Savin' Me

"Saving Me"
Single by Nickelback
from the album All the Right Reasons
Released April 25, 2006 (2006-04-25)
Format Digital download (NA), CD single (elsewhere)
Recorded January–May 2005 at Mountainview Studios, Abbotsford, British Columbia
Genre Post-grunge
Length 3:39
Label Roadrunner
Songwriter(s) Chad Kroeger, Ryan Peake, Mike Kroeger, Daniel Adair[1]
Nickelback singles chronology
"Animals"
(2005)
"Saving Me"
(2006)
"Far Away"
(2006)

"Animals"
(2005)
"Saving Me"
(2006)
"Far Away"
(2006)
Nickelback UK singles chronology
"Far Away"
(2006) Far Away2006
"Savin' Me"
(2006) Savin' Me2006
"Rockstar"
(2007) Rockstar2007
Music video
"Savin' Me" on YouTube

"Saving Me" is a song written by Canadian band Nickelback. It was released as the third major single from their fifth studio album, All the Right Reasons (2005). The song reached number two on the Canadian Singles Chart, became another top ten hit for the band in New Zealand, peaking at number nine, and peaked at number nineteen on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. It is one of the band's few videos in which they are not shown performing. The music video was very well received and it's among their most well known videos. When the song returned to the band's live setlist during their Feed the Machine Tour; an edited version of the video, without the parts showing the band, was played on the big screen during the performance, being the only song with a music video during their live performances. It was featured in the closing credits to the film The Condemned as well as in the commercials for the third season of Battlestar Galactica and the second season of Prison Break. It was also the title theme for the TV series Surgery Saved My Life.

Music video

The music video opens with a man in a trenchcoat wandering near a street corner with a confused look on his face. He then sees another man talking on a cell phone about to get hit by a New Jersey Transit bus, and pulls him back just in the nick of time, and then walks away. The second man starts staring at other people as the song begins.

Band members Chad Kroeger and Ryan Peake in the music video for "Savin' Me".

Eventually, the viewer sees that the second man sees timers (counting in seconds) with glowing numbers counting down above the heads of everyone around him. To everyone else, he appears to be crazy. He is baffled by the meaning of the timers until he sees an elderly woman being brought out on a stretcher to a waiting ambulance: when the timer above her head reaches zero, she dies. Shortly afterwards, he sees a young woman sitting down and peeling an orange. She has numbers above her head and in front of her pregnant stomach. He also sees that he cannot see the timer above his own head. He soon spots a business woman about to enter her car, and sees her timer rapidly dwindles much faster than it should, dropping from the millions to the single digits in a matter of seconds. Realizing what's about to happen, he pulls her out of the way in nick of time, just like the first man in the beginning did to him, before her car is crushed by a falling statue in a crate (which, in an example of foreshadowing, can be seen in midair about halfway through the video (timestamp 2:00 as well as the lyrics just afterwards: "I'm fallin'"). The second man, talking on a cell phone, then walks away with his own reappearing glowing numbers overhead, just as the man who had saved him did, leaving the businesswoman astonished as she now sees the timers over everyone else's heads.

The band is in an apartment; Chad Kroeger and Ryan Peake are singing on camera, but no instruments are played; the other band members are seen simply staring at the camera, or into space. It was filmed over 2 days, in Newark, NJ

Release history

Country Release date Version
United States April 25, 2006 Original
United Kingdom June 5, 2006
December 2008 Re-release

Charts

Chart (2006–08)[2] Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart 18
Austrian Singles Chart 43
Brazil (ABPD)[3] 89
Canadian Singles Chart 2
Dutch Top 40 25
German Singles Chart 72
Irish Singles Chart 47
New Zealand Singles Chart 9
Slovakia (Rádio Top 100)[4] 25
Swiss Singles Chart 82
UK Singles Chart 77
US Billboard Hot 100 19
US Billboard Pop Songs 6
US Billboard Alternative Songs 29
US Billboard Adult Pop Songs 2
US Billboard Adult Contemporary 29
US Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks 11

References

  1. CD liner notes: Now That's What I Call Music! 22, Sony BMG 2006
  2. Chart peak positions:
  3. "Brazil" (PDF). ABPD. October 6, 2001. Retrieved April 1, 2014.
  4. "SNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: insert 200636 into search.
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