his Dark Tower series, The Dark Tower, Stephen King quotes the lines "I was born 6-gun in my hand, Behind a gun I'll make my final stand".

On The Best Show on WFMU with Tom Scharpling, the song is frequently faded up to drown out callers who have proven to be poor company.

It also appears in the 1992 film Crossing the Bridge.

Garth Brooks covers the song on his box set Blame It All on My Roots: Five Decades of Influences.

The South African trio of Mark Haze, Dozi and Ghapi (from season 7 of Idols South Africa) recorded a cover version on their album "Rocking Buddies" in 2013.[3]

Personnel

Five Finger Death Punch cover

"Bad Company"
Single by Five Finger Death Punch
from the album War Is the Answer
Released May 17, 2010
Recorded 2009
Genre Heavy metal
Length 4:22
Label Prospect Park
Writer(s) Simon Kirke, Paul Rodgers
Producer(s) Kevin Churko
Five Finger Death Punch singles chronology
"No One Gets Left Behind"
(2010)
"Bad Company"
(2010)
"Far from Home"
(2010)

Five Finger Death Punch frequently performs a cover of this song live, and recorded the song for their second album War Is the Answer. The song has a significantly heavier tone to it, along with several lyrical edits ("I was born a shotgun in my hands", "the death punch sound is our claim to fame"). The song is used by Washington Nationals closer Drew Storen, Chicago Cubs pitcher Jake Arrieta and San Francisco Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner.

Track listing

UK Digital Download
No. Title Length
1. "Bad Company"   4:22
2. "The Devil's Own" (Live) 4:54

Chart performance

Chart (2010) Peak
position
US Mainstream Rock Songs (Billboard) 2
US Rock Songs (Billboard)[4] 7
US Alternative Songs (Billboard)[4] 26
US Heatseekers Songs (Billboard)[4] 11

Band members

References

  1. "Bad Company by Bad Company". Songfacts.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  3. Retrieved 4 February 2014
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.

External links