Istanbul (Not Constantinople)
From This Might Be A Wiki
song name | Istanbul (Not Constantinople) |
artist | They Might Be Giants |
releases | Flood, Istanbul (Not Constantinople) (EP), Dial-A-Song: 20 Years Of They Might Be Giants, A User's Guide To They Might Be Giants: Melody, Fidelity, Quantity, Rhino Hi-Five: They Might Be Giants, Flood + Apollo 18, 50,000,000 They Might Be Giants Songs Can't Be Wrong |
year | 1990 |
first played | January 20, 1987 (1458 known performances) |
run time | 2:38 |
sung by | John Flansburgh, John Linnell |
Trivia/Info
- "Istanbul (Not Constantinople)" was originally recorded in 1953 by The Four Lads. Its lyrics were written by Jimmy Kennedy and music by Nat Simon.
- John Linnell in a 2015 interview about why They Might Be Giants chose to cover the song:
Oh! You know what’s weird? I think John and I have completely different versions of why. I always thought that it was because I saw The Four Lads on television in the early eighties and told John about it – and maybe he would agree with this. I mean what happened was there was this television special about music from the fifties; and, by the eighties, there was this received idea that the fifties had been this rock and roll decade. And, if you watched the show, that clearly was not the angle they were going for, because there was no rock and roll involved. It was all Patti Page and The Four Lads and stuff like that – stuff that was like adult popular music. I was so impressed and The Four Lads came out and sang Istanbul and I wasn’t really familiar with the song, but I really loved it. So I remember talking to John about this. I think that he had already heard the song when he was growing up; so, according to him, he knew the song already. So I can’t necessarily claim that it was my idea to cover it because I can’t remember which of us finally said that we should do that song. I think that we had both come to it different ways. But, for me, it was sort of about this alternate history of music, which was not the clichéd one of the fifties being all about rock and roll. By the time of the early eighties, that was sort of the established idea, you know – that Dean Martin didn’t exist. Instead, it was all about Elvis Presley, you know?
- John Flansburgh (Rolling Stone Flood interview, 2009):
This song I knew from my childhood, and we learned it simply to have more songs in our repertoire. It was in the show for a couple of years, and John and I would perform without the drum machine. It had a very spaced out middle section where we would basically yodel into an echo effect and it all went very, very trippy. It always got a good response, and when we got our fancy Casio FZ-1 samplers, this track was one of the things we put together to test it out.
When we were recording the Flood album, we had bought these Casio FZ-1 samplers. I basically spent a couple of weeks in my house recording every single thing I could figure out how to record and playing it back on the keyboard. And so all these things that you hear on Istanbul are samples, except for the violin solo at the beginning and the trumpet in the middle. The thing that sounds like an accordion is actually a melodica that's been sampled. In the 'Even old New York' part, it's a Coke bottle being blown into a chord. The song's got a very unusual texture.
- Flansburgh on the drums heard in the song in a 1990 interview with Making Music:
On "Constantinople", I wanted every drum to sound as if it was being played by a different person, not like a drum kit, more like a percussion group. That was an experiment. It's completely unqualified, totally loose − kind of "six people in a circle beating on different percussion objects" sound.
- Regarding recording the song, TMBG has stated, "We actually worked up this song from memory, and when putting the recording together made a point of not listening to the original."
- During live performances, an elaborate instrumental solo will often be played to lead into the song. Dan Miller has played improvisational, acoustic guitar, and Curt Ramm the trumpet/valve trombone.
- Two videos were made for this song:
- Official music video - Features stop-motion animated papier-mâché sculptures by Mark Marek and hand-drawn animation by J. Otto Seibold. This version appeared at The Angelika Film Center Jan. 18, 1991 in a film fest about recent animations and on MTV's "Liquid Television" animation showcase. A New York Times reporter called it "inane fluff."
- Tiny Toon Adventures video - The Tiny Toons video is partly a spoof of the 1964 movie, Topkapi (starring Melina Mercouri, Maximilian Schell, and Peter Ustinov). The movie is about a petty con guy enlisted by international jewel thieves to steal a dagger with a huge emerald in the hilt, from the Topkapi Palace museum in Istanbul (dagger replaced by an emerald Plucky Duck in the video).
- Flansburgh would mention the official video in a 1990 interview:
I chose the artists, and the production team as well as helping out on the storyboard. It adds a bit of colour to the music and it's nice to escape from the same old tired video techniques.
- Flansburgh would also mention the Tiny Toons video in a 1998 interview:
They basically called us and said "we'll send you a really big check if you let us use your song in this cartoon". It was associated with Steven Spielberg, so we knew it wouldn't be a bad quality cartoon. A lot of people's first exposure to us is through that.
- Featured in:
- The Simpsons episode - "Mobile Homer," first aired March 20, 2005.
- The Secret Life of the American Teenager episode - "Just Say Me", first aired January 25, 2010.
- Dance Dance Revolution Ultramix 3 for the Xbox - The version of the song featured has been shortened to 1:40.
- Raising Hope featured the Four Lads version and the TMBG version, both of which the grandmother played Jenga to, in the episode "Dream Hoarders" which aired October 5, 2010.
- Bunheads featured the song in episode 6, "Movie Truck", which aired July 23, 2012.
- Just Dance Kids 2 and Just Dance 4 include the song as a playable track. [1]
- The Umbrella Academy (TV series) episode - "We Only See Each Other at Weddings and Funerals", first aired February 15, 2019.
Song Themes
Cartoons, Cities, Educational, Fade Out, Geography, History, New York City, Not In Common Time, Not In Major Or Minor, Oxymorons, Paradoxes, And Contradictory Statements, Places (Real), Questions, TMBG Remakes, Two Chord Songs
Videos
- Watch it on
- Watch it on
- Watch it on - Tonight Show performance, April 3rd, 1990
- Watch it on - Tiny Toons music video
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