I’ve made a big deal about British rock (‘indie’, ‘Britpop’, call it what you will) not getting its fair share of airtime at the top of the singles chart in the ‘90s. I even did a special post on it. But here’s an even rarer sighting of the US equivalent…
Breakfast at Tiffany’s, by Deep Blue Something (their 1st and only #1)
1 week, from 29th September – 6th October 1996
When I think of US alternative rock, post-grunge, in the mid-1990s, I think of REM, the Chili Peppers, Hootie & the Blowfish, and… I’m struggling, to be honest. Britain was bursting at the seams with their own alt-rock, and not many American acts broke through. Here then is US indie, alt-, college (again, call it what you will) rock’s one week in the sun. I might even go as far as suggesting that this is the first such #1 since The Highwaymen in 1961, though that might be pushing things slightly.
It’s a catchy record, with jangly verses which contrast against the power chords in the chorus. It’s a very different sound to Oasis, or Blur – there’s an earnestness to US rock that its British equivalent often deliberately avoids – but I’m sure the prevalence of Britpop benefitted this in making it to #1. And, though I was still young at the time, I can remember it being everywhere on the radio…
The most interesting thing about this record is the lyrics. Even the title intrigues… ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’? I make it only the second number one single to share its name with a book, after ‘Wuthering Heights’, but I’ll happily be proven wrong if I’ve forgotten one! It’s about a dying relationship, that the singer tries to save by thinking of one thing the pair have in common. And I said, What about, ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s? She said I, Think I, Remember the film… I think we’re meant to assume that this is enough for them to give it another go. I always thought that the next line was And as I recall, I read the book and I liked it… with the film and the book versions of ‘Breakfast at Tiffany’s’ being pretty different and a sign of the couple’s ill-suitedness… Except it turns out that the real line is as I recall I think we both kinda liked it… Call me a cynic, but my subconscious didn’t want them to stay together.
I see a lot of hate for this song online, hate that was also around at the time. And I can kind of see it, the fact that it’s cookie-cutter mid-nineties soft rock. The lyrics could also be seen as contrived, though I think they’re endearingly clumsy. It’s certainly not worthy of #6 on the ‘50 Most Awesomely Bad Songs Ever’ list, as VH1 and ‘Blender’ named it!
Deep Blue Something were from Denton, Texas and, despite forming in 1991 this was their first hit. Their only hit in much of the world, apart from in the UK. We felt sorry for them, and allowed their follow-up ‘Josey’ to make #27, sparing them a one-hit wonder tag. They split in 2001, but reformed in 2014. The members juggle being in Deep Blue Something with other day jobs in the music industry. Apart from, that is, guitarist Clay Bergus, who is a manager of Eddie V’s Prime Seafood restaurant in Fort Worth. Which is great.


Oh my God this song. When I was a little kid during the early 2000s, my older cousin – who was 12 years older than me – used to play this song all the time whenever I visited my uncle’s house. I thought it was annoying. Now, I actually don’t mind it.
This song is what I categorise as a post-alternative music. Very American-centric. Pop rock with an alternative sheen, influenced by both grunge and more jangly alt-bands like R.E.M.. Bands/artists like Matchbox 20, Counting Crowes, Hootie and the Blowfish, Alanis Morrisette, Third Eye Blind, even Green Day to an extent etc.
The genre that springs to my mind is ‘college rock’, or ‘music for between scenes in ‘Friends”… I do like this song, but looking at the bands you listed I have to say that British rock was in a stronger position than US rock in the mid-nineties!
This was a fun upbeat US poprock track, as it was morphing into “slacker” style radio friendly stuff – and which I heard on Florida radio around Orlando and the Florida Keys in early ’96 on a holiday with a mate – we had a freak cold blast from the north, actual ice hanging from telegraph wires in Orlando, and coats on, even in the Keys! This was one of the big holiday tune take-homes, so I bought it when it got a UK release. By this time I was taping US radio onto cassette/radio player I bought, so lots of tapes from the 90’s and early 00’s I ought to be sticking onto Youtube or similar. Period pieces now….!
This is a HUGE improvement over the last number one…to me anyway. Night and day…annoying and very good. I like the sound of this one…I’ve never heard it.
I though this would have been big on the radio in the US… It just sounds so American to me!
I love and it should have been…but at this time I could have missed it. It does sound like alt rock