"Shimmer" is a song by American alternative rock group Fuel. It was released in May 1996 as part of their third EP Porcelain and later on as lead single from their debut album Sunburn (1998).
According to Radio & Records, "Shimmer" was the most played song on alternative radio stations in the United States in 1998.[5]
Content
Guitarist Carl Bell told a crowd on VH1 Storytellers that the song was inspired by an ex-girlfriend he had shortly after high school, who left him for another man she ended up marrying. A few years later, she called Bell, confiding her relationship woes in him, and he felt a range of emotions from hurting to helplessness that inspired the lyrics of "Shimmer".[6]
Critical reception
Dan Snierson of Entertainment Weekly cited "Shimmer" as one of the "mellowest cuts" from its parent album, commenting that the song is a "Dave Matthews-ish ditty".[7]Billboard wrote that "the best thing about 'Shimmer' is that it doesn't wallow in angst melodrama or reek of kiddie-pop sugar," and called it "vibrant, aggressive rock' n'roll for adults."[8]
Music video
The music video has the band performing the song (mostly centered on singer Brett Scallions) and has short flashes to things like a mother and infant child and a dog. Directed by Josh Taft, the film clip's theme of the past and the present draws quite heavily from the song's lyrics of a shimmering love that while starting off mesmerizing can and will eventually fade and be torn away through emotional distance and neglect. The visions concentrate on the position of a past potential family in the storyteller's life as wholesome visions of a woman post-pregnancy in a white dress, a faceless father holding a baby, a goldfish and a family dog come into focus but are rarely seen clearly as the camera blurs and we are drawn quickly away. As the lyrics grind on describing the prior engagements with the female antagonist Taft brings us quite suddenly to the realization that the goldfish is dead, the family dog blurs away and the baby ceases to move and recedes to a cold blackened shape. The arrival of a female antagonist with symbolic sands of time falling through her outstretched hands heralds the arrival of new life as the song reaches its climax. The protagonist's car ride slowly but surely drifts him along and possibly away from the dead home-life but the goldfish now risen is rejoined by a now clearer vision of the family dog and the squirming life of the baby in a man's arms returns. The director has hinted at an emotionally empty space; a dead home through his lack of furnishings, drained color and detached objectivity but seems to suggest that the storyteller singer becomes the one framed in the past while the others live on as suggested in the closing scene.
Use in media
The song was used in Charmed season one, episode 14 "Secrets and Guys".
^Rolling Stone Staff (April 28, 2020). "The 50 Greatest Minivan Rock Songs". Rolling Stone. Retrieved January 11, 2025. A stripped-down intro with orchestral backing kicks into total post-grunge high gear...
^Reece, Doug; Smith, Shawnee; Flick, Larry (March 21, 1998), "Singles: Rock tracks". Billboard. 110 (12):98
^ abShimmer (US CD Single liner notes). Fuel. 550 Music. 1998. 36K 79019.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Shimmer (EU Maxi CD Single liner notes). Fuel. Epic Records. 1998. FFM 666812 2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Shimmer (AUS CD Single liner notes). Fuel. 550 Music. 1998. 666 420 2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
^Shimmer (US 7" Vinyl liner notes). Fuel. 550 Music. 1998. BS7 5484-S1.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)