"Where have all the virgins gone?" Death From Above 1979 ask in this track from their second album, The Physical World. In a Songfacts interview, their drummer/vocalist Sebastien Grainger said: "Lyrically, it's about innocence, and it's about that moment before a person is corrupted by sex, in a way. I'm not speaking in a moralistic way."
Sebastien Grainger and his bandmate Jesse F. Keeler claim that they both had little interest in girls until they got to be about 18, an experience that influenced this song. "I was more into nerding out in the music room than trying to get a date," said Grainger.
Grainger elaborated on the song's lyric, telling Songfacts: "The concept started because I was at the park with my wife, and we were walking our dog. We were sitting on his grassy embankment, and there were some kids playing above us – two girls, probably 10 or 11 years old. And they were just tumbling down the hill with such abandon. I thought, You know, next summer they're not going to be tumbling down the hill. They're probably doing to be doing something else. Like, that kind of androgynous state before you're worried about boys and girls. It was an exploration in that feeling. The feeling of innocence."
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