Nowhere Generation

Album: Nowhere Generation (2021)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • Rise Against are part of Generation X, but by 2021 they had a bundle of younger fans that were part of a different generation with their own concerns. It's these fans that inspired this song. In a Songfacts interview with lead singer/lyricist Tim McIlrath, he explained:

    "'Nowhere Generation' came from my interaction with our own fanbase – a lot of them are younger than me. Our fanbase was expressing a lot of concern about what their future is going to look like, and they have a lot of anxiety about what tomorrow is going to look like. You get a lot of stories of people trying to get ahead and they can't get ahead, and they're wondering what is going on. For me, 'Nowhere Generation' was lending a sympathetic ear to people who feel like they're swimming against an insurmountable current in today's society.

    They're being held down by everything from concentrated wealth to institutionalized racism to the rise of the one percent, the anxieties of global warming and climate change, social media presenting a lifestyle that nobody can live up to. All these things are weighing on young people when they wake up every day, and they feel that they're dealing with circumstances that are unique to their generation.

    'Nowhere Generation' is talking about that and acknowledging that, and being more sympathetic to the plight of young people today, and to anybody who is trying to get ahead and can't. Anybody who asks, 'What makes this era of civilization different than previous eras?'"
  • This is the title track to Rise Against's ninth album, their first since Wolves four years earlier. Much of the album deals with broken promises of the American Dream, and how for the first time in history, the next generation could be worse off than the one before. These concepts manifest in this song's lyrics:

    The finish line kept moving
    And the promises wore thin
    The smoke on the horizon
    Was the burning promised land
  • The black-and-white music video was directed by Brian Roettinger, who also did the artwork for the album. With images of an ant colony, a hamster on a wheel, and banks of TV monitors, it has a dystopian feel that is part of the visual motif for the project, which the band describes as "the critique of mainstream pop culture and those at the top who actively work to suppress true equality for all."
  • The video was shot in Los Angeles in the fall of 2020, a time when pandemic restrictions were starting to ease. It was the first time Tim McIlrath left lockdown, and the first time the band got together in person since the pandemic.

    "It was good to see my band – we were all remote, we all live in different states. And it was good to be playing music," McIlrath told Songfacts. "It was a lot of fun to play those songs in that big white room. It felt like the Willy Wonka TV room: big, white, and sterile like that. It was a fun time to document that."
  • The song became Rise Against's first ever Billboard #1 when it climbed to the top of the Mainstream Rock Airplay tally dated August 7, 2021. The band had previously reached #2 on the Hot Rock Songs and Alternative Songs charts with "Help Is On The Way" and the same position on the Mainstream Rock survey with "The Violence."

Comments: 2

  • Brooke from Brisbane, AustraliaGreat song.
  • Lone Wolf from Charleston S.c Pull yourself up by your bootstraps & quit crying
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Pam Tillis

Pam TillisSongwriter Interviews

The country sweetheart opines about the demands of touring and talks about writing songs with her famous father.

Rock Stars of Horror

Rock Stars of HorrorMusic Quiz

Rock Stars - especially those in the metal realm - are often enlisted for horror movies. See if you know can match the rocker to the role.

Frankie Valli

Frankie ValliSong Writing

An interview with Frankie Valli, who talks about why his songs - both solo and with The Four Seasons - have endured, and reflects on his time as Rusty Millio on The Sopranos.

Part of Their World: The Stories and Songs of 13 Disney Princesses

Part of Their World: The Stories and Songs of 13 Disney PrincessesSong Writing

From "Some Day My Prince Will Come" to "Let It Go" - how Disney princess songs (and the women who sing them) have evolved.

Kip Winger

Kip WingerSongwriter Interviews

The Winger frontman reveals the Led Zeppelin song he cribbed for "Seventeen," and explains how his passion for orchestra music informs his songwriting.

Stephen Christian of Anberlin

Stephen Christian of AnberlinSongwriter Interviews

The lead singer/lyricist for Anberlin breaks down "Impossible" and covers some tracks from their 2012 album Vital.