Sell Out (song)
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“Sell Out” | |||||
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Song by Reel Big Fish | |||||
Album | Turn The Radio Off | ||||
Released | August 13, 1996 | ||||
Genre | Ska | ||||
Length | 3:47 | ||||
Label | Mojo Records, Jive Records | ||||
Writer | Aaron Barrett, Scott Klopfenstein | ||||
Producer | Reel Big Fish, Jay Rifkin | ||||
Turn The Radio Off track listing | |||||
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"Sell Out" is one of the more famed songs from California ska punk band, Reel Big Fish, released as the first track on their 1996 album Turn The Radio Off. The song has proven to be one of Reel Big Fish's more popular releases. It has been interpreted as chronicling the payola scandals of early FM radio. However, it can also be seen as a satire of the way the pop music industry works in general.
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[edit] Reception
Sell Out was released in 1996 and gained the band a distinct amount of attention, becoming a minor hit in that year. It received regular radio airplay in America and competed favourably on the charts in the UK, consequently, the video (see below) soon gained regular rotation on MTV, much to the surprise of Matt Wong[1]. The band has since largely used it to close their live shows, referring to it as "[their] big hit from the 90s"; Aaron Barrett can be heard on Our Live Album is Better Than Your Live Album yelling at the crowd that they cannot play the song until the end because of its status[2]. It also appeared on the soundtrack to the video games FIFA 2000, Aggressive Inline, and Disney's Extreme Skate Adventure. The song also appeared on the season three finale of My Name is Earl.
[edit] Video
A video clip was released some time later, featuring the members of the band working at a roadside fast food outlet (conforming to the lyrics), complete with Matt Wong as the mascot in a giant French Fries outfit. They are recruited by a man played by their agent into the world of music at Mojo Records. They compete against several other types of bands, such as 'Rap', 'Rock' and 'Metal' for the rights to a contract (the band themselves wear a jacket emblazoned with the words 'Ska Band'), but Matt must be pulled out of his costume. In the end, the people trying to extract him resort to dynamite, which he tosses away and runs for his life. The building explodes, and the last scene shows Matt back at the fast food outlet.
The film clip references the popular Star Wars movies (in that their agent's car makes a TIE fighter noise as it drives). Also, Goldfinger, a band known to tour with Reel Big Fish, appear briefly in the clip throwing them menacing looks.
Matt has stated that, upon first seeing the music video on MTV, he had not expected it and the sandwich he was eating fell out of his mouth in astonishment; he was then unable to talk to anyone about his response as the other band members were all at work. [1]
[edit] Popularity
The song itself has grown to be very popular, to the extent that, on Reel Big Fish's album We're Not Happy 'Til You're Not Happy, there is a song entitled "One Hit Wonderful", in which the band complains that their fans ignore all their other songs in favour of one of their classics. Though the song in question is not named, "Sell Out" is heard playing at the start and end of the song.
This song has become a sort of running joke amongst the band members and fan base. In 2006, the best-of album Greatest Hit...And More was released by former label Jive and titled to refer to the fact that Sell Out was, at least on the charts, their only hit. The band, in particular frontman Aaron Barrett, have experienced frustration trying to one-up the song. In an interview, Barrett was asked if he felt that Sell Out was the band's biggest accomplishment and everything else was downhill. He responded that "Sometimes you feel like that, like your band is around for a long time and you wonder if you're going to get bigger. You wonder if radio will ever play you again, or if you're ever going to have a hit bigger than the novelty song you had in the 90s. You're thirty, make a living playing music, and can't do anything else. There is a lot to worry about."[3]
The band notes, however, that although the song remains its greatest hit, that it is not the song that has kept its popularity alive since they began playing. Barrett instead credits that to another song originally from Everything Sucks and re-recorded for Turn The Radio Off, Beer, a song which, the band asserts, did not receive the same amount of media attention as Sell Out because of its suggestiveness.[1]
[edit] Charts
Single - Billboard
Year | Chart | Position |
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1997 | Modern Rock Tracks | 10 |