Behind Every Good Woman

Album: Down Here (2000)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Tracy Bonham made a splash with "Mother Mother," the lead single from her 1996 debut album The Burdens Of Being Upright. She was signed to Island Records, a major label with a long history of success, but in 1998 they merged with Def Jam, which caused her next album, Down Here, to be delayed until 2000 when the momentum for female singer-songwriters who rock had abated. "Behind Every Good Woman" was the first single. It pushed against the tide of screamo rock and fluffy pop, which proved a losing battle. The song and album fared poorly, and Bonham was dropped from the label. She landed on her feet; after a tour with Blue Man Group as a featured vocalist, she released a series of independent albums. In 2020, she started Melodeon Music House, a program where she puts her classical music training to use teaching kids about music.
  • This sassy song is what Bonham calls "half about 'stick it to the man,' and also about female strength and still trying to hang on to this feeling of empowerment and having control over my life." The title is a play on the saying "behind every great man there's a great woman," which Bonham adapts to "behind every good woman lies a trail of men."
  • Bonham wrote this song under pressure from her record company to deliver a hit. "They had come back to me and said things like, 'Look, we've got a second single, and maybe we have a third single, but we don't have a first single to come out of the box. We need a hit single! Come on, Tracy. You've done it before, you can do it again,'" she said in a Songfacts interview. "So I went back and started writing again with some frustration, for sure, and some anger. Now I'm angry at the music business. Now, I'm angry at the man, but it's a whole new face - it's the music business in general."

    The man in charge was Lyor Cohen at Island/Def Jam, who had put his stamp on artists like Shania Twain and Bon Jovi. "When I completed the song, I played it for Lyor Cohen and he was like, 'It's the hit of the summer! It's a woman's anthem,'" Bonham added. "He was really excited because he was lost in the idea that this could be a hit and could make the label money. But because of the climate change they just had no way of making that happen."
  • Bonham spent many years studying violin and included the instrument on her first hit, "Mother Mother," but there's no trace of the instrument on "Behind Every Good Woman."

    "I think there was no room for violin in that song," she told Songfacts. "I had a whole sonic landscape idea for that song and it started with the idea of having the organ panned right to left, right to left. That was how the song started: just as a sonic idea. The violin was probably going to soften it, and I wanted it to be really hard."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Gary Brooker of Procol Harum

Gary Brooker of Procol HarumSongwriter Interviews

The lead singer and pianist for Procol Harum, Gary talks about finding the musical ideas to match the words.

Andy McClusky of OMD

Andy McClusky of OMDSongwriter Interviews

Known in America for the hit "If You Leave," OMD is a huge influence on modern electronic music.

Waiting For The Break of Day: Three Classic Songs About All-Nighters

Waiting For The Break of Day: Three Classic Songs About All-NightersSong Writing

These Three famous songs actually describe how they were written - late into the evening.

Donald Fagen

Donald FagenSongwriter Interviews

Fagen talks about how the Steely Dan songwriting strategy has changed over the years, and explains why you don't hear many covers of their songs.

Graham Nash

Graham NashSongwriter Interviews

Graham Nash tells the stories behind some of his famous songs and photos, and is asked about "yacht rock" for the first time.

Michael Sweet of Stryper

Michael Sweet of StryperSongwriter Interviews

Find out how God and glam metal go together from the Stryper frontman.