The Down Town Explained

The Down Town
Type:single
Artist:Days of the New
Album:Days of the New
Released:March 1998
Genre:Acoustic rock, post-grunge
Length:4:16
Label:Outpost
Producer:Scott Litt
Prev Title:Touch, Peel and Stand
Prev Year:1997
Next Title:Shelf in the Room
Next Year:1998

"The Down Town" is a song by Days of the New and the second single from their self-titled debut album. Like its predecessor, the song reached #1 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks in 1998[1] and is a concert staple. "The Down Town" is also the third track on the band's Definitive Collection released in 2008.

The song is arguably the second most popular single from the band's debut album and certainly one of their best known songs overall. It is also one of the album's upbeat tracks while bearing an aggressive chorus. Lyrically, "The Down Town" ambiguously details a town of drug users who are afraid of change and suppressive of the narrator. The phrase "to bring me down" is rebelliously shouted throughout the chorus. A mention of pointless and rejected concern over another person's well-being is also addressed during the bridge. Given this theme of negativity, the "Down Town" song title may be intended as a double entendre or pun.

Music video

The "Down Town" video, directed by Lance Bangs, consists of a live concert performance. It retains the live audio and includes some notable differences from the studio recording; verse chords are used extensively in various parts, more punchy staccato is incorporated, and the first lyric of the bridge is changed to "I don't think that I should give a fuck about you." The performance lasts nearly a whole minute longer at 5:10.

Track listing

  1. "The Down Town (LP Version)"
  2. "The Down Town (Radio Remix Version)"
  3. "Touch, Peel And Stand (Live)"
  4. "Freak (Live)"

Chart positions

Chart (1998)Peak
position
Billboard Modern Rock Tracks19
Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks1

External links

Notes and References

  1. Artist Chart History - Days of the New