A slow and building synthesizer line begins to hum, and then Simon Le Bon starts to croon, and then piece by piece the rest of the band join the melee, a sleek and sexy slice of pop perfection. The song evokes images of cars, servitude, longing, and touches of regret in a spooky melody that throbs and sways before culminating in a world music infused breakdown of synth beats and pan flute. You can practically feel the air teeming, the sweat running down your skin, the moisture condensing on windows, the tension mounting as our narrator bites his lower lip. This is a haunting track that just pulses sex…and somehow I missed out on it until I was well into my twenties.
I loved Duran Duran when I was little, during their heyday, but was really only familiar with their bigger singles and hits, and never owned any of their albums. Sometime after college, I was driving around Austin, listening to a flashback lunch program on an alternative rock radio station, and they played “The Chauffeur,” and I was mesmerized. At the time, I missed the deejay’s announcement as to what the name of the song was, but it was unmistakably Duran Duran. I became obsessed. I spent the next several days scouring the band’s entire discography, intent on finding the song, on completing my quest for some sonic nirvana. Nothing else mattered. Only Duran Duran.
Eventually I found it, and I have not been able to stop listening since.
“Sing Blue Silver!”
Check it out below, our Daily Jam. And you may also want to check out the excellent covers of “The Chauffeur” from The Deftones and Warpaint.
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