Candy Says

1969 song by The Velvet Underground From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Candy Says" is the first track on the Velvet Underground's self-titled third album.[3]

ReleasedMarch 1969
RecordedNovember  December 1968
T.T.G. Studios, Hollywood
Sunset and Highland Sound, Hollywood
Length4:05
Quick facts Song by The Velvet Underground, from the album The Velvet Underground ...
"Candy Says"
Song by The Velvet Underground
from the album The Velvet Underground
ReleasedMarch 1969
RecordedNovember  December 1968
T.T.G. Studios, Hollywood
Sunset and Highland Sound, Hollywood
Genre
Length4:05
LabelMGM
Songwriters
ProducerThe Velvet Underground
Close

It is one of four songs that Lou Reed explicitly wrote in the voice of a female character, in the case of "Candy Says", a transgender woman, telling her experiences. Each would begin with the woman's name and then be followed by the verb "says". "Stephanie Says" was the first (later adapted into "Caroline Says" on his solo album Berlin).

Reed insisted bassist Doug Yule take the lead vocal, as he felt Yule's voice was better suited for the material. Reed said the song was also "about something more profound and universal, a universal feeling I think all of us have at some point. We look in the mirror and we don't like what we see...I don't know a person alive who doesn't feel that way."[4]

The song was inspired by actress/model Candy Darling, and ranked as the 15th best Velvet Underground song by Alexis Petridis of the Guardian who described the song as "tender" and "melancholy" with backing vocals inspired by the doo-wop genre.[5]

Alternate versions

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