Send Them Off!

Album: Wild World (2016)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This horn-driven, hip-hop influenced tune was released as the third single from Wild World on August 31, 2016. "We wanted to sort of make a big, bombastic, swaggering hip-hop track," frontman Dan Smith told BBC Radio 1. "And then have, obviously, my vocals come in and it suddenly becomes all depressing and Bastille-y."
  • This was debuted by Bastille at the Rose Bar in New York City on December 1, 2015.
  • With regard to the song's theme, Dan Smith commented on Twitter "It's Othello meets The Exorcist."
  • The song starts off with a modified quote from the 1977 movie War of the Planets. Dan Smith explained to Radio.com: "Originally the quote is from this Italian sci-fi film from the '70s. It was a slightly different quote, and we wanted it to basically open up with a bit of slightly bragging, like call to arms, then it leads into this kind of really over-the-top like brass riff, almost like a swaggery hip-hop tune. But then basically, we couldn't find, we couldn't track down the rights to this quote. We tried really hard. Some of our workers at our label in Italy drove down to the old film company, this closed down film company, and ended up rewriting it slightly and re-recording it. But yeah, I think it nicely sets the dramatic tone."
  • Dan Smith explained the song's meaning: "'Send Them Off!' I guess is a kind of, it's a song of irrational relationship jealousy told very dramatically by the language of Desdemona in Othello, which is such a famous, classic jealousy narrative, but using some of the imagery from The Exorcist. So I guess it's kind of quite symbolic of how we write, and how our music comes out as sort of moments that are like little scenes in themselves but via all these references that we have and nods towards things that we like and enjoy and just try to tell things in a slightly different way."
  • The darkly provocative video is a modern twist on Dante's medieval poem Divine Comedy. The original work finds Dante traveling through hell, purgatory and eventually paradise, but in the clip the man at the heart of the action appears to be stuck in purgatory. During the surreal visual, the band channel the Stanley Kubrick erotic drama Eyes Wide Shut as well as the horror movie Rosemary's Baby.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Tommy James

Tommy JamesSongwriter Interviews

"Mony Mony," "Crimson and Clover," "Draggin' The Line"... the hits kept coming for Tommy James, and in a plot line fit for a movie, his record company was controlled by the mafia.

Steely Dan

Steely DanFact or Fiction

Did they really trade their guitarist to The Doobie Brothers? Are they named after something naughty? And what's up with the band name?

David Gray

David GraySongwriter Interviews

David Gray explains the significance of the word "Babylon," and talks about how songs are a form of active imagination, with lyrics that reveal what's inside us.

JJ Burnel of The Stranglers

JJ Burnel of The StranglersSongwriter Interviews

JJ talks about The Stranglers' signature sound - keyboard and bass - which isn't your typical strain of punk rock.

Tim McIlrath of Rise Against

Tim McIlrath of Rise AgainstSongwriter Interviews

Rise Against frontman Tim McIlrath explains the meanings behind some of their biggest songs and names the sci-fi books that have influenced him.

George Clinton

George ClintonSongwriter Interviews

When you free your mind, your ass may follow, but you have to make sure someone else doesn't program it while it's wide open.