FearOfMu21c #3
The Killers - When You Were Young
Released - Sept 18 2006
Highest chart position - #2
Spotify streams to date - 548,257,626
One of the things that I like about The Killers is that, while they’re undeniably a rock band, their sound is much more frothy than their image suggests; rooted in hooks and glamour, they come across as a kind of Duran Duran for the 00s. While their biggest pop bangers date from earlier on, When You Were Young remains for me their best single and a strong memory from 2006 is feeling the kind of ownership of it that you only get when yr fave is coming out of every radio speaker going. That said, I wasn’t so much in a rock mood when we did the Uncool50 last year and so surprisingly it ended up on the cutting room floor. But now we’re back, things are different and its time has finally come.
The lyrics follow a kind of idealised American romance and the song follows suit, mapping it out as a road trip of epic (and slightly ridiculous) proportions. It’s full of Springsteenesque imagery - “burning down the highway skyline on the back of a hurricane” indeed - and the song itself has a similar momentum, each verse kicking on with ever greater intensity, each repetition of that indelible guitar hook hitting harder than before.
But the real ace here is Brandon Flowers, with his swaggering vocal harnessing a kind of star power that perhaps didn’t see out the decade but felt very real to me at the time (yes I know). There’s a kind of melodrama in him that’s always reminded me of Meatloaf, something slightly silly but also entirely in earnest, and When You Were Young is a better song for the way that he captures that. Whereas so many American rock bands would have turned it into something quite gritty and boring, it’s this flamboyance built into The Kilers’ DNA that makes this a truly great record.









