People Are Still Having Sex
"People Are Still Having Sex" is a song written and performed by American musician LaTour. It was released in March 1991 as the first single from his self-titled debut album, LaTour (1991). The song reached number one on both the US and Canadian dance charts. It also peaked at number 35 on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 15 in the United Kingdom. Background and releaseMassachusetts-born LaTour worked 11 years as Production Director in radio. He started as a DJ in Phoenix and moved to Chicago. A radio station in Detroit got a cassette copy of "People Are Still Having Sex" and began playing the song — it suddenly became the Number One requested record.[2] LaTour told about the song in an interview, "The reaction has been 95 percent positive and the rest negative due to the word 'Aids' in the song. I guess people weren't really listening to the song very closely and when they heard the word Aids come up they'd freak out, begin to call the radio stations and say 'This is a pretty strong song — you shouldn't be playing this'. So radio stations were taking it off the air! But I'm not saying anything positive about Aids in the song. I'm not saying anything positive about SEX — it's just the way it was taken. The people complaining about it were getting into the dance beat and didn't really listen to the lyrical content."[2] ContentThe song features a monologue expounding the narrator's observations that "people everywhere" are "still having sex"; no matter what authority figures such as parents and counselors advise, and despite the risk posed by AIDS.[3] Critical receptionLarry Flick from Billboard wrote that "People Are Still Having Sex" is "one of the quirkier tunes now breaking out of the Chicago club circuit", noting that "a hypnotic techno beat is topped with a detached male voice reporting the frequency at which folks continue to fornicate." He added, "Industrialists will find "Mark's Missionary Mix" by Mark Picchiotti most useful, while "Mo's Sleazy Mix" by Maurice Joshua will please house enthusiasts."[4] A reviewer from Cashbox said the song "is excellent primer for the rest of the disc."[5] Marisa Fox from Entertainment Weekly commented, "In a dry, radio-announcer tone, LaTour (appropriately, a former producer of commercials) declares over a soundscape of racy rhythms, tinges of electronic melody, and hard-hitting beats that "People Are Still Having Sex"." She added that "this hit song, about the AIDS generation's irrepressible lustfulness, has been causing controversy, mostly because it contained the word AIDS until radio censors had their way."[6] Stephen Dalton from NME declared it as "a solidly pumping bottom line of bleep-driven beats woven into LaTour's distant, deadpan commentary on biological bedroom habits."[7] Music videoThe song's accompanying music video features early 1990s computer animation, and also features various animated backgrounds, some of which relate to the song's topic, and LaTour's live face is seen at the left and right of the screen during his speaking parts, while animation occupies the rest of the screen. The video was conceived by H-Gun, creator of early videos by Nine Inch Nails and Ministry. The video of the song was featured on the animated MTV series Beavis and Butt-head, on the episode "Temporary Insanity", which aired on December 10, 1994, and in the Top40 Breakers on the 13 June 1991 broadcast of Top of the Pops, where presenter Jakki Brambles said that LaTour planned a follow-up called People Are Still Having Lunch. LaTour then appeared live in the studio on the 20 June 1991 broadcast of Top of the Pops with various backing artists, as the single climbed up the charts. In popular cultureThe song was used by American figure skater Tonya Harding for her short program in the 1991–1992 season, including at the 1992 Olympic Winter Games in Albertville. The music was one of the only one of her programs to be included in the 2017 film I, Tonya, where the program was recreated by actress Margot Robbie. Charts
Release history
Real McCoy version
In 2007, German rapper Olaf Jeglitza released a cover of the song under the name Real McCoy through his independent label, Phears. The single was produced by Daniel Peter. Track listing
References
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