American Bad Ass

"American Bad Ass"
Single by Kid Rock
from the album The History of Rock
Released April 18, 2000
Recorded 1996 to 2000
Genre Rap metal, heavy metal
Length 4:32
Label Atlantic
Writer(s) Kid Rock, James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich
Producer(s) Kid Rock
Kid Rock singles chronology
"Wasting Time"
(2000)
"American Bad Ass"
(2000)
"Forever"
(2001)
The History of Rock track listing
"Intro"
(1)
"American Bad Ass"
(2)
"Prodigal Son"
(3)
Live Trucker track listing
"Picture"
(7)
"American Bad Ass"
(8)
"Rock n' Roll Pain Train"
(9)
Music video
"American Bad Ass" on YouTube

"American Bad Ass" is a heavy metal/rap song from American musician Kid Rock, released from his 2000 album The History of Rock. "American Bad Ass" uses the instrumental structure of Metallica's "Sad but True." The song was a victory lap for Devil Without a Cause '​s success.

Content

He also gave nods to his musical heroes including: AC/DC, ZZ Top, Hank Williams, Jr., Beastie Boys, Run-DMC, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Bob Seger, Limp Bizkit, Korn, The Rolling Stones, David Allan Coe, George Jones, Johnny Cash, The Clash, and Grandmaster Flash.

In the song, the word "Oklahoma", a reference to the Oklahoma City bombing with 168 casualties, is edited out, as the record label didn't want to cause offense.

Music video

The music video for the single aired on MTV2 upon release, and reached #1 on Canada's MuchMusic Countdown.[1] The song was performed on Saturday Night Live.

At the beginning, Kid Rock watches TV and then after going to a rapping party, he goes to a concert on a cabriolet, surrounded by bikers. At the middle of the song, Kid Rock's car explodes and the thrash metal party starts to play. At the end of the video, Kid Rock with his band plays at a concert on the stage.

The video features a cameo appearance by Ron Jeremy.

In popular culture

Track listing

  1. "American Bad Ass" (clean album version)
  2. "3 Sheets to the Wind" (Live)
  3. "Cowboy" (Live)

Charts

Chart (2000) Peak
position
Canada Rock (RPM) 24
Germany (Media Control Charts)[4] 26
Ireland (IRMA) 30
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[5] 81
UK Singles (The Official Charts Company) 25
U.S. Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 20
U.S. Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 33

Parody

In 2001, the American glam metal band Tuff made a parody of this song, named "American Hair Band".

References

External links