Guilty (The Rasmus song)

"Guilty" is a song by Finnish alternative rock band The Rasmus, originally released on the band's fifth album Dead Letters on March 21, 2003.

"Guilty"
Single by The Rasmus
from the album Dead Letters
B-side
  • "Guilty" (US Remix)
  • "First Day of My Life" [live]
  • "Guilty" (US Radio Edit) (UK only)
  • "Play Dead" (UK only)
ReleasedAugust 4, 2004
RecordedJune - December 2002 in Stockholm, Sweden
GenreAlternative rock
Length3:46
LabelPlayground Music
Songwriter(s)Aki Hakala, Eero Heinonen, Pauli Rantasalmi, Lauri Ylönen
Producer(s)Mikael Nord and Martin Hansen
The Rasmus singles chronology
"Funeral Song"
(2003)
"Guilty"
(2004)
"No Fear"
(2005)

The single was released on August 4, 2004 by the record label Playground Music. It was the last single from the album Dead Letters and also features the track "First Day of My Life" (live). The UK version features "Guilty" (US Radio Edit), "Play Dead" and the video of "Guilty".

Track listing

CD-single

  1. "Guilty" (US Remix)
  2. "First Day of My Life" [live]

UK edition

  1. "Guilty" (US Radio Edit)
  2. "Play Dead"
  3. "Used To Feel Before"

UK Enhanced CD

  1. "Guilty" (US Radio Edit)
  2. "Play Dead"
  3. "Used To Feel Before"
  4. "Multimedia track:Guilty" (Video)

Enhanced CD [Album Version]

  1. "Guilty" (Album Version)
  2. "First Day Of My Life" (Live Radio Session)
  3. "In The Shadows" (Live Radio Session)
  4. "Guilty" (Video)

Music video

The music video for "Guilty" was shot in Los Angeles 2004. In the video, The Rasmus are performing in a darkened room, with a photographer taking numerous pictures of different people and the band. There is a problem in the photographs' development, and they turn into representations of the people's anguish, fear and pain.

The band's comments

The band have said that this song is about how they have neglected their family and friends because of the demanding and time-consuming nature of their job.[1]

gollark: If you wanted to ocnvert a number into a vector of digits, the right way would be repeated div/mod-ing.
gollark: Is that not the standard tool for reverse engineering?
gollark: However, why even.
gollark: - convert `n` to string- map over all chars, converting them to strings and then... parsing them as integers...? and crashing on error- collect the resulting ints together
gollark: It's simple*!

References

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