Venus in Furs (song)

"Venus in Furs" is a song by The Velvet Underground, written by Lou Reed and originally released on the 1967 album The Velvet Underground & Nico. Inspired by the book of the same name by Leopold von Sacher-Masoch, the song includes sexual themes of sadomasochism, bondage and submission.

Contents 1 Recording 2 Personnel 3 Alternate versions 3.1 Ludlow Street Loft, July 1965 3.2 Scepter Studios, April 1966 3.3 Live recordings 3.4 Norman Dolph acetate and Factory rehearsal 4 In film and TV 5 In advertising 6 Cover versions 7 References

Recording
"Venus in Furs" was one of three songs to be re-recorded, in May 1966 at T.T.G. Studios in Hollywood, before appearing on the final mix of The Velvet Underground & Nico (the other two being "Heroin" and "I'm Waiting for the Man"). The arrangement features John Cale's cacophonous electric viola as well as Lou Reed's ostrich guitar, which is a guitar with all of its strings tuned to the same note.[3] The more prominent guitar work is Reed's guitar at standard tuning, albeit a semitone down. Guitarist Sterling Morrison played bass on the song, but according to Cale, who was the band's usual bassist, Morrison never cared for the instrument.[4][5] The backbeat consists of two bass drum beats and one tambourine shake, played at a slow pace by Maureen Tucker.

In his essay "Venus in Furs by the Velvet Underground", Erich Kuersten writes:

"There is no intro or buildup to the song; the track starts as if you opened a door to a decadent Marrakesh S&M/opium den, a blast of air-conditioned Middle Eastern menace with a plodding beat that’s the missing link between "Bolero" and Led Zeppelin’s version of "When the Levee Breaks".[6]

Personnel
Lou Reed - lead vocals, lead guitar, ostrich guitar John Cale - electric viola Sterling Morrison - bass Maureen Tucker - tambourine, bass drum

Alternate versions
Ludlow Street Loft, July 1965

The song was one of several early songs to be recorded by Lou Reed, John Cale and Sterling Morrison in their Ludlow Street loft during July 1965. This version of the song features a drastically different arrangement than would appear on The Velvet Underground & Nico, and ends with what David Fricke calls a "stark, Olde English-style folk lament" in the liner notes for Peel Slowly and See (the 1995 compilation album upon which the Ludlow demos appear). John Cale provides lead vocals for this demo recording of the song.

Scepter Studios, April 1966

An alternate take of the song was first recorded at Scepter Studios, New York City before being re-recorded in Hollywood. This take of the song is performed at a quicker pace and the lyrics vary slightly from the T.T.G. recording.

Live recordings

Live recordings of "Venus in Furs" appear on Bootleg Series Volume 1: The Quine Tapes (recorded in San Francisco, December 1969) and on Live MCMXCIII (recorded in Paris, June 1993).

Norman Dolph acetate and Factory rehearsal The 2012 deluxe six-CD boxed set, celebrating the album's 45th anniversary features, as Disc 4, the original version of the album, cut to acetate on April 26, 1966, known as the "Norman Dolph acetate". This features a version with more of Cale's viola in the arrangement. Additionally, on the same disc, there is a "fun version" recorded on January 3, 1966, during rehearsals at Warhol's Factory.[7]

In film and TV
The song appeared in episode 2 of the TV series Vinyl during a flashback to Andy Warhol's Factory.

The song is featured in Rob Zombie's 2012 film The Lords of Salem.

The song appears as part of the soundtrack for Gus Van Sant's 2005 film Last Days.

The song appears as the soundtrack for the Andy Warhol party scene in Oliver Stone's 1991 The Doors.

RZA used samples of the song, for his song called "Fatal" played in the final credits of Blade: Trinity, also appears in its soundtrack.

In the British TV series Being Human, the song is used prominently in season 2, episode 5.

In 1965, the Velvet Underground appeared in Piero Heliczer's underground film, Venus in Furs, which was named for the song. Heliczer, the Velvets, and the other performers were featured in a CBS News segment titled "The Making of an Underground Film" which aired in December of that year. This brief appearance turned out to be the only network television exposure for either Heliczer or the band.[8][9]

In advertising
In 1993, the song was used as the soundtrack for a British advertisement for Dunlop Tyres, by the advertising agency Abbott Mead Vickers BBDO and directed by British director Tony Kaye. The advertisement was notable for featuring both fetish and surrealist imagery.[10]

Cover versions
Lou Reed recorded several solo versions of the song and John Cale also performs it with his band. In addition, the following artists have recorded it:

Artist

Year

Appears on album

Paul Gardiner 1981 (released only as single) Niagara ? Beyond the Pale compilation Melvins 1991 Here She Comes Now/Venus in Furs (split single with Nirvana)[11] Paul Roland 1992 Strychnine The Ukrainians 1993 Vorony Christian Death 1993 Path of Sorrows[12] The Smashing Pumpkins 1994 Mashed Potatoes[13] Rosetta Stone 1996 Hiding in Waiting EP Miłość 1997 Talkin' About Life and Death Psychopomps 1997 Fiction Non-Fiction Bettie Serveert 1998 Plays "Venus in Furs" and other Velvet Underground songs The Creatures (Siouxsie's second band) 1999 Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Now Buy Zulu (also referred to as simply "Now Buy Zulu") Dave Navarro 2001 Trust No One[14] Hugh Cornwell 2002 Footprints in the Desert[15] Berry Sakharof 2003 Berry Sakharof Live (CD 2) Krieg 2004 The Black House[16] Trash Palace 2004 Positions[17] Monster Magnet 2004 Monolithic Baby! (US version bonus track) DeVotchKa 2006 Curse Your Little Heart EP[18] Chuck Dukowski Sextet 2006 Eat My Life Boxcar Preachers 2006 Autobody Experience[19] Ordo Rosarius Equilibrio 2006 Apocalips Beck 2009 Beck's Website[20] Broken Records 2009 Radio Scotland - Vic Galloway Live Session Sendelica feat. Alice Davidson (vocals) 2011 The Pavilion of Magic and the Trials of the Seven Surviving Elohim; previously released on the A Nice Pear EP (2010) Until The Ribbon Breaks 2015 Los Angeles

Additionally, the early David Bowie composition "Toy Soldier," recorded with his band The Riot Squad in 1967, lifts its chorus almost verbatim from "Venus in Furs." Bowie had received a test pressing of The Velvet Underground and Nico from his manager before the album was officially released.