Trumpet and harmonica were recorded for the song but were omitted from the final mix. A mix featuring the extra instrumentation was released in March 2012.
Release
"Needle in the Hay" was released as a 7" vinyl single on January 1, 1995 by record label Kill Rock Stars. It is the lead track on the albumElliott Smith, released in May that year.
Live performances
During later shows with a full band, the song was given more of a "rock" arrangement and would feature drums and bass, with Smith also singing the vocals an octave higher.
Legacy
placed the song at number 27 in their list of the two-hundred best songs of the 1990s. "Needle in the Hay" appeared in Wes Anderson's 2001 filmThe Royal Tenenbaums, in a scene featuring a suicide attempt. Smith was reportedly unhappy about the song being used this way. The song appeared on the film's soundtrack. In 2017, Australian music and culture publication, , launched an annual vinyl named after "Needle In The Hay".
Cover versions
The song was covered by numerous artists, including punk band Bad Astronaut for their 2001 album Acrophobe; drone metal duo Nadja on their 2009 covers albumWhen I See the Sun Always Shines on T.V.; Mélissa Laveaux on her 2006 album Camphor & Copper; and Juliana Hatfield in 2014's I Saved Latin! A Tribute to Wes Anderson, a tribute album of songs used in the films of director Wes Anderson. It was also covered in a viral video of a parody of The Muppets character Kermit the Frog. In July 2018, singer/songwriter Vanessa Carlton digitally released her own recording of "Needle in the Hay"; Carlton selected the track among a variety of songs that were unveiled as part of her 'Six Covers / Six Months' showcase. In reference to Smith's work, Carlton issued the following: "This is one of my favorite songs period. Elliott was a great poet and the metaphors in this lyric split me open. This song is a juxtaposition because the song is about excruciating pain and the brutal moments of an addiction spiral and yet it's formed in this drone-y meditative manner. Such restraint makes the listener have to move in closer. And then it breaks you. I hope I did him justice. He deserves the best."