The Racing Rats | |
Cover: | Editors The Racing Rats.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Editors |
Album: | An End Has a Start |
B-Side: | Banging Heads, A Thousand Pieces |
Recorded: | 2006/2007 |
Genre: | Post-punk revival, indie rock |
Length: | 3:50 (single edit) 4:17 (album version) |
Label: | Kitchenware Records (UK) PIAS (Continental Europe) |
Producer: | Jacknife Lee |
Prev Title: | An End Has a Start |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Push Your Head Towards the Air |
Next Year: | 2008 |
"The Racing Rats" is the third single from Editors' second album An End Has a Start. The single was released on 26 November 2007 with a CD format and three 7" singles in the UK, as well as on two CD formats and DVD on PIAS in Europe. It reached number 26 in the UK Charts, one place higher than the previous single, "An End Has a Start". It was used as the backing music, to the 2008 BAFTA Academy Fellowship Award tribute to Anthony Hopkins.
"The Racing Rats" is composed in the key of E minor with a tempo of 154 beats per minute.[1]
CD SKCD97
Vinyl SKX972
Limited Vinyl 1 SKX97
Limited Vinyl 2 SKX973
Note: 1000 numbered vinyl copies
CD1 (PIAS European Release)
CD2 (PIAS European Release)
DVD (PIAS European Release)
CD3 (PIAS European Release)
Promo:
The music video for "The Racing Rats" features the band performing in a rural suburb in slow motion, much like the video for the band's other single "Bullets". Tom notices a little girl who is drawing a big circle on the pavement. Near the end of the video a solar eclipse occurs directly parallel to the girl's circle causing it to light up spectacularly as the band and other citizens look on in awe. At the end of the video the town is empty of life, suggesting the eclipse consumed all the townspeople.
The relevance the video has to the song is from the lyrics "Slow down little one, you can't keep running away / You mustn't go outside yet, it's not your time to play / Standing at the edge of your town with the skyline in your eyes / Reaching up to God, the sun says its goodbyes".
Peak position | |
Poland (ZPAV)[2] | 35 |
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