The essay was used in its entirety by Australian film director
Baz Luhrmann on his 1998 album
Something for Everybody, as "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)". Also known as "The Sunscreen Song", The backing is the choral version of "Everybody's Free (To Feel Good)", a 1991 song by Rozalla, used in Luhrmann's film ''
William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet''. The chorus, also from "Everybody's Free", is sung by
Quindon Tarver.
Background Luhrmann explained that Anton Monsted,
Josh Abrahams, and he were working on the remix when Monsted received an email with the supposed Vonnegut speech. They decided to use it but were doubtful of getting through to Vonnegut for permission before their deadline, which was only one or two days away. While searching the Internet for contact information they came upon the "Sunscreen" authorship controversy and discovered that Schmich was the actual author. They emailed her and, with her permission, recorded the song the next day.
Release Originally released on the album
Something for Everybody (1997), "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" gained popularity in 1998 in some areas of the US, when a
Portland radio station started to air it. The single came out in 1999. "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" was released as a single in some territories in 1997, with the speech (including its opening words, "Ladies and Gentlemen of the Class of '97") completely intact. This version appeared in the
Triple J Hottest 100 of that year at number 16 in the countdown, and was released on the
subsequent CD in early 1998. A limited-edition
CD single was issued in the United States on February 9, 1999, but only in the
Pacific Northwest region. In the United Kingdom, the song was released on May 31, 1999.
Versions There are four versions of the song: the original 7:09 minute mix from the album
Baz Luhrmann Presents: Something for Everybody; a 1999 single release which features a 5:05 minute edit that lacks both choruses; "Geographic's Factor 15+ Mix" that runs for 4:42 minutes; and a "2007 Mix" of the original 7:09 minute version released on the 10th Anniversary Edition of the
''William Shakespeare's Romeo + Juliet'' soundtrack, on which the opening words are changed to "Ladies and gentlemen of the class of 2007". The song also appeared in Germany and was soon followed by a German version with the title "Sonnencreme". The German translation is narrated by the German actor Dieter Brandecker. A Brazilian version, entitled "Filtro Solar", is narrated in Portuguese by journalist and TV presenter
Pedro Bial and was released in the last 2003 edition of the program
Fantástico, on
Rede Globo. This version became a radio success in 2004. A Russian adaptation of the song, recorded live by
Silver Rain Radio, was performed by Alex Dubas and Yolka. An Israeli adaptation of the song, named "Matters One Should Know" (דברים שכדאי לדעת), was recorded and released for the Israeli Children's channel in 2004 by Avri Gilad, Rinat Gabay and MC Shiri. Other versions include a Finnish version titled "Aurinkovoiteella onneen", performed by Erkki Saarela, and a Belgian version called "Beslis zelf maar (of je zonnemelk gebruikt)", performed by
Frank Aendenboom.
Critical reception Daily Record wrote, "Luhrmann's single is the biggest spoken-word hit since
JJ Barrie topped the charts with '
No Charge' in 1976. The lyrics began life as a newspaper article." James Oldham from
NME commented, "Unless you have been holidaying on
Jupiter for the last two months, this remarkable and potentially nauseating record will have burrowed its way into your deep subconscious by now." He added, "Luhrmann's postmodern masterpiece is half pisstake, half soul-soothing brain massage and all genius; a DIY
pop landmark for the end of the self-help decade. Buy this record. Twenty years from now, in ways you can't even begin to imagine today, you will be glad you did."
Chart performance The song was a top-10 hit across Europe but was largely obscure in the US until Aaron Scofield, a producer in
Phoenix, edited the original 12-inch version into a segment of a syndicated radio show called
Modern Mix. This show played on many stations in the United States. In Portland,
Oregon—where
Modern Mix played on
KNRK—listeners began requesting the track. KNRK program director Mark Hamilton edited the song for time and began playing it regularly. He distributed the song to other program directors that he networked with and the song exploded in the US. The song reached number 24 on the
Billboard Hot 100 Airplay in the United States; by the time it was released as a commercial single in the country, radio airplay had declined significantly, and only managed to peak at number 45 on the
Billboard Hot 100. In Canada the song peaked at number 11 on the
RPM Top Singles chart and topped the
RPM Adult Contemporary chart. It also reached number one in the United Kingdom and Ireland, partly due to a media campaign by
Radio One DJ
Chris Moyles. On August 10, 2008, the song re-entered the
UK Singles Chart at number 72.
Music video There are two
videos for the song: one which uses the 1999 5:05 minute single edit of the song (the version in which Quindon Tarver is not featured), directed and animated by
Bill Barminski; and another using the 7:09 minute edit made by the Brazilian advertising agency DM9DDB.
Track listings UK CD and cassette single • "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" (performed by
Quindon Tarver—edit) – 5:05 • "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" (performed by
Lee Parry—Geographic's Factor 15+ mix) – 4:42 • "
Love Is in the Air" (performed by
John Paul Young—Fran mix) – 4:29
European CD single • "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" (performed by Quindon Tarver—edit) – 5:05 • "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" (performed by Lee Parry—Geographic's Factor 15+ mix) – 4:42
US CD single • "Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)" (performed by Quindon Tarver—edit) • "I'm Losing You" (performed by Lani—Day mix)
Charts Weekly charts Year-end charts Certifications Release history ==Parodies==