High Enough

Album: Damn Yankees (1990)
Charted: 3
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Songfacts®:

  • "High Enough" was the first single from Damn Yankees, the supergroup of Jack Blades from Night Ranger, Tommy Shaw from Styx, Ted Nugent, and drummer Michael Cartellone. In a Songfacts interview with Jack Blades, he told the story behind the song: "'High Enough' was about how you love someone so much and you just don't want to scare them away. And it's like, do I take the next step? And then she freaks out when you go, 'I love you.' And it's like, 'What!?!? I'm outta here!' And you're, 'Wait a minute! Come back!' But then the girl comes back, because in the bridge it's, (singing) 'The next thing I remember I was running back for more.' You know how you get scared at first when you fall in love, and everybody freaks out, and that can't be right. And then you go, Wait a minute, this is great, let's forget about the past. Can you fly me over yesterday? Can you take me high enough to fly me over yesterday?"
  • In a Songfacts interview with Ted Nugent, he shared his thoughts on this song: "A masterpiece. Mostly created by Tommy and Jack, my Damn Yankee cohorts who are musical forces to recon with. Geniuses of musical creativity on an adventurous, soulful level. I injected the Detroit guitar into it, and I might have had a couple licks on some of the lyrics, but it was a team effort."

    "It's about the reciprocity of human relationships," he added. "It's, Can I take you high enough.' 'High Enough' is Jack, Tommy, Michael and my statement that we care about you. Can we reach a higher level of awareness together? It's not about getting high. It's about a higher level of awareness and respect for each other."
  • Damn Yankees' next single was "Coming of Age," which didn't reach the same heights but also did well on radio and MTV. They released one more album, Don't Tread in 1992, which had another hit, the power ballad "Where You Goin' Now." The band members stayed on good terms and reunited from time to time.
  • This melodic, uplifting song is on brand for Jack Blades and Tommy Shaw, but a departure for Ted Nugent, the "Motor City Madman" known for frantic, testosterone-injected guitar rock. According to Nugent, the metal guitarist Zakk Wylde gave him some grief for it, telling Nugent he'd gone soft. "He'd rather hear me play 'Stranglehold' and 'Wang Dang Sweet Poontang,'" Nugent told Songfacts. "But I love the song."
  • Explaining how they came up with this song, Jack Blades told Songfacts: "I was downstairs at Tommy Shaw's flat in New York City. We were all sitting around and I'm doing laundry down in the basement, because I had just gotten to his place, and I'm just singing, 'I don't want to hear about it anymore, it's a shame I've got to live without you anymore.' Tommy's like, 'Hey, what's that?' And I said, 'I don't know. Just something I'm singing around with.' 'That sounds great.' So I went upstairs and we started banging around on a piano, and then we switched over to guitars, and then in about a half hour we'd written the whole song 'High Enough.' So in that case the melody and the words came before anything else. That got us to finish the rest of the song. That spurred us on."
  • When you think of Jack Blades, Tommy Shaw and Ted Nugent, you probably picture them on stage or in the studio, but long before they get there, they have to write the songs. And according to Blades, this skill takes a certain gift. "It's not something that's really cool, or something that's really a big thing, it's just something that happens that I do. Like I drive a car – except I come up with rhymes," he said. "I don't look at it as anything special. It's just how I've been all my life, so I don't see it as something really unique and amazing, because it's just what I do. Half the time it is like you're like channeling something. When you sit down and write a song, it's almost like you're channeling a higher power, whom I choose, of course, to call God, (laughing) but other people would choose to call it whatever. And I just don't know where else that kind of stuff can come from. But just to be able to sit back and be quiet and muse, and all of the sudden you start writing down things. You've gotta be channeling something from somewhere else."
  • Ted Nugent is known for his manic energy on stage and highly opinionated personality. In the wrong band, he would be combustible, but Damn Yankees was a good fit. Blades explains: "Ted is a blast, he is so much fun. I produced Ted's last album. Ted is Ted, man, you don't want to calm any of that down. With the Damn Yankees, that's really fun, because there were no egos there, nobody was trying to outdo the other guy or anything like that. All we ever wanted to do was be the best that we could be, and we just got together and wrote all those songs, and then got up on stage and started playing, and let Ted do his Ted thing. I wouldn't want Ted to calm down one bit."

Comments: 11

  • Kim from WyomingWho is the girl in the video?
  • Robert from Clermont Fl.What was the guitar that Ted Nugent was playing in the Damn Yankees video High Enough?
  • David J Haskell from Camarillo, CaThis song was arranged by Jimmie Haskell
  • Nathalie from CaliI've loved this song since the day it first came out. While many songs speak to me and my relationship with my man, this is the one that hits home. It's almost like the boys looked into the future back then...
  • Della from CanadaOne of my favorite ballads, and the hair, gotta love the hair!
  • William from Reno, NvThat is the same model they used for "Where you goin now". I wonder if she's someone's squeeze. That's NOT Shemaine Nugent. She's not tall enough. K/H D
  • Andrea from Allentown, PaShaw Blades, comprised of Damn Yankees' members Tommy Shaw and Jack Blades, perform a beautiful country-and-western version of this song.
  • Andrea from Allentown, PaThis is easily one of my favorite songs of all time. To me, this song is about making a mistake and wishing to go back in time to not make this mistake. My ears hear "woe, woe, woe, woe," instead of "whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa."
  • Crystal from Warren, PaLove it
  • River from Istanbul, Turkey"I don't wanna hear about it...."
    They should of kept it that way...
  • Rachel from Augusta, KsMy absolute favorite power ballad of all time. I'm surprised there aren't other comments for it.
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