HeartBreaking: The bangles Guitarist bids farewell to members as he has officially announced Retirement due to serious Health Issues…
What is the song about? Who wrote it? And how did The Bangles change the perspective ever so slightly to make it more suitable to them?’ Let’s find out all there is to know about “If She Knew What She Wants,” a fantastic track from one of the ’80s most iconic groups.
Making the Leap
It’s never easy to make the jump from being a band that’s buzzed about by a small sector of the listening public to one that gains widespread, mainstream appeal. And it’s even tougher to do it without losing your identity in the process. Give credit to The Bangles that they were able to make all this happen in the ’80s and make it look relatively easy.
The guy who wrote and first performed “If She Knew What She Wants” was Jules Shear. He has done excellent work as an artist in his own right for decades, but is best known by the wider listening public for the cover versions of his material. For example, Cyndi Lauper turned his original “All Through the Night” about that same time.
For the most part, The Bangles stuck to the contours of Shear’s original, which had come out a year earlier on his album The Eternal Return. But they did make one crucial change. Shear had performed the song in the first person (If she knew what she wants, I’d be giving it to her). The Bangles turned that I into a he at certain points of the song. It was a neat little twist that made it sound like Hoffs and company were giving out sage advice instead of being the tortured ones in the song.
What is the Meaning of “If She Knew What She Wants”?
“If She Knew What She Wants” sets up perfectly for The Bangles because of how it has lines in between lines in each verse. For example, it allows Susanna Hoffs to sing If she knew what she wants, and then the other Bangles (Vickie Peterson, Debbi Peterson, and Michael Steele) to answer, in harmony, He’d be giving it to her. And that’s the conundrum that faces the guy in the song, in that he can’t ever discern the girl’s needs so that he can properly satisfy them.
Shear’s lyrics suggest a kind of incurable fickleness is at the core of the problem: Then one day she’s satisfied / And the next I’ll find her crying / And it’s nothing she can explain. The narrator also suggests life can’t quite compare to the ideals of her dream world: But she won’t understand / Why anyone would have to try / To walk a line when they could fly.
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