Californication (song)

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"Californication"
"Californication" cover
Single by Red Hot Chili Peppers
from the album Californication
Released June 19, 2000
Format CD,
Cassette,
Vinyl
Recorded 1999
Genre Alternative rock
Length 5:21
Label Warner Bros. Records
Producer Rick Rubin
Red Hot Chili Peppers singles chronology
"Otherside"
(2000)
"Californication"
(2000)
"Road Trippin'"
(2000)

"Californication" is the Red Hot Chili Peppers' fourth single from their seventh studio album, Californication. Released in 2000, the song reached #69 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the USA, and #16 on the UK charts, and hit #1 on both US Modern Tracks and US Mainstream Rock Tracks. It is notable for its sparse combination of guitar and bass notes in the intro, and its unique music video.

Contents

The song is mainly about the dark side of Hollywood. The song opens to the "Psychic spies from China try to steal your mind's elation." Kiedis says in his book "Scar Tissue" that he got the inspiration for the lyric from when he was in New Zealand and he heard a woman on the street ranting about there being psychic spies in China.'The track also makes references to the decline in western society, and other topics such as pornography and plastic surgery and even some pop culture references including Star Wars ("Alderaan's not far away"), Star Trek, ("Space may be the final frontier, but it's made in a Hollywood basement"), Celebrity Skin magazine ("Celebrity Skin is this your chin", although this could also be a reference to Hole's song, "Celebrity Skin"), Nirvana singer Kurt Cobain ("Cobain can you hear the spheres"), and David Bowie's Station to Station ("Songs off Station to Station"). The line "teenage bride with a baby inside" refers to the fictional character Dani California, who is also mentioned in later songs By the Way and the eponymous Dani California. The song's riff closely resembles the song "Elevation" off of "Marquee Moon" by Television.

Californication is a unique video in that it takes the form of a video game from the point of view of the player. The video itself bears resemblance to many games, including Tomb Raider, Grand Theft Auto, Crazy Taxi, Panzer Dragoon, SSX, Resident Evil, Tony Hawk's Pro Skater, and the railcar level of Donkey Kong 64.

The following statistics are presented for each member of the band at the beginning of the video.

/ Anthony Chad Flea John
Strength 18.9 19.8 19.2 18.6
Stamina 19.2 19.4 19.5 19.2
Agility 19.6 19.2 19.3 19.5
Charisma 19.5 18.8 18.5 19.6
Rhythm 18.8 19.9 19.8 18.9
Vocals 20.0 - - -
Drums - 20.0 - -
Bass - - 20.0 -
Guitar - - - 20.0

Guitarist John Frusciante starts off on the Hollywood Walk of Fame. He bumps into a celebrity, and jumps over three security guards, then picks up an asterisk. The action pauses and cuts to a shot of the band playing on top of a hill for a few seconds. This happens each time a band member picks up an asterisk, which is the logo of the band.

Chad Smith, the Chili Peppers' drummer, is seen snowboarding down a hill (although he has never ridden a snowboard in real life). He falls into a ravine, but lands on a train.

Lead singer Anthony Kiedis starts off swimming in an ocean, passing sharks and swimmers and picks up an asterisk. He gets out riding a shark and lands in his car. The registration plate on the car says "GERMS", which is a reference to The Germs, the band that Kiedis listened to as he grew up.

Flea, the bassist, is seen in Muir Woods, and is about to pick up an asterisk, but he can't get past a bear guarding it, although he helps it out by kicking down a hunter about to shoot it. He goes on a mine-cart ride, and goes to another asterisk, but it's guarded by a pregnant teen (Dani of Dani California and By the Way, also mentioned in this song as "getting high on information"). He then gets surrounded by a horde of lumberjacks, but he jumps on top of a tree and sees all the other trees fall.

Meanwhile, John goes to a movie set, and ducks and weaves through a sci-fi film, a porno, and stops in a set apparently filming a biographical film about Leonardo da Vinci (John has an interest in da Vinci and his works). He sees a theorized flying machine being used.

Chad is meanwhile seen snowboarding on the Golden Gate Bridge, using it as a grind rail.

Anthony is in the same scene, driving around San Francisco. He drives underwater, and then jumps through the hole of a giant doughnut (A reference to Randy's Donuts shop in LA) His car falls off a cliff and he lands on a giant dragonfly, being harnessed by Flea, who rides it to the sky, where John is riding the da Vinci flying machine, and Chad is doing snowboarding tricks. Anthony eventually falls off, and lands in a poppy field, and the flowers grow huge, but he finds an asterisk.

Much later, there is a big earthquake, and a city is falling apart. All the band members narrowly escape death from falling buildings and car crashes. The video ends with all the band members falling into the center of the earth, finding a cube, touching it, and turning from computer graphics to real people. (Flea falls through an asterisk while falling to the center of the Earth)

The video is directed by the prolific husband-wife directorial team Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris.

There is a link between this video clip and the experience of relapsing into a drug addiction that Anthony describes in his book, Scar Tissue:

"... The chase is always exciting. There are cops and bad guys and freaks and hookers. You're diving into a big insidious video game, but again, you're being tricked into thinking that you're doing something cool, since the price is always bigger than the payoff. You immediately give up your love and your light and your beauty, and you become a dark black hole in the universe, sucking up bad energy and not walking around putting a smile on someone's face..."

CD Single 1

  1. "Californication" - 5:21
  2. "I Could Have Lied" (Live) - 4:26
  3. "End Of Show Brisbane" (Live) - 8:11

CD Single 2

  1. "Californication" - 5:21
  2. "I Could Have Lied" (Live) - 4:26
  3. "End Of Show State College" (Live) - 9:27

Ep. 1

  1. "Californication" - 5:21
  2. "End Of Show Brisbane" (Live) - 8:11
  3. "I Could Have Lied" (Live) - 4:26
  4. "End Of Show State College" (Live) - 9:27

Californication

Sample of "Californication" from Californication

Problems listening to the file? See media help.

Preceded by
"Last Resort" by Papa Roach
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number-one single
August 12, 2000
Succeeded by
"Last Resort" by Papa Roach
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