"Ready to Fall" | ||||
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Single by Rise Against | ||||
from the album The Sufferer & the Witness | ||||
Released | October 2006 | |||
Format | CD, digital | |||
Recorded | Fort Collins, Colorado | |||
Genre | Post-hardcore | |||
Length | 3:50 | |||
Label | Geffen | |||
Writer(s) | Tim McIlrath, Joe Principe, Brandon Barnes, Chris Chasse | |||
Producer | Jason Livermore, Bill Stevenson | |||
Rise Against singles chronology | ||||
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"Ready to Fall" is the first single by the punk rock band Rise Against from their fourth studio album, The Sufferer & The Witness (2006).
An acoustic version of this song was performed live on the CJZN Radio station in Victoria, British Columbia, on January 18, 2007, before a Billy Talent concert featuring Rise Against, Anti-Flag, and Moneen.
On March 12, 2009, the song became a downloadable song in the video game, Guitar Hero World Tour. It is also featured in Tap Tap Revenge 3 on iPhone and iPod Touch as a downloadable double song pack with Audience of One.
The song featured in 2009 action movie 12 Rounds.[1]
The song is most often performed last at Rise Against's live performances.
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Made in 2006, the video is about pollution and its effects on the environment. The video is 3 minutes and 51 seconds long, and cuts between shots of the band playing and shots of animals being saved or dying, if not already dead, from various environmental hazards caused by humans. At the end of the video, lead singer Tim McIlrath says, "Every action has a reaction. We've got one planet, one chance."
As well as the version played on television, there was another, more graphic version created. This was never released officially but is available on certain websites. The video serves a testimony to veganism. Rise Against is an active supporter of PETA, an animal rights organisation, and the band members are all active vegetarians.
The video was filmed at Brandywine Falls Provincial Park in British Columbia, Canada.
The song reached number 13 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart. It is the lowest charting single from The Sufferer & the Witness, but at the time, it was the band's second highest charting single.
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