" Ebeneezer Goode" is a song by Scottish electronic music group the Shamen. Written by Colin Angus and Richard West, and remixed by the Beatmasters, the song became their biggest hit when released as a single on 24 August 1992 by One Little Indian, topping the UK Singles Chart for four weeks. The group's original version featured on the vinyl edition of their fifth album, Boss Drum (1992).
"Ebeneezer Goode" was one of the most controversial UK number-one hits of the 1990s due to its perceived oblique endorsement of recreational drug use, and it was initially banned by the BBC. It has been claimed the single was eventually withdrawn after the band were hounded by the British tabloid press, although the Shamen stated it was deleted while at number one due to its long chart run "messing up our release schedule". Its music video was directed by Richard Heslop and features Jerry Sadowitz.
The song also contains references to the use of cannabis with ecstasy, referencing the rolling of a cannabis joint with the lines "Has anybody got any Veras?" ("" being rhyming slang for "skins" or ) and "Got any salmon?" ("salmon and trout" being rhyming slang for "snout" or tobacco).
The "A great philosopher once wrote..." sample at the start of the song is Malcolm McDowell from Lindsay Anderson's 1973 film O Lucky Man!
In 2017, Mixmag ranked "Ebeneezer Goode" number four in their list of "10 of the Best Songs Celebrating Ecstasy", writing, "There'll never be another group like The Shamen, Scottish psychedelic evangelists fronted by a north London geezer (Mr C) who hit the top of the charts with an arch ditty about eccies. From the opening "Naughty, naughty, very naughty" to its blatant chorus – "Eezer Goode"(ie, "E's are good"!) – it mischievously characterised MDMA as an impish "Mr Puncinello". Its success was a cheeky daytime radio wink to a million pill-poppers at a time when rave was an all-encompassing national phenomenon."
In the US, Epic Records did not service the single to radio stations nor released the single commercially. They did, however, service the single to club DJs via two separate white labels: the first one with the UK mixes (catalog No. EAS 5001), and the second one with the US mixes (catalog No. AED 4917). The only information on these releases were the artist name, the name of the single, and the catalog number. "Ebeneezer Goode" received heavy club play in US clubs, but Epic Records did not hire a record club promoter to push the song up the Billboard Dance Club Play chart; therefore, DJs were not pressured to report the song back to Billboard. Because of its lack of promotion, the single charted only for one week, debuting and peaking at No. 2 on the Hot Dance Breakouts chart for the week ending 5 December 1992.
9 November 1992 | 12-inch vinyl |
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