Circle (Big Head Todd and The Monsters Song)

"Circle" was the third single from Boulder, Colorado based rock band Big Head Todd and the Monsters' major label debut album Sister Sweetly, which eventually went platinum. It reached #21 on the Mainstream Rock Chart, with their first two singles, "Bittersweet" and "Broken Hearted Savior", also charting.

Big Head Todd & the Monsters performed "Circle" during an appearance on the Late Show with David Letterman. A music video was also made, which features the band playing the song live interspersed with clips of a dog chained to a post, running in circles while his master holds up sheets of OSB with various shapes painted on them.

Big Head Todd and the Monsters
  • Todd Park Mohr
  • Brian Nevin
  • Rob Squires
  • Jeremy Lawton
  • Corey Mauser
Studio albums
  • Another Mayberry
  • Sister Sweetly
  • Strategem
  • Beautiful World
  • Riviera
  • Crimes of Passion
  • All the Love You Need
  • Rocksteady
  • "100 Years of Robert Johnson"
EPs
  • Big Head Todd and the Monsters Live
Live albums
  • Midnight Radio
  • Live Monsters
  • Live at the Fillmore
Singles
  • "Bittersweet"
  • "Broken Hearted Savior"
  • "Circle"
  • "It's Alright"
  • "In the Morning"
  • "Kensington Line"
  • "Tangerine"
  • "Resignation Superman"
  • "Boom Boom"
  • "Julianna"
  • "Imaginary Ships"
  • "Come On"
  • "Blue Sky"
  • "Beautiful"

Famous quotes containing the words circle, head, todd and/or monsters:

    The lifelong process of caregiving, is the ultimate link between caregivers of all ages. You and I are not just in a phase we will outgrow. This is life—birth, death, and everything in between.... The care continuum is the cycle of life turning full circle in each of our lives. And what we learn when we spoon-feed our babies will echo in our ears as we feed our parents. The point is not to be done. The point is to be ready to do again.
    Paula C. Lowe (20th century)

    Most childhood problems don’t result from “bad” parenting, but are the inevitable result of the growing that parents and children do together. The point isn’t to head off these problems or find ways around them, but rather to work through them together and in doing so to develop a relationship of mutual trust to rely on when the next problem comes along.
    Fred Rogers (20th century)

    You don’t have power if you surrender all your principles—you have office.
    —Ron Todd (b. 1927)

    his address
    to the grey monsters of the world,
    Imamu Amiri Baraka (b. 1934)