Our Velocity
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“Our Velocity” | |||||
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Single by Maxïmo Park from the album Our Earthly Pleasures |
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A-side | "Our Velocity" | ||||
B-side | "Distance Makes"
"Mary O'Brien" |
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Released | March 19, 2007 | ||||
Format | CD | ||||
Genre | Post-punk revival | ||||
Length | 3:26 | ||||
Label | Warp Records | ||||
Writer(s) | Paul Smith | ||||
Producer | Gil Norton | ||||
Maxïmo Park singles chronology | |||||
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Our Earthly Pleasures track listing | |||||
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"Our Velocity" is the first single from Our Earthly Pleasures, the second album from the band, Maxïmo Park. The single was released two weeks prior to the release of the album, on March 19, 2007.
The song, according to singer Paul Smith, was inspired by a piece of photography by Anglo-French artist Mathieu Ógan, of a twisting motorway. Smith stated "Our Velocity is a broadly political song about somebody fighting for their country and wondering just how they found themselves in such a godforsaken position in the first place." [1]
The video of the song features the band being multiplied in a white room while playing the song. It was directed by Nima Nourizadeh.
The song has been highly regarded and in VH1's "50 Greatest Songs of 2007 So Far" it placed at number 1.
The song reached Number 9 on 25th March 2007 on the UK Singles Chart and number 1 on the UK indie chart[1] within a week of its physical release.
In August 2007, a segment of the song was used as the title music for the BBC coverage of the Reading and Leeds Festival.
Teletext's music page Planet Sound named "Our Velocity" as the best single of 2007.
The song features in the 2007 video game Project Gotham Racing 4.
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
- CD:
- "Our Velocity"
- "Distance Makes"
- "Mary O'Brien"
- 7" #1 (white vinyl):
- "Our Velocity"
- "Pride Before A Fall"
- 7" #2 (red vinyl):
- "Our Velocity"
- "Robert Altman"
- 1st Week Only Download:
- "Our Velocity" (Home Demo Version)
- "Our Velocity" (First Live Performance)
[edit] Lyrical References
This article or section may contain original research or unverified claims. Please improve the article by adding references. See the talk page for details. (May 2008) |
The lyrics of the song are also seen to possibly reference to Paul Smith's home town of Billingham, with "I'm not a man, I'm a machine" possible referring to the over worked and underpaid workers in Billingham's industries. "I buy books I never read" could also be a reference as Paul had a love of public libraries when he was younger. "Beneath the concrete there's a sound / A muffled cry below the ground" possibly referring to the anhydrite mines below Billingham, and "There is a poison in the air / A mix of chemicals and fear" could be referring to the chemical works in and around Billingham, or possibly about the chemical leaks from ICI Billingham. Paul Smith's father also worked as an industrial welder for ICI and numerous other Teesside industries. Another few lines in the song are suspected to be references to this fact.`
[edit] References
[edit] External links
Maxïmo Park |
Paul Smith | Duncan Lloyd | Archis Tiku | Tom English | Lukas Wooller |
Discography |
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Albums: A Certain Trigger | Missing Songs | Our Earthly Pleasures |
Singles: "The Coast Is Always Changing" | "Apply Some Pressure" | "Graffiti" | "Going Missing" | "Apply Some Pressure" (Re-Release) | "I Want You to Stay" | "Our Velocity" | "Books From Boxes" | "Girls Who Play Guitars" | "Karaoke Plays" |
DVDs: Found on Film |
Related articles |
Warp Records | County Durham | Maxïmo Park discography |