Handlebars (song)

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the idea that we have so much incredible potential as human beings to be destructive or to be creative. And it's tragic to me that the appetite for military innovation is endless, but when it comes to taking on a project like ending world hunger, it's seen as outlandish. It's not treated with the same seriousness. ... at the same time, I knew there were people at that moment who were being bombed by our own country. And I thought that was incredibly powerful.

It is the contrast between these "little moments of creativity, these bursts of innovation," and the way these ideas are put to use "to oppress and destroy people" that the singer feels is "beautiful and tragic at the same time." [3]

Music video

The animated video for the song opens with two young friends, one wearing casual clothes and the other in a businesslike suit, seated on their bicycles on a hill looking over a city. Prominent in the city is a crystalline tower with part of its framework showing. The friends ride their bikes down the hill without their hands on the handlebars, while the casual friend smiles widely. They arrive at a sign that points in two directions, one labeled with a corporate-looking symbol leading to a shadowed street, and the other labeled by a dove leading down a sunlit street. They hug and head their separate ways, the casual friend taking the path of the dove.

The next part of the song centers on the casual friend. While describing his hobbies and skills, including things he can teach people, he walks along a cracked sidewalk and sees a chalk drawing depicting the first scene of the video, with the bicycling friends represented by stick figures. He picks up an apple off of the ground and returns it to its barrel. He walks past a street corner that shows a path to the corporate street, unaware of the blood on that street's walls. Observing a group of young girls playing jump rope, he picks up his cellphone and sees the corporate friend's face.

After their conversation, the corporate friend hangs up and walks down the industrial street. He lists his accomplishments per the song's lyrics before stopping in front of and looking up at the same tower that appeared in the beginning of the video. In the next scene, he is completing a transaction with a man in a board room, after which he holds a meeting with some executives. A graph displays profits zigzagging up a board with the corporate logo on it before ending in what resembles a spatter of blood. The camera zooms out, revealing that he was inside the tower. He then gives a televised speech behind a podium, while the background changes from a corporate to a political setting with two American flags. The casual friend sees it, disappointedly shaking his head.

The world becomes more bleak and oppressive, with security cameras and smokestacks, emblazoned with the corporate logo, spewing toxic fumes into the air. A hawk kills a dove, and a fighter jet soars overhead.

The casual friend begins rallying a crowd of oppressed-looking people. A man wearing a bandana sprays an X over a poster displaying a picture of the now-dictator-like friend and the word "LIAR" below that. The rebellious friend leads the crowd towards the tower, but a line of heavily armed riot-control officers, with shields displaying a fist and submachine guns, proceeds to kill the entire crowd. The bandana-wearing man is killed first by a sniper, following many more deaths. The corporate friend looks on horrified as he sees his friend shot dead and lying on the ground.

The video ends with a flashback of the two friends crisscrossing as they ride their bicycles, again without using their handlebars, off into a bright light in the distance.

Several times in the video, the dove is used to symbolize peace, while the hawk represents oppressive power destroying that peace. A hawk kills an actual dove, and a wrecking ball destroys a wall with a dove painted on it, located next to a billboard displaying the corporate symbol and a cityscape again featuring the tower. In addition, a hawk flies over the head of the corporate friend when he is walking down the street.

Che Guevara, an iconic revolutionary, is referenced in the video when an image of Guevara's face appears on a man's T-shirt while the oppressed friend is rallying a crowd. Another reference is to the Abu Ghraib tortures during the Iraq War, seen in a flashing image identical to the iconic photograph of prisoner Abdou Hussain Saad Faleh. [4] [ citation needed ]

Chart performance

On May 17, 2008, the song peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks. [5] Fueled by radio airplay, including six straight weeks at the top of KROQ's most played list, it was the first single since Semisonic's "Closing Time" to chart in the top ten so quickly. [6]

It has had similar success on the digital landscape, having over 16.5 million total plays on the band's MySpace.com page and over 54 million views on YouTube. [7] [8] Digital download purchases have placed the song at number 4 on certain rap and hip-hop charts on Amazon.com. [9]

"Handlebars" also performed well on the Billboard charts. Peaking at number three on the Modern Rock Tracks chart, number twenty-two on the Hot Digital Songs chart, number thirty-five on the Pop 100 chart, number thirty-seven on the Hot 100 chart, number sixty-three on the Canadian Hot 100. [5]

On September 7, 2008, the song entered the UK Singles Chart at number 35 on downloads alone and peaked at number 14.

Track listing

Compact Disc:

  1. "Handlebars" – 3:27
  2. "Rise" – 4:10

7-inch vinyl:

  1. "Handlebars" – 3:27
  2. "Handlebars" (DJ Shadow Remix) – 4:03

Personnel

Flobots:

Guest musicians:

Charts

"Handlebars"
Handlebars Flobots.jpg
Single by Flobots
from the album Fight with Tools
ReleasedApril 11, 2008 (United States)
August 25, 2008 (United Kingdom)
Recorded2005
Genre
Length3:27
Label Universal Republic
Songwriter(s)
  • Jamie Laurie
  • Andrew Guerrero
  • Jesse Walker
  • Kenneth Ortiz
  • Mackenzie Roberts
  • Stephen Brackett
Producer(s) Flobots
Flobots singles chronology
"Handlebars"
(2008)
"Rise"
(2008)
Audio sample

Certifications

RegionCertification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI) [17] Silver200,000
United States (RIAA) [18] Platinum1,000,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

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