Rango (song)

"Rango" is the second single by Welsh indie rock band Catfish and the Bottlemen. The song was included in their EP, Kathleen and the Other Three, and their debut studio album, The Balcony. The single was released on 13 August 2013.

"Rango"
Single by Catfish and the Bottlemen
from the album Kathleen and the Other Three and The Balcony
B-side"Asa"
Released
  • 13 August 2013 (digital)
  • 16 September 2013 (7-inch)[1]
Genre
Length5:26
Label
Songwriter(s)Van McCann
Producer(s)Jim Abbiss
Catfish and the Bottlemen singles chronology
"Homesick"
(2013)
"Rango"
(2013)
"Kathleen"
(2014)
Music video
"Rango" on YouTube

Lyrics

The song was about Van's first ever girlfriend, named Abby, whom the song is written for. McCann said he wrote the song when he was about 16. He described the relationship between him and Abby as one that didn't work out, although they remained friends and Van also stated in an interview that he wrote the song to try and get her back, but she did not like it. Then when it got on the radio she was flattered by it and wanted to get back together with him, but Van refused.[2]

Music video

The EP version of the music video was released on 3 September 2013. The video is an animation about a sperm cell named Rango who is determined to make a name for himself and be the fastest sperm to fertilize the egg. The video ends with Rango winning the race, where he is consumed by the egg. The video was directed by Pedro Chaves. Animation for the music video was done by Chaves, Turid Hoekstra and Dream Journey Studios.[3]

Track listing

No.TitleLength
1."Rango"2:58
2."Asa"2:29
Total length:5:26

Critical reception

BBC's Tom Young praised the song as "glorious", and included it on his BBC playlist of upcoming artists.[4] The Red Brick, the official student newspaper for the University of Birmingham described the song as intriguing.[5]

gollark: I'm sure Google has lots of spare GPU/TPU power. They have some ridiculous GPT-3-scale image/text model in development now, and use BERT-like entities for search parsing.
gollark: I'd think that it would be possible to detect it if you had a lot of samples of it versus real human text. And there was this demo highlighting differences between human and GPTous text, via highlighting low-probability-from-the-model words (which are often also the most important).
gollark: I wonder if Google/search engines generally can detect GPT-3ous content yet.
gollark: That sounds hard, actually.
gollark: What if we generate VAST quantities of novel and interesting content?

References

  1. "Catfish And The Bottlemen – Rango". Discogs. Zink Media. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  2. Thomas, Matt (3 October 2013). "Gimme Your Answers: An Interview With Catfish and the Bottlemen". A Music Blog Yea. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  3. "Catfish and the Bottlemen - Rango". YouTube. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  4. Young, Tom (13 August 2013). "On the playlist: Catfish and The Bottlemen - Rango". BBC. bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  5. Musgrove, Ben (17 November 2013). "Single Review: Catfish and the Bottlemen – Rango". Red Brick. redbrick.me. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
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