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An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/RKKUyaMc0HTBM7MUoKgMcw==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

"American Woman" is a song by the Canadian band, The Guess Who, from their album of the same name. It was the first Canadian rock song to make to #1 on the Billboard Top 100 in 1970. It was also famously covered by Lenny Kravitz on the second Austin Powers soundtrack. File:The Muppets American Woman

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  • American Woman
rdfs:comment
  • "American Woman" is a song by the Canadian band, The Guess Who, from their album of the same name. It was the first Canadian rock song to make to #1 on the Billboard Top 100 in 1970. It was also famously covered by Lenny Kravitz on the second Austin Powers soundtrack. File:The Muppets American Woman
  • American Woman is a song by The Guess Who Randy Bachman explained the origins of this song in an interview with Words & Music magazine, Spring 2005. Said Bachman: "We were playing in a curling rink in Kitchener, Ontario (Canada), and I broke a string. I was up there alone, tuning up my E/Fb an B/Cb strings on an old Les Paul. I started playing that riff and in the audience, heads started turning. The band got up, and I said, 'Keep playing this, I don't want to forget it.' When Burton had run out of solos, I yelled out, 'Sing something!' So out of the blue Burton just screamed, 'American Woman, stay away from me!' That was the song, the riff and Burton yelling that line over and over. Later, he added other lines like 'I don't need your war machine, you ghetto scenes.' Before America knew it
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Date
  • 1970(xsd:integer)
Album
  • American Woman
Genre
  • Classic Rock
Language
  • English
Title
  • American Woman
Cover
  • American Woman.png
Released
  • 1970(xsd:integer)
Gender
  • Male
Artist
  • The Guess Who
Source
  • RB2
Rating
  • SR
Writer
  • Randy Bachman, Burton Cummings, Jim Kale, Garry Peterson
solo guitar
  • yes
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  • yes
abstract
  • "American Woman" is a song by the Canadian band, The Guess Who, from their album of the same name. It was the first Canadian rock song to make to #1 on the Billboard Top 100 in 1970. It was also famously covered by Lenny Kravitz on the second Austin Powers soundtrack. In 2010, the song was performed by Sam the Eagle in a Muppet viral video, partly as an ode to the Statue of Liberty. As Sam goes through the lyrics which deride the United States, he stops to announce that the song is a "slap in the face to American women everywhere." He was even more aghast when Kermit told him of the song's creators' nationality. File:The Muppets American Woman
  • American Woman is a song by The Guess Who Randy Bachman explained the origins of this song in an interview with Words & Music magazine, Spring 2005. Said Bachman: "We were playing in a curling rink in Kitchener, Ontario (Canada), and I broke a string. I was up there alone, tuning up my E/Fb an B/Cb strings on an old Les Paul. I started playing that riff and in the audience, heads started turning. The band got up, and I said, 'Keep playing this, I don't want to forget it.' When Burton had run out of solos, I yelled out, 'Sing something!' So out of the blue Burton just screamed, 'American Woman, stay away from me!' That was the song, the riff and Burton yelling that line over and over. Later, he added other lines like 'I don't need your war machine, you ghetto scenes.' Before America knew it, it was a #1 record and it was a protest song." (thanks, Darryl - Cambridge, Canada) The lyrics are a scathing commentary on America's imperialistic attitude at the time of the Vietnam War. The Guess Who are Canadian. Some of the lyrics were inspired by a problem the band encountered at the Canada/US border involving the Vietnam War draft. (thanks, Tony - Westbury, NY) Due to the anti-American lyrics, The Guess Who was not allowed to play this when they performed at the White House for President Richard Nixon in 1970. The first time the band performed this was before 150,000 people at the Seattle Pop Festival in 1969. The crowd loved it even though they had never heard it. This is one of the most misinterpreted songs ever. Despite a very clear lyric: "American Woman, get away from me," Americans often hear it is a patriotic ode and a tribute to American women. This was released as a double A-side with "No Sugar Tonight." It was #1 in the US for 3 weeks. The Guess Who were already huge in Canada, but this broke them in The States. In the late-'90s, this was used in a variety of commercials, including one for Tommy Hilfiger and another for Castrol motor oil. Nike also used in an ad featuring women's soccer. Lenny Kravitz covered this in 1999. His version was used in the movie Austin Powers 2, The Spy Who Shagged Me. Kravitz and The Guess Who performed this September 21, 2000 at the MuchMusic Video Awards in Toronto. The Guess Who were given a lifetime achievement award. The album version contains a 1:05 acoustic intro. Radio stations often skip past it. Randy Bachman left the group the month after this hit #1 in America because the band's lifestyle did not jibe with his religious beliefs. Because of his departure, they did not tour the US when this was hot, which could have made them a lot of money. The Guess Who reunited and toured in 2000, 30 years after this was a hit. This was featured in the Jim Carrey movie The Cable Guy, where it appears in a Karaoke scene, and American Beauty, where Kevin Spacey rocks out to it while going through a mid-life crisis.
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