"Life Is a Minestrone" | ||||
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Single by 10cc | ||||
from the album The Original Soundtrack | ||||
B-side | "Channel Swimmer" | |||
Released | March 1975 | |||
Studio | Strawberry Studios, Stockport, Cheshire, England | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 4:08 (single version) 4:42 (album version) | |||
Label | Mercury | |||
Songwriter(s) | Eric Stewart Lol Creme | |||
Producer(s) | 10cc | |||
10cc singles chronology | ||||
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Official Audio | ||||
"Life Is a Minestrone" on YouTube |
"Life Is a Minestrone" is a 1975 song by 10cc released as a lead single from their third album, The Original Soundtrack.
The track was written after Lol Creme and Eric Stewart were driving home from Strawberry Studios and a BBC Radio presenter said something that they only partly heard, but which Creme interpreted as "life is a minestrone". Stewart and Creme believed the phrase to be a good title for a song on the grounds that life is, according to Stewart in a BBC Radio Wales interview, "a mixture of everything we pile in there". They had the song written in a day.[1]
Adapted from the liner notes of The Original Soundtrack.[2]
The song was released as the lead single from The Original Soundtrack as the band had reservations regarding the 6:00+ ballad "I'm Not in Love" being the lead single.[1] In the United States, "Life Is a Minestrone" was not released until after the release of "I'm Not in Love", so the band re-released the record over there in 1976 with "Lazy Ways" from the next album, How Dare You!, as its B-side.
The B-side "Channel Swimmer" appears as a bonus track on the later CD release of The Original Soundtrack.[3]
The song charted at no. 7 on the UK Singles Chart,[4] no. 12 on the Netherlands Singles Chart,[5] and no. 7 on the Irish Singles Chart[6] in 1975; in 1976, it charted at no. 104 on the Billboard Hot 100.[3]
In his review for AllMusic, Dave Thompson calls the song "utterly daft, wholly compulsive", and a "deadly accurate barrage of disconnected theories, thoughts and ghastly geographical puns, all tied together by that bizarre nomenclatural observation and a fadeout which is pure Paul McCartney". He notes that "reducing the human condition to the contents of a well-stacked pantry, composers Lol Creme and Eric Stewart combine for a truly joyous slice of pop nonsense, and one of 10cc's most effervescent hit singles".[7]