Again Again Again Ong Lyric Indie

2010 vocal by Foster the People

"Pumped Up Kicks"
PumpedUpKicks.jpg
Single by Foster the People
from the EP Foster the People and the album Torches
B-side
  • "Pumped Upwards Kicks" (A cappella)
  • "Pumped Up Kicks" (Instrumental) (12")
Released September 14, 2010
Recorded 2010
Genre
  • Indie pop[ane]
  • psychedelic pop[2]
  • alternative rock[iii]
  • alternative pop[4]
Length
  • 4:00 (album version)
  • 3:38 (radio edit)
Label
  • Columbia
  • Startime
Songwriter(s) Mark Foster
Producer(s) Marking Foster
Foster the People singles chronology
"Pumped Up Kicks"
(2010)
"Helena Beat"
(2011)
Music video
"Pumped Up Kicks" on YouTube

"Pumped Upwardly Kicks" is a song by American indie pop band Foster the People. It was released as the band'south debut single in September 2010, and the following year was included on their EP Foster the People and their debut anthology, Torches. "Pumped Up Kicks" became the group's breakthrough hit and was one of the most popular songs of 2011. The song was written and recorded by frontman Mark Foster while he was working as a commercial jingle author. Contrasting with the upbeat musical limerick, the lyrics depict the homicidal thoughts of a troubled youth named Robert.

The track received considerable attention later information technology was posted online in 2010 every bit a complimentary download, and information technology helped the group garner a multi-album record bargain with Columbia Records banner Startime International. "Pumped Upwards Kicks" proved to exist a sleeper hit; in 2011, after receiving pregnant airplay on modernistic rock stations, the song crossed-over onto contemporary striking radio stations. The song spent eight sequent weeks at number three on the Billboard Hot 100 nautical chart in the U.s.a., making it the get-go Billboard Alternative Songs number-one single to scissure the U.Due south. pinnacle 5 since Kings of Leon'due south "Use Somebody" in 2009. The song was widely praised by critics, and it has been licensed for use in a wide range of popular media since its release. "Pumped Up Kicks" besides received a Grammy Laurels nomination for All-time Popular Duo/Group Operation. The song remains the band's most successful hitting unmarried to date.

Writing and recording [edit]

Soon after Mark Foster formed Foster the People in 2009, he wrote and recorded "Pumped Up Kicks" in five hours while working as a commercial jingle writer at Mophonics in Los Angeles.[5] [6] On the day of recording, Foster debated between songwriting in the studio and going to the beach. He explained: "I really didn't have anything to do that day. I was standing in that location in the studio, and this thought came in my mind like, 'I'm going to write a song,'... and then I was like, 'I don't feel similar writing. I don't want to write a song.' I was a block away from the beach, and it was a beautiful day. I kind of just wanted to just be lazy and go hang out at the beach or whatever. Just I merely forced myself to write a song... By that time the next mean solar day, the song was finished."[seven]

Reflecting on the lack of inspiration he felt when writing the vocal, Foster said, "I've heard a lot of other artists talk about this too, like, 'I'm not inspired right now. I've got author'southward block. I'm merely not really feeling anything.' And I've felt that way, too, just not being inspired and wanting to expect for inspiration to come before I wrote. But I wasn't inspired when I wrote 'Pumped Upwardly Kicks,' and that'south what came out. So... information technology just solidified the notion that perspiration is more powerful than inspiration."[seven] Thinking that he was just recording a demo, he played all of the instruments on the song,[viii] and using the software Logic Pro, he bundled and edited the song himself.[9] The demo is ultimately the version of the song that Foster released.[viii]

Composition and inspiration [edit]

I like to write about existent-life topics, and I like to write about unlike walks of life. For me, that song was really an observation about something that's happening in the youth culture these days. I guess I wanted to reveal that internal dialogue of a kid who doesn't have anywhere to turn, and I call up the song has kind of done its job. I think people are talking about it, and information technology's become a point of conversation, which I think is a really salubrious affair.

—Mark Foster[10]

The lyrics to "Pumped Up Kicks" are written from the perspective of a troubled and delusional youth with homicidal thoughts.[8] The lines in the chorus warn potential victims to "outrun my gun" and that they "better run, better run, faster than my bullet." Foster said in a statement to CNN Entertainment, "I wrote 'Pumped Up Kicks' when I began to read about the growing trend in teenage mental illness. I wanted to empathise the psychology behind it because it was foreign to me. It was terrifying how mental illness among youth had skyrocketed in the last decade. I was scared to see where the pattern was headed if we didn't start changing the fashion nosotros were bringing upward the adjacent generation."[11] In writing the song, Foster wanted to "get inside the head of an isolated, psychotic kid"[8] and "bring awareness" to the outcome of gun violence among youth, which he feels is an epidemic perpetuated by "lack of family unit, lack of honey, and isolation."[12] [thirteen] The song's title refers to shoes that the narrator's peers vesture every bit a status symbol.[14] [fifteen]

The upshot of youth violence is a thing close to the group. Foster was bullied in high school, while bassist Cubbie Fink has a cousin who survived the Columbine High School massacre in 1999. Fink said of his cousin's feel, "She was actually in the library when everything went down, so I actually flew out to exist with her the twenty-four hour period after it happened and experienced the trauma surrounding it and saw how afflicted she was by it. She is as close every bit a sister, so patently, it affected me deeply. So to be able to have a song to create a platform to talk well-nigh this stuff has been expert for us."[10]

Contrasting with the dark lyrics of the song, the music, which was written first, is upbeat. Foster said, "It'due south a 'fuck you lot' song to the hipsters in a fashion—only it'southward a vocal the hipsters are going to want to trip the light fantastic to."[8] Jeffery Berg of Frontier Psychiatrist said, "I was so engrossed with the cheery melody of its chorus that it took me a few listens to discover that the lyrics suggest nighttime, Columbine revenge."[sixteen]

Due to the opening lyrics, "Robert's got a quick paw," many have speculated that the vocal is a reference to Robert Hawkins, perpetrator of Omaha'south Westroads Mall shooting. The band'south publicist denied whatever connection: "This is completely false. The character name in the song is simply a coincidence."[17] For play on the television channels MTV and CheddarU (and so MTVu), the words "gun" and "bullet" were removed from the song's chorus.[18] Many accept written letters to Foster's record label and called radio stations to mutter that the song was glorifying schoolhouse shootings. He explained, "The song is not about palliating violence at all. It's the complete reverse. The song is an amazing platform to have a conversation with your kids about something that shouldn't exist ignored, to talk well-nigh it in a loving way."[6]

Release and promotion [edit]

Initial attention [edit]

After writing "Pumped Upward Kicks", Marking Foster (pictured) posted the song on his website as a free download. It subsequently grew in popularity through viral outlets and earned the band a record deal.

"Pumped Up Kicks" drew considerable attention online later Foster posted the vocal on his website equally a complimentary download in early 2010; Nylon mag used the track in an online advertising campaign,[19] and through various blogs, information technology went viral.[20] Foster the People offset performed the vocal alive at the Stand up Clemency Benefit in Venice in February.[21] The group, yet to be signed, garnered buzz with performances at the Southward by Southwest music festival in March.[22] [23] Foster was emailed by many people near the song, and needing professional guidance, he contacted creative person managing director Brent Kredel at Monotone, Inc., saying, "Everyone is calling me and emailing me—what do I exercise? Who are the proficient guys, who are the bad guys?" Kredel recalled that "He went from the guy who couldn't get a hold of anyone to being the guy who had hundreds of emails in his inbox." Kredel and Brett Williams were subsequently hired to co-manage Foster the People, and they helped the grouping go a multi-anthology record deal with Columbia Records imprint Startime International in May 2010.[19] Wishing to release a record that would back upward the song's success, the group wrote new textile betwixt July–September 2010.[nineteen]

"Pumped Up Kicks" was licensed for use in a July 2010 episode of the Telly serial Entourage, the first of many instances in which Foster the People's music was licensed in popular media.[19] The song received its first widespread radio play that calendar month on Sirius XM'due south Alt Nation channel and the Australian radio station Triple J.[24] In November, the Academy of Maryland's radio station WMUC played the song, marking its debut on United states terrestrial radio.[25] The vocal placed at number 32 in the Triple J's Hottest 100 for 2010,[26] a notable accomplishment due to the band being relatively unknown in Australia. Still, the grouping was inexperienced as a live act, and equally a result, their booking agent Tom Windish secured them several society shows "to help them get their body of water legs." Foster the People promoted these concerts in Jan 2011 by emailing fans who had downloaded "Pumped Up Kicks" from their website, notifying them of the shows. The group connected to grow its fanbase with a month-long residency of concerts in January at The Repeat nightclub in Los Angeles. Past the group's third show at the venue, according to Windish, "there were hundreds of people trying to get in exterior... It was an obvious turning betoken that could be measured in numbers."[xix]

Commercial breakthrough [edit]

In January 2011, the band issued their first commercial not-single release, a self-titled EP on which "Pumped Up Kicks" appeared. Around the aforementioned time, many alternative radio stations began playing "Pumped Up Kicks", including Los Angeles terrestrial stations KROQ-FM and KYSR, and information technology connected to proceeds popularity on Alt Nation.[xix] Mark Foster credits Sirius XM'due south airplay with the song's success, proverb, "Alt Nation played our music before any other radio outlet in the land."[27] On Jan 29, the vocal debuted on Billboard 's Stone Songs chart and a week later, information technology debuted on the Alternative Songs nautical chart. In May, the track debuted at number 96 on the Billboard Hot 100, and subsequently that calendar month, the group released their first total-length studio anthology, Torches, on which "Pumped Up Kicks" appears.[19] On May 23, 2011, BBC Radio one DJ Greg James selected the song as his Record of the Week, which ran until May 27. During this time, James released an accompanying video of him dancing to the vocal which he entitled and promoted "The Bum Dance".[28]

The song proved to be a crossover hit; afterwards peaking at number ane on the Alternative Songs chart in June and number three on the Rock Songs chart in July, the song broke into the tiptop twoscore of the Hot 100 in belatedly July and appeared on the Adult Top xl and Mainstream Acme 40 charts. Columbia senior VP of promotion Lee Leipsner said, "It was one of the but alternative bands I remember in a while that you could actually dance to. And the fact that the tape has a groove and rhythmic feel to information technology—not heavy guitar-based at all—gave us a wide opportunity to cross the record." He credits the song's crossover success and push into the height twoscore to a June presentation of new music by Clear Channel president of national programming platforms Tom Poleman. According to Leipsner, "Afterwards we showed our presentation, we had so many Clear Channel major-marketplace programmers come to us and say, 'The record I desire to play besides Adele is Foster the People.'" "Pumped Up Kicks" peaked at number iii on the Hot 100, spending eight consecutive weeks at the position, 7 of them stuck backside Maroon v's "Moves Like Jagger" and Adele'south "Someone similar You" occupying the two spots above.[19] It has been certified 5× platinum in Canada and Australia,[29] [thirty] 4× platinum in the United States,[31] and gilt in Germany.[32] The vocal ranked as the sixth-best-selling digital vocal of 2011 in the U.s.a. with three.84 meg copies sold,[33] while it ranked as music streaming service Spotify'due south almost streamed song of the year.[34] The song has sold 5,173,000 copies in the United States equally of August 2013.[35]

Music video [edit]

The music video, directed past Josef Geiger, features the ring playing a show. There are also cuts to band members doing other activities, such as playing frisbee and surfing. Parts of the video were filmed at the University of California, Riverside. The video peaked at number 21 on the MuchMusic Countdown in Canada.[36] Equally of April 2022, the video has received over 854 meg views on YouTube.[6]

Reception [edit]

Disquisitional reaction [edit]

"Pumped Upwards Kicks" received positive reviews from critics. Barry Walters of Spin said that with the song every bit their debut single, Foster the People "denote themselves as major players."[37] Jon Dolan of Rolling Rock described the song as having a "slinky groove, misty guitar flange and succulent astral-wimp vocals."[38] Rob Webb of NME drew some parallels between the song and other indie pop hits like "Young Folks", "Paris", and "Kids" describing its rise in popularity thus: "artist writes (undeniably brilliant) pop song, makes it tricky every bit hell, but quirky enough for the 'cool' crowd, song later on gets some big pimping from every blog/radio station/Hype Machine user on the planet and, seemingly overnight, becomes utterly, irritatingly inescapable."[39]

August Brownish of the Los Angeles Times chosen it a "reputation-making single" that "cakes Foster in Strokes-y vocal baloney atop a loping synth bass."[40] Jon Pareles of The New York Times called it a "popular ditty with dazed, dweeby vocals and a handclapping chorus that warns, 'You ameliorate run, better run, outrun my gun.'"[41] BBC Music's Mark Beaumont chosen the song a "psychedelic cake party skipping tune." Reflecting on the vocal'southward fusion of diverse musical elements, Beaumont said the song is a prime example of how they "adapt Animal Collective's fine art-tronic adventurousness to incorporate the funky danceability of Scissor Sisters, the fuzzy pop catchiness of 'Kids' and the knack of throwing in deceptively downbeat twists akin to Girls, Sleigh Bells or Smith Westerns."[42] Matt Collar of AllMusic said the song, like other tracks from the anthology, is "catchy, electro-low-cal dance-popular that fits nicely next to such contemporaries as MGMT and Phoenix".[43] The Guardian 's Michael Hann was less receptive, maxim it "amounts to footling more than than a bassline and a chorus" and that "It'southward as irresistible as information technology is infuriating".[44]

Accolades [edit]

A Rolling Stone readers poll named information technology the 2d-all-time song of summer 2011.[45] Claire Suddath of Fourth dimension mag named "Pumped Up Kicks" one of the Top 10 Songs of 2011,[46] while Entertainment Weekly selected the vocal as the year's second-best unmarried.[47] In end-of-year polls, writers for Rolling Stone selected "Pumped Up Kicks" as the 11th-all-time song of 2011,[48] while the publication's readers voted it the year's sixth-best song.[49]

A listeners poll by Toronto radio station CFNY-FM (102.1 The Edge) voted information technology #1 in a list of the top 102 new rock songs of 2011.[l] NME ranked it number 21 on its list of the "50 Best Tracks of 2011", writing, "Unusually for a song and then omnipresent, listening to its hyper-upbeat melodies about a psycho high-school kid-killer is still an enjoyable experience."[51] The magazine's readers voted "Pumped Upward Kicks" the yr'southward eighth-best vocal.[52] At the end of 2011, the vocal received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Pop Duo/Group Performance.[53]

Impact [edit]

I think it's great that that song did what information technology did around the earth, not just for us as a band but I think for a lot of other artists who are left-of-eye artists. That song kind of paved the fashion for. Now I listen to the radio and in that location are songs like Gotye, with "Someone That I Used To Know" has blown up, and fun. – their song has blown upwards, I raise my drinking glass to artists when that happens, you know?

—Mark Foster, on the song's success[54]

In an article for The Huffington Post, DJ Louie 14 singled out "Pumped Upward Kicks" as one of several pop songs that helped usher in the return of commercially successful indie music. In discussing the growing acceptance of fringe cultures, he wrote, "It seems but plumbing fixtures, then, that the soundtrack to this fourth dimension flow should exist music that was itself once viewed as fringe civilisation."[55] Reflecting on the vocal's success, Gary Trust, the associate director of charts/radio for Billboard, said, "They're walking a tightrope very well in terms of eras, formats and styles. When you mix all that together, it becomes a very expert recipe for a hit that works on and so many levels. It'due south the perfect song." Foster said of the song, "There's a spirit at that place and that'southward what people resonate with. 'Pumped Up Kicks' wasn't an blow."[6]

Use in pop media [edit]

The song was used in TV serial such as Entourage,[56] Gossip Daughter, CSI: NY, Cougar Town, Homeland, Pretty Picayune Liars, Warehouse xiii and The Vampire Diaries, the web series Dick Figures, and besides in the 2011 films Friends with Benefits [19] and Fright Nighttime, besides equally sampled in Shawn Chrystopher's vocal "All the Other Kids", from his 2010 hip-hop album You, and Only You. The whistling part of the song is function of the rotation of bumper music played on the Michael Medved syndicated radio program. The song has too been used on the BBC programs Top Gear and Match of the Day. Great britain radio station TalkSPORT has used the instrumental version on their "Bulldoze" programme. On October 8, 2011, Foster the People performed the song on Sat Night Alive. The song was too used in Australian beer XXXX'south "XXXX Summertime Bright Lager" television set commercial.[57] "Pumped Up Kicks" was included as a playable track in the music video game Stone Band Blitz and Guitar Hero Live. The song was also used in season ane episode 4 of Suits in the episode "Muddy Little Secrets".[58] The song was used in "Piggy Piggy", the 6th episode of the showtime flavour of American Horror Story.[59] The vocal since its release in 2012 has received massive utilise on the cyberspace in meme civilisation equally well.[60] A stone cover of the song was used in the credits of the episode "Best Friends, For Never" of the HBO Max series Peacemaker, as a reference to the graphic symbol of Evan that likes the song.[61]

Radio ban [edit]

Due to the song's lyrics, it was temporarily pulled from circulation on certain U.S. radio stations in response to the Sandy Claw Elementary School shooting.[62] [63]

Cover versions and remixes [edit]

The official remix of the unmarried was released by New York City-duo The Knocks in April 2011, under the name "Pumped Up Kicks (The Knocks Speeding Bullet Remix)", and was made available to subscribers to the band's email list. The song was covered by Weezer during their 2011 Due north American Tour, at the Orangish County Off-white on Baronial 4, 2011. Weezer likewise played the vocal during their grandstand performance at the Minnesota State Fair on September 3, 2011.[64] Mark Foster said in reaction, "Nine years agone, I met Rivers Cuomo at a political party, and I had my acoustic guitar with me. He taught me how to play 'Say Information technology Ain't So'. Then nine years later, to watch him play one of my songs – it was wild. I can't wait to see him and remind him of that story."[65] Peruvian vocaliser Tongo also recorded a cover in 2017, called Pan con ají (Staff of life and peppers), in allusion to a vague pronunciation with Spanish phonemes. In 2017, French DJ Klingande released a song titled "Pumped Up" using the same lyrics in the chorus of the song. In dissimilarity to the original lyrics, Klingande's version is told from the perspective of a girl who saw the troubled male child. She wishes to "evidence him the light" and pb him down a improve path.

In 2011, The Kooks covered the song in BBC Radio 1's Alive Lounge.[66] Australian musician Owl Optics performed a version of "Pumped Upwards Kicks" for Triple J'south Like a Version. Also in 2011 the underground rapper George Watsky released a "Pumped Upwardly Kicks" remix on his album A New Kind of Sexy Mixtape. In the Triple J Hottest 100, 2011, Owl Eyes' version came in at 28, four positions college than the original did the previous twelvemonth. Singer-songwriters Dani Shay and Justin Hunt covered the song in a theatrical music video in October 2011[67] and released the single in Nov 2011.[68] A parody of the song was performed by Taylor Swift and Zac Efron on The Ellen DeGeneres Show, as a serenade to the host. Its lyrics were about how they felt weird when Ellen used to put them equally a couple when they were not.[69] On March 12, 2012, singers Lex Land and Charlotte Sometimes performed the song during the second "Battle Round" episode of The Voice.[70] In September 2012, vocaliser Mackenzie Bourg performed this song equally his Blind Audience for The Voice, winning a spot on Cee Lo Green's squad.[71] Kendrick Lamar also recorded a remix to the vocal with DJ Reflex.[72] On Feb 1, 2013, singer Fatin Shidqia performed this song as her solo performances on Bootcamp iii episode of X Factor Indonesia.[73] The rapper Yonas released a remix version to "Pumped Upward Kicks".[74] "Weird Al" Yankovic covered the song every bit part of his polka medley "NOW That's What I Call Polka!" for his 2014 album, Mandatory Fun.[75] Keller Williams with The Travelin' McCourys has performed this vocal in concert.[76] [77] In June 2019, industrial metal ring 3Teeth released a cover of the vocal.[78] It later appeared on their album Metawar.

Rails listing [edit]

UK digital download[79]
No. Title Length
one. "Pumped Up Kicks" 3:58
2. "Pumped Upward Kicks" (Chrome Canyon remix) 4:49
Vinyl – side A[80]
No. Title Length
1. "Pumped Upward Kicks" iv:13
2. "Chin Music for the Unsuspecting Hero" iii:26
Vinyl – side B[80]
No. Title Length
1. "Pumped Upwardly Kicks" (A cappella) 4:13
ii. "Pumped Up Kicks" (Instrumental) iv:13

Personnel [edit]

  • Marker Foster - vocals, guitar, keyboards, synthesizers, programming, percussion

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

See too [edit]

  • List of best-selling singles in Commonwealth of australia
  • Listing of number-one Billboard Alternative Songs of 2011
  • List of number-1 trip the light fantastic airplay hits of 2011 (U.South.)
  • List of number-one singles of 2012 (Australia)

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pumped_Up_Kicks

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