Singer/songwriter Shawn Colvin already had three albums in her rear view by 1996, and was somewhat fed up with record company intrusions aimed at scoring her a big single. When she decided to stop worrying about any of that and make the music she wanted to make, she ended up with “Sunny Came Home,” the biggest song of her career.
What is the “Sunny Came Home” about? And what did Colvin use as inspiration for writing it? Here is the unlikely story about how Shawn Colvin conquered the pop world in 1996 with a song about an enigmatic arsonist.
Recording Repairs
Shawn Colvin had managed a few songs, like “Steady On” from her 1989 debut album, that had scraped together some adult-contemporary airplay. But her material, which tended towards introspection, didn’t seem cut out for the pop charts. Colvin had come to terms with that, and she decided that on her fourth album, scheduled for release in 1996, she wasn’t even going to worry about chasing a hit anymore.
The only change in her approach that Colvin made for the album was to start writing from the perspective of other characters. In the past, she had mostly stuck to first-person confessionals. But she found she was effective in getting inside the heads of others.
Aside from that, the process was pretty much the same. Her co-writer John Leventhal would come up with pieces of music, and Colvin would add the melodies and lyrics. One particular piece featuring a prominent mandolin part at the beginning caught her ear, but she wasn’t sure what words should go with it. That’s when a painting helped change the trajectory of her career.
Flame on
Colvin had been gifted a painting by an artist friend of hers named Julie Speed. It features a woman with a lit match in her hand, and way behind her in the distance are copious flames. She decided she would write about the woman in the painting, and that song became “Sunny Came Home.”
A line from the lyrics, A Few Small Repairs, would be used for the album title. When it came to coming up with those lyrics, Colvin wasn’t all that interested in spelling out all the details to listeners about why this woman had started the conflagration. Instead, as she explained in an interview with HuffPost, it was more about making it resonate:
“You want to write a moving song, and something personal, but you want it to be well-crafted enough so people can project themselves into it. That’s what I always appreciated about my heroes. That their stories could be my story, too.”
What is the Meaning of “Sunny Came Home”?
As mentioned above, Colvin never gives us an explicit reason for why Sunny decides to do what she does. Without that motive, we’re left to fill in the blanks via the subtle hints Colvin leaves behind like so many scattered bread crumbs. Or we can just assume we’ll never know, and simply enjoy the striking lines that Colvin concocts throughout “Sunny Came Home.”
We do know there’s no hesitation (Sunny came home with a mission) and she’s had it with rising above, instead choosing revenge (Sunny came home with a list of names / She didn’t believe in transcendence.) She even comes out with an action-hero one-liner: And it’s time for a few small repairs, she said. The middle eight sounds like the inner voice compelling her to this act: Count the years, you always knew it / Strike a match, go on and do it.
The world is burning down / She’s out there on her own, and she’s alright, Colvin sings. The two lines wouldn’t seem to go together, but we’re not exactly meant to connect all the dots of “Sunny Came Home,” a Top-10 single and Grammy-decorated track. Instead, Shawn Colvin wants us to come to our own conclusions as to why this mysterious character felt the need to burn it all down.
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Photo by Terry Wyatt/Getty Images for Americana Music