Cousins (song)

"Cousins"
Single by Vampire Weekend
from the album Contra
B-side California English, Pt. 2
Released November 17, 2009 (Digital Download, radio promo), December 15, 2009 (7" vinyl)
Recorded 2009
Genre Indie pop
Indie rock
Length 2:25
Label XL
Writer(s) Vampire Weekend
Vampire Weekend singles chronology
"Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa"
(2008)
"Cousins"
(2009)
"Giving Up the Gun"
(2010)

"Cousins" is the first single from Vampire Weekend's second album Contra. It was recorded by the band in Mexico City and debuted a few days later in Guadalajara.[1] The single was released November 17, 2009 and a 7" was released December 15, 2009.

Contents

Music video

The video for the song, directed by Garth Jennings, debuted on MTVu on November 19, 2009.

The video features the members of Vampire Weekend performing in a long alleyway. Throughout the song, the members of the band rotate places on a platform that moves up and down the alleyway on a track. While some of the band members are on the platform, the others take positions beside the platform. The band members also exchange masks of one another, wearing them whilst singing. Towards the end of the video, confetti starts raining down on the alley.

Stereogum describes the video as "quick, quirky, and unpredictable but not without a sense of humour about itself, so pretty much perfect for a band of Ivy Leaguers who aren't above self-satirizing their prepped up ways."[2]

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "Cousins"   2:25
2. "California English, Pt. 2"   2:59

Chart performance

Following Contra's release on January 11, 2010, "Cousins" began to receive increasing amounts of digital downloads. As of January 13, 2010, the single peaked at #27 on the UK iTunes Chart. The single first entered the UK Singles Chart on January 17, 2010, where it reached a current peak of #39. It entered the UK Indie charts at #3.

Chart (2010) Peak
position
UK Singles Chart 39
UK Indie Chart 3
US Billboard Alternative Songs 18
US Billboard Rock Songs 25

Use in other media

Cousins is used in the opening sequence of the 2010 film, The Kids Are All Right, although the song does not appear on the soundtrack release. It also appears in Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 as a soundtrack. It was also covered by the British indie folk band Mumford & Sons.

References