"
Sugar, We're Goin Down" is the first
single released from
Fall Out Boy's album
From Under the Cork Tree
(2005). The single reached #8 in the U.S., becoming Fall Out Boy's
first top 10 single. This single launched the band into the
MTV mainstream. Two different CDs were released
with different
B-side, Part I with
a green cover and Part II with a red cover. According to
Blender on their "The
100 Greatest Songs of 2005", "Sugar, We're Goin Down" was rated #4
and was rated #3 according to About.com on their "Top 100 Pop Songs
of 2005".
The song appears on the karaoke games
Lips (as downloadable content) and in
Karaoke Revolution Presents:
American Idol.
The song has so far sold over 2,000,000 digital downloads in the
United States, becoming the bands first two-million seller and
being certified double platinum by the RIAA.
It is a playable song on
Band Hero.
Track listing
CD single:
- "Sugar, We're Goin Down" - 3:51
- "The Music or the Misery" - 3:27
CD 1:
- "Sugar, We're Goin Down" (Guitars down version) - 3:47
- "The Music or the Misery" - 3:27
CD 2:
- "Sugar, We're Goin Down" (Album version)
- "Dance, Dance" (Mark Ronson Secret
Agent Remix)
- "Snitches and Talkers Get Stitches and Walkers"
- "Sugar, We're Goin Down" (Video)
7" vinyl:
- "Sugar We're Goin Down"
- "Nobody Puts Baby in the Corner" (Acoustic version)
Music sample
Chart performance
"Sugar, We're Goin Down" would rise and fall in inconsistent
patterns. The song debuted on the
Billboard Hot 100 on July 2,
2005, at #93. Ten weeks later, on September 17, 2005, the song
entered the top 10 at #8, giving Fall Out Boy their first top 10
single. At this point, the song did not have much
airplay but had relied on the strength of
downloads alone, and they experienced a sales surge following their
performance at the 2005
MTV Video
Music Awards.
Following this download surge, however, downloads fell, and the
song dropped to #15 the following week. During this time, though,
mainstream radio support kicked in, and while downloads were
falling, airplay was able to help stabilize the song. As a result,
the song rose in the following weeks to be at either position #10
or #11. The single peaked at #2 on
Hot
Digital Songs and its airplay peak was #19 on the
Hot 100 Airplay; it also peaked at #1 on
Hot Digital Tracks.
On the
Pop charts, "Sugar, We're Goin Down"
displayed a slightly better performance. With the same digital
download stats, but with an airplay panel to their advantage, the
song reached a peak position of #6 on the
Pop
100 with its component airplay,
Pop
100 Airplay, being #6. In terms of total spins versus total
impressions, the single also peaked at #6 on the
Top 40 Mainstream chart.
In the
UK
, the song first charted on January 21, 2006,
hitting outside ofthe Top 20 at #24. However, it appeared
again on the charts in February, and entered the chart in the Top
10, at its peak position, #8. It remained in the top 75 of the
UK Singles Chart for seventeen
weeks.
Music video
The music video for "Sugar, We're Goin' Down", directed by
Matt Lenski follows the persecution and
subsequent redemption of a boy with
antlers.
The video establishes the life of a socially outcast boy with
antlers (played by
Donald Cumming of
the Virgins), and his feelings for a
neighborhood girl. It is made clear that the girl's father
disapproves. Distraught, the boy tries to cut his antlers off, but
is stopped by the girl. Later on, the father attempts to shoot the
boy with an arrow, but is hit by a car. When he rushes to the man's
aid, the boy finds that the father has hooves. They connect, and
the father accepts him, allowing him to date his daughter.
Another version of the video exists, and has been played on some UK
and Australian music channels. The video simply features the
footage of the band playing from the main video, added to footage
of the band's live performances and tour movies. This version won
the "MTV2 Award" at the 2005 MTV Video Music Awards.
The antlers in the video can be seen in Fall Out Boy's music video
for
What a Catch, Donnie.
Charts
Impact
The song was the first by Fall Out Boy and the first by an artist
on the
Fueled by Ramen label to
reach the top ten in the
Billboard Hot
100. This success would lead to future
Fueled by Ramen artists breaking into the
mainstream, and helped pave the way for the group's next single,
"
Dance, Dance", to also crack the top
ten on the chart.
Cultural References
The song was used in the first-ever
fan made
video to include footage from the original video of the backing
song mixed in with footage of the object of fandom (the video,
released in July 2009, was a
Craig
Ferguson fan video with clips of the movie
Saving Grace mixed with footage
from the original video of
Fall Out Boy
playing the song and jumping around with their instruments.)
References
External links