"Everybody Takes a Tumble" is a song from Scottish-Irish folk rock band The Waterboys, released as the only single from their ninth studio album Book of Lightning. It was written by Mike Scott and Anthony Thistlethwaite, and produced by Scott and Phil Tennant.
Background
"Everybody Takes a Tumble" was written in early 1986,[1] when Scott moved to Dublin. The song was not recorded at the time, but retained for possible future use alongside Scott's other unreleased songs.[2] The Waterboys began performing the song live as early as 2005 before recording it for Book of Lightning.[3][4]
Speaking of the song, Scott told Terry Staunton of Record Collector in 2007: "Everybody Takes a Tumble" is pretty much a snapshot of what the music scene was like in Dublin when I went to live there. The first line mentions Phil Lynott, who died the day I moved to Ireland. Sinéad O'Connor was just starting at that time, so she's namechecked, and Van Morrison had this song at the time where he was singing about other artists copying his style, so I included a line about that." The song's also references Brush Shiels and The Blades.[4]
Reception
In a review of Book of Lightning, James Christopher Monger of AllMusic felt "Everybody Takes a Tumble" was "nearly a carbon copy" of "Fisherman's Blues" and added that it "feels like a campfire full of good-natured charlatans on a stormy night, just waiting to talk the ear off of some lucky (or unlucky) traveler".[5] Dave Simpson of The Guardian described it as a "delirious, heady waltz" and "possibly the best song [Scott's] completed since "The Whole of the Moon"."[6] Fiona Jerome of musicOMH commented: "There are songs that would slot straight into their late '80s repertoire, particularly the lengthy "Everybody Takes a Tumble"."[7]
Lee Davis of inthenews.co.uk wrote: "The album runs the full gamut of emotions before catapulting into the blissful 'kiss-and-make-up' moment writ large in the vibrant, fiddle-fuelled "Everybody Takes a Tumble"."[8] Finbarr Bermingham of The Skinny felt the song was "welcomed as one of the more upbeat numbers".[9] Michael Keefe of PopMatters described it as a "deceptively sunny-sounding song of revenge".[10] Ian Abrahams of Record Collector considered the song to "musically resemble" "Fisherman's Blues" and also thought it had the same "centred honesty".[11]
Ed Condran of The Record described the song as "one of the most charming tracks from Book of Lightning".[12] Karl Leslie of St. Cloud Times noted: "...by the time you get to the end of the disc and "Everybody Takes a Tumble" kicks in, it sounds like he's searching to recreate the acoustic magic of the band's 1987 masterpiece "Fisherman's Blues"."[13] Kevin O'Hare of the Star Tribune considered the song one of the best on the album and added that it "name-drops Sinéad O'Connor and Van Morrison while skipping around Wickham's fiddle and Naiff's organ."[14]
Formats
7" single
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Everybody Takes a Tumble" (Single Version)
4:25
2.
"Ain't Doin' Too Bad"
2:20
CD single
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Everybody Takes a Tumble" (Single Version)
4:25
2.
"Killing My Heart" (Live)
4:18
3.
"All Things Must Pass" (Live)
3:57
CD single (European promo)
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Everybody Takes a Tumble" (Single Version)
4:25
Personnel
Everybody Takes a Tumble
Mike Scott – vocals, acoustic guitar, pianola, sleighbell