Rubber Band Man
by Mumford & Sons (featuring Hozier)

Album: Prizefighter (2025)
Charted: 64 120
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Songfacts®:

  • "Rubber Band Man" is a harmony-rich folk-rock piece that stretches, snaps, and stretches again, a melodic metaphor for emotional elasticity.
  • The metaphor isn't new, of course. Rubber bands have been snapped, stretched, and strummed through popular music before, from The Spinners' joyful 1976 funk hit "The Rubberband Man" (about a man whose groove simply would not quit) to David Bowie's 1966 track "Rubber Band," a small, theatrical study in heartbreak and displacement where it isn't a loop of latex, but a literal brass band. Rapper T.I. used the term in 2004 for a completely different kind of tension, equating rubber bands with stacks of cash. Soulja Boy later took it further by using them as jewelry, proving that in hip-hop, elasticity is mostly financial. Mumford & Sons, by contrast, bring it all back to the heart, that fragile, foolish muscle that keeps trying to hold on.
  • The track originated from a strange dream Brandi Carlile had involving Marcus Mumford. Chatting to Track Star, Mumford explained that while he was in Paris, Carlile texted him about the dream, along with some lyrics she had written in her sleep. "It was basically a poem," he explained, "and I asked if I could turn it into a song." Carlile agreed, and her lyrics became part of the song's verse material.
  • "Rubber Band Man" encompasses a vocal exchange between Marcus Mumford and Hozier. It's the first time Mumford & Sons and Hozier have collaborated on disc, though the two acts had performed together previously at festivals like Longitude 2017 and Austin City Limits in 2023.
  • Aaron Dessner of The National produced the track at Long Pond Studios in New York.
  • Mumford & Sons premiered the track on October 24, 2025 during an acoustic performance at New York's Electric Lady Studios as part of a segment for the media outlet Track Star.
  • Released on October 24, 2025 as the lead single from Prizefighter, Mumford & Sons' sixth album, the song signals the beginning of a new, more collaborative chapter for the band. The album also ropes in friends like Chris Stapleton, Gracie Abrams, and Gigi Perez, proving that even the most self-contained groups sometimes need to stretch a bit.
  • Aaron Dessner's role on Prizefighter came about almost by accident. "It was perfect timing, we literally walked into a room and Aaron happened to be working next door," Marcus Mumford told NME.

    "We started trading demos while we were mixing Rushmere, and before we knew it, we were making another record. The songs just poured out in a way they haven't since our first album. There was this real spirit of freedom, creativity, curiosity, and trust between the three of us, with Aaron steering the ship."

    Mumford added that the collaboration had been years in the making: "He helped us with demos for Wilder Mind back in 2015, and he's been a friend and supporter for a long time. This time, it just felt right."

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