The Rat (song)

"The Rat"
Single by The Walkmen
from the album Bows + Arrows
B-side "Clementine"
Released April 19, 2004
Format
Recorded April – October 2003
Genre
Length 4:22
Label Record Collection
Songwriter(s) The Walkmen
Producer(s) Dave Sardy
The Walkmen singles chronology
"Let's Live Together"
(2002)
"The Rat"
(2004)
"Little House of Savages"
(2004)

"Let's Live Together"
(2002)
"The Rat"
(2004)
"Little House of Savages"
(2004)
Audio sample
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"The Rat" is a song by American indie rock band The Walkmen. It was released as the first single from their second studio album, Bows + Arrows (2004), on April 19, 2004. The song peaked at number 45 on the UK Singles Chart and number 49 on the Scottish Singles Chart. It has received high acclaim from critics, featuring in many publications' best-of-the-decade lists.

Composition and recording

Singer Hamilton Leithauser said the song originated in a jam session when the band were "just screwin' around." The band's drummer Matt Barrick instigated the track by playing a fast drum pattern. The band then quickly built this foundation into the full track, Leithauser said "we threw some chords on it, I wrote the words in five minutes." The song had been included in the band's live sets as early as February 2002, with slightly different lyrics than the recorded version.[1]

The band's usual method was to self-produce their material. However, after unsuccessful attempts to record the layered electric organ and guitar, they decided to record the track with a professional record producer at the advice of their label. This was later viewed as an unsatisfactory move by bassist Walter Martin who said "It doesn't sound right at all. I think the production for the rest of the album makes the music sound big and live. But it just sounds dense and solid."[2]

Ezra Koenig, who worked as an intern for the band, says the song was originally titled "Girls At Night" and was recorded a year after it was first played to him.[3]

Music video

The video features a live performance shot in black and white making use of chiaroscuro and directed by filmmaker Eva Aridjis

Critical reception

The track has received highly positive critical acclaim, featuring in many end-of-decade lists. It was named thirteenth best track of the decade by NME[4] and 20th best track of the 2000s by Pitchfork Media who named it "a St. Valentine's Day Massacre of relentless drums, bass, and guitar."[5] Rolling Stone called it "one of the greatest songs of the century".[1] Modern Drummer magazine praised Barrick's performance as "a jaw-dropping exercise in precision and velocity".[6] In October 2011, NME placed it at number 31 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years".[7]

Stylus Magazine took a different slant saying that the song's 'one-hit wonder' success "was the worst thing to ever happen to The Walkmen. It brought the iPod-lazy—singles, MP3s, mix and matchers—to their shows and records."[8]

The song is featured on the soundtracks of Major League Baseball 2K7, Dirt 2, and True Crime: New York City.

Cover versions

Florence and The Machine covered the track as part of a series on Myspace Music.[9]

Track listing

CD & 7"

  1. "The Rat"
  2. "Clementine"

Charts

Chart (2004) Peak
position
Scotland (Official Charts Company)[10] 49
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[11] 45

References

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