"High School Confidential" | ||||
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Single by Rough Trade | ||||
from the album Avoid Freud | ||||
B-side | "Grade B Movie" | |||
Released | 1980 | |||
Length | 3:26 | |||
Label | True North TN4-159 | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Gene Martynec | |||
Rough Trade singles chronology | ||||
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"High School Confidential" is a song by Canadian new wave band Rough Trade, from their 1980 album Avoid Freud.[1] The band's breakthrough Top 40 hit in Canada, it remains their most famous song.
The song's producer was Gene Martynec, who won the Juno Award for Producer of the Year for his work on "High School Confidential" and Bruce Cockburn's "Tokyo". It was written by the band's main songwriting team, Carole Pope and Kevan Staples. Some references incorrectly credit Jerry Lee Lewis and Ron Hargrave as the songwriters,[2] but the Rough Trade song is not a cover of the Jerry Lee Lewis song of the same name.
Although the song uses the title of the 1958 film High School Confidential, as well as references which suggest that the song is set in a similar time frame, the lyrics do not strongly resemble the film's drug-related plot. Instead, the song's narrator is a student observing a sexy female classmate, a "cool blonde scheming bitch" whose activities suggest that she may be having sexual relations with adult men, including the high school principal. The narrator compares the classmate to 1950s sex symbols Mamie Van Doren, Anita Ekberg and Dagmar, and reveals her own unrequited lust for her: in one of the most famous lyrics from the song, Pope sings "She makes me cream my jeans when she comes my way".
The lyrics never explicitly state the narrator's own sex, so they may be read either as Pope speaking from a male perspective, or as a reference to lesbianism. In a 2000 interview with Eye Weekly, Pope confirmed that while she intended the lyric from her own perspective as a lesbian, the ambiguity was intentional: "The general public didn't get that I was gay – if you were gay you did – and when I wrote love songs, I wanted them to be interpreted however. The thing is, I really, really love men – straight men are very sexy as long as, you know, they don't try – and I think that comes across in my songs. Rock 'n' roll is about desire and passion, and I'm singing to both sexes."[3]