Baby's on Fire

"Baby's on Fire" is the third track on English musician Brian Eno's 1974 debut solo album Here Come the Warm Jets.

[2] The song is a surreal fantasy about a photography session involving a burning woman and unthinking, laughing onlookers, and two second-hand tobacconists.

I was exhausted", with shifting drum beats as backing; Eno's vocal returns as the song ends.

Douglas Wolk of Blender described the song as "a two-note wonder built around an all-hell-breaks-loose guitar meltdown by King Crimson's Robert Fripp",[13] while Chris Ott of Pitchfork Media called the track "earth-shattering".

The track’s centerpiece is the conflagration of Robert Fripp and Paul Rudolph's all-devouring instrumental break with Eno’s "treatments" spraying fuel all over it.