Like Flames


"Like Flames" is a song by American band Berlin, released in 1986 as the lead single from their third studio album, Count Three & Pray.

Background

Berlin worked with Canadian producer Bob Ezrin on the album. The producer, best known for his work with Alice Cooper and Kiss, gave the record a radically different 1980s pop-rock guitar sound than Berlin's previous releases, which had a more new wave/synth-pop sound. Berlin singer Terri Nunn and their label, Geffen Records, were approving of the change of sound, but it did not sit well with founding member John Crawford and drummer Rob Brill, who wrote the song. The recording of the album wasn't a relaxed affair, as differences of opinion between band members plagued the recording sessions. These clashes were further exacerbated by the recording of the group's previous single, the worldwide #1 hit "Take My Breath Away" from the soundtrack of the film Top Gun, which Nunn was eager to record, while the other two members were not excited about due to the song not being written by them, and with a sound not representative of the band.

Music video

The music video sees the band singing at the top of a mountain. It was filmed at the Red Rock Canyon, Nevada.

Release and reception

"Like Flames" was released as the lead single from the album in October 1986 and, following up "Take My Breath Away", a chart-topper in September of that year, was expected to do well. However, the record and the album did not find chart success, peaking at number 82 in the US and becoming their last chart entry in that country. In Europe, the record performed better on the strength of "Take My Breath Away", reaching the top 20 in several countries, but still it was only a moderate hit. In the UK, "Like Flames" was released as the second single from the album in March 1987, following "You Don't Know", which was released as the next single elsewhere. It peaked at number 47 there.
Nunn has blamed the lack of success to the sudden change of style for the band, which alienated their established fanbase of their synth-pop albums, and failing to gain new fans from their new-found fame with "Take My Breath Away", because the album sounded nothing like it, although the hit song was included on the album at the insistence of Geffen to capitalize on its success. The record's lack of success and their internal clashes eventually led to the demise of the band in 1987.

Track listings

  1. "Like Flames" – 4:02
  2. "Hideaway" – 5:08
  1. "Like Flames" – 7:00
  2. "Hideaway" – 5:08
  3. "Dancing in Berlin" – 4:44
  1. "Like Flames" – 4:02
  2. "Trash" – 3:38
  1. "Like Flames" – 7:00
  2. "Trash" – 3:38
  3. "You Don't Know" – 5:31

    Charts

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Alannah Myles version

Canadian singer Alannah Myles covered the song in 2000. The record was produced by German musician and producer Frank Peterson, known for his work with Enigma, Gregorian and Sarah Brightman as a commission by German cable TV Premiere to use the song at the end of their coverages of the Bundesliga on their Sports channel during the 2000–2001 season.
Myles' cover version mixes the standard Europop of that time with her trademark rock vocal delivery. Myles sang it on the Bundesliga playoffs and, since the song received a good response, it was released as a single in Germany in November 2000, peaking at number 98 there, Myles' first single to chart since 1990 in that country. Myles eventually included the song on her compilation Myles & More: The Very Best Of, released in the Spring of 2001. These would be Myles' last releases with her label Ark 21 Records, with whom she had signed in 1996.
Myles would collaborate again with Peterson on his 2010 Gregorian album Dark Side of the Chant, providing vocals on three tracks.

Track listing

  1. "Like Flames" 3:55
  2. "Like Flames" 5:14
  3. "Like Flames" 5:13

    Charts

Twenty 4 Seven version

"Like Flames" was covered and released as a single by Dutch Eurodance group Twenty 4 Seven in October 2007. It featured Twenty 4 Seven's new vocalist Elle and was the group's first release since 1999.
The music video was shot in an abandoned power plant, and featured Elle singing and dancing with a couple of other dancers, with flames in the background.

Charts