New York City Cops (song) explained

New York City Cops
Cover:Strokes_hard_to_explain_UK_cover.PNG
Type:single
Artist:the Strokes
A-Side:"Hard to Explain" (double A-side)
Released:June 25, 2001 (double A-side)
Recorded:March and April 2001
Studio:Transporterraum, New York City
Genre:Street punk[1]
Length:3:30
Label:RCA
Producer:Gordon Raphael
Hard to Explain
Title2:New York City Cops
Next Title:Last Nite
Next Year:2001

"New York City Cops" is a song by American rock band the Strokes. It was released along with "Hard to Explain" as a double A-side single on June 25, 2001, in Australia and Europe. It appears on international editions of their debut studio album, Is This It (2001); it was replaced with the track "When It Started" on the then-unreleased American CD edition following the September 11 attacks due to its lyrics regarding the New York City Police Department. As a double A-side single, it reached number 16 in the UK and number 66 in Australia.

Background and release

"New York City Cops", written in response to the 1999 murder of Amadou Diallo by four plainclothes police officers, was released along with "Hard to Explain" as a double A-side single on June 25, 2001, through RCA Records in Australia and Europe.[2] [3] [4] Both tracks would later be included on their debut studio album, Is This It (2001).[5] The song features the refrain "New York City cops, but they ain’t too smart." Since the American CD had not been released yet, the song was removed after the September 11 attacks. The band did so after they witnessed the "valiant response" of the city's police department during the tragedy, feeling that it would be "wrong to release it during these highly sensitive times". They replaced the song with the newly recorded "When It Started".[6] The vinyl release retained the original track list, due to its release falling on September 11, 2001.[7]

Live performances

The Strokes continued to perform the song live despite the September 11 attacks. During their performance in Toronto on October 2, 2001, Casablancas stated, "I liked this fucking song and it's ruined. We live in New York. It's fucked up. The cops have killed a lot more people than they're saying and that's the fuckin' truth."[8]

The song was performed at a rally for Senator Bernie Sanders at the Whittemore Center Arena in Durham, New Hampshire on February 10, 2020.[9] According to some accounts, "New York City Cops" was not on the band's setlist, but the Strokes performed the song after taking issue with lights being turned up and attempts to stop crowd-surfing fans.[10]

Track listing


Personnel

The Strokes

Additional personnel

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2001–2002)! scope="col"
Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[11] 66

Year-end charts

Year-end chart performance for "Hard to Explain" / "New York City Cops" by The Strokes!Chart (2002)!Position
Canada (Nielsen SoundScan)[12] 96

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Beaumont. Mark. April 9, 2020. The 20 greatest Strokes songs. February 18, 2023. The Independent.
  2. June 9, 2001 . The Strokes – Why New York's finest will change your life – forever! . NME.
  3. Web site: The Strokes – Hard To Explain / New York City Cops (Australia) . . April 16, 2020.
  4. Web site: The Strokes – Hard To Explain / New York City Cops (Europe) . . April 16, 2020.
  5. Is This It (international editions) . . 2001 . CD booklet and case back cover. RCA Records
    Rough Trade Records
    .
  6. Web site: Schumacher-Rasmussen . Eric . September 21, 2001 . Dave Matthews Band, Strokes, Sheryl Crow Rethink Their Music . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20020202180327/https://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1449031/20010921/dave_matthews_band.jhtml . February 2, 2002 . November 20, 2009 . MTV.
  7. Roach, p. 96
  8. News: Taste of the masses. The Cord. 10 March 2022.
  9. Bloom . Madison . The Strokes Debut New Song "Bad Decision" at Bernie Sanders Rally: Watch . February 10, 2020 . . February 11, 2020.
  10. February 11, 2020 . Strokes Sing 'New York City Cops' Face-to-Face With Cops as Sanders Rally Gets Rowdy . Variety . February 11, 2020.
  11. Book: Ryan, Gavin. Australia's Music Charts 1988–2010. 2011. Moonlight Publishing. Mt. Martha, VIC, Australia.
  12. Web site: Canada's Top 200 Singles of 2002. January 14, 2003. Jam!. https://web.archive.org/web/20040906184715/http://www.jamshowbiz.com/JamMusicCharts/2002_singles.html. September 6, 2004. March 22, 2022.