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Switched on Pop

Kimbra reflects on a song that we used to know

Switched on Pop

Vox Media Podcast Network

Music Interviews, Music History, Music, Music Commentary

4.62.7K Ratings

🗓️ 9 March 2021

⏱️ 47 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Ten years ago the Australian artist Gotye asked New Zealand musician Kimbra to feature on his song “Somebody I Used To Know.” At the time Kimbra had no idea it was going to be a hit. No wonder—the song lacks the trappings of a conventional pop song. The chorus shows up late and it only repeats once in a track composed of an obscure Brazilian guitar sample and nursery rhyme xylophones. But this slow burner about opposing sides in a relationship's bitter end found a global audience, ascending to No. 1 in more than 25 countries, and accumulating billions of plays across streaming platforms. In 2013, Prince anointed Gotye and Kimbra the Grammy for record of the year (it won best pop duo/group performance as well). The song created many opportunities for both Gotye and Kimbra, but both chose unconventional paths, resisting the industry’s desire to generate the next hit for hits sake. Reflecting on the song a decade later, Kimbra spoke with Charlie Harding from the podcast Switched On Pop about how this unlikely song inspired her to pursue her singular musical vision, and how it feels to be yet again co-nominated for a 2021 Grammy for her collaboration with Jacob Collier and Tank and The Bangas on “In My Bones.” SONGS DISCUSSED Gotye - Somebody I Used to Know (feat. Kimbra) Luiz Bonfá - Seville Kimbra - Miracle Kimbra - 90s Music Kimbra - Top of the World Jacob Collier - In My Bones Kimbra - Right Direction Son Lux - Lost It To Trying MORE Check out Kimbra’s course on Vocal Creativity, Arranging, and Production over at Soundfly Listen to our conversation with Jacob Collier Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Welcome to Switched On Pop. I'm a songwriter, Charlie Harding.

0:14.5

And I'm musicologist Nate Sloan.

0:16.7

Nate, from time to time, we hop in the musical time machine.

0:20.2

And we're gonna do that right now. We're gonna hop in.

0:22.8

Okay, I'm in.

0:23.8

We're gonna go into the past.

0:24.8

The recent past.

0:25.8

Should I buckle my seatbelt?

0:27.2

It's advised, but you're gonna departicleize it either way.

0:29.4

Here we are. We've arrived.

0:35.8

Yeah, it looks pretty similar to 2021.

0:40.1

I gotta be real.

0:41.0

And there's a song playing in the background.

0:42.8

Mm-hmm.

0:46.0

Do you remember this one?

0:46.9

Oh, yeah, this rings every bell.

0:48.6

This takes me back to a simple time.

0:50.8

A time before I owned a smartphone.

0:53.5

Ha, ha, ha.

0:54.4

Before I had 17 gray hairs.

0:57.5

A time before I show even existed when we were just fiddling around on bluegrass instruments.

1:03.2

That's right. You said simpler times.

...

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