Bullet (Hollywood Undead song)
"Bullet" | ||||
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Single by Hollywood Undead | ||||
from the album American Tragedy | ||||
Released | April 4, 2011 | |||
Length | 3:18 | |||
Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Griffin Boice | |||
Hollywood Undead singles chronology | ||||
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"Bullet" is a song by American rap rock band Hollywood Undead. It was recorded as the sixth single and eleventh track from their second studio album American Tragedy (2011). The song was produced by Griffin Boice. This song is one of the few songs by Hollywood Undead to feature a member other than Danny or Deuce as the clean vocalist. Charlie Scene performs the chorus of "Bullet," in addition to "Rain" from Notes from the Underground. The song has received positive reviews from critics due to its cheerful tone and uptempo beat that directly contrast its dark lyrics about suicide and self-harm.
Background and development
"Bullet" was written by Lewis Edwards. The song contains verses by Terrell and
The song was produced, recorded, and mixed by Griffin Boice at the Beat Suite in Hollywood, California.[1]
Composition and lyrics
The acoustic guitar pattern repeats throughout the intro and outro, the verse, the pre-chorus and the chorus in a pattern of intro-verse-pre chorus-chorus-verse-pre chorus-outro, with the chord progression being E-B-C♯m-A. The chord progression during the pre-chorus is G♯m-F♯m-E-D♯m-C-B, with every chord following a two strum pattern, with the exceptions of C and B, which both follow an eight strum pattern.
The lyrics detail a teenage male's trouble with suicide. The chorus, which the song opens with, implies past attempts at suicide for the protagonist: "My legs are dangling off the edge, the bottom of the bottle is my only friend. I think I'll slit my wrist again, and I'm gone, gone, gone, gone! My legs are dangling off the edge, a stomach full of pills didn't work again. I put a bullet in my head, and I'm gone, gone, gone, gone!" The protagonist continues in the verses to describe the decomposition of his life, stating that his "two best friends" are "a bottle of pills" and "a bottle of Gin". We then learn he is at the top of a twenty story building, and that the polishing of a bottle is "pushing [me]" off and he describes how asphalt has never "looked so soft". The protagonist begins to express concern that his mother found his
Remix contest
The band has hosted a remix contest for the songs "Bullet" and "Le Deux". Bullet's remix is hosted on Indaba Music and is chosen by voting majority. One of the top five voted remixes will be picked by the band themselves, and will receive the grand prize of a Cakewalk SONAR X1 Producer, a Cakewalk Z3TA+2 virtual instrument, and a Roland audio interface. The remix will also be featured on an upcoming official remix EP. Five honorable mentions from the top ten remixes will be sent a Hollywood Undead album signed by the members. Submissions for the contest were due by August 24, 2011.[2]
Critical reception
The song has received positive reviews from music critics. Rick Florino of
Jeremy Borjon of Revolver described the song as "a disturbingly upbeat song about a man attempting suicide" and included it with several other songs as high points of the album. He gave the album four out of five stars.[5]
Richard Solomon of The Minaret stated that the song was in a part of the album that "stayed strong and continued to please", and analyzed it as "an intense song about suicide," and stated that "[t]he lyrics are probably more depressing than most. The twist? It has a melody happier than many songs, an upbeat and almost peppy tempo that's completely at odds with lyrics like, 'I never bought a suit before in my life, but when you go to meet God you know you wanna look nice!' and, 'A stomach full of pills didn't work again. I put a bullet in my head, and I'm gone, gone, gone, gone!'" He later analyzed that "[t]he final verse is different and is sung by what sounds like a little girl and adds to the 'happy' melody, but with the previous lyrics it just makes it even sadder," and stated that "if 'Comin' in Hot' is a successor to 'No. 5,' then this song is the successor to '[sic] My Black Dahlia.'" Solomon gave the album a positive review, granting four and a half out of five stars.[6]
Credits and personnel
The credits for "Bullet" are adapted from the liner notes of American Tragedy.[1]
- Recording
- Recorded at: The Beat Suite in Hollywood, California.
- Drums recorded at: NRG Studios, North Hollywood, California.
- Personnel
- Charlie Scene – clean vocals, rapping, guitar, composer, writer
- Johnny 3 Tears – vocals, composer, writer
- Petra Christensen – end vocals
- J-Dog – synthesizers, keyboards, composer, writer
- Danny – composer, writer, background vocals
- Griffin Boice – production, recording, mixing, guitar, bass guitar, programming, percussion, composer, writer
- Sean Curiel – drum recording assistant
- Ken Dudley – additional recording
- Daren Pfeifer – drums
Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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United States (RIAA)[7] | Gold | 500,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
References
- ^ A&M/Octone Records(B0014411-02)
- ^ "Hollywood Undead – Bullet Remix Contest". Indaba Music. Archived from the original on August 26, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - Artist Direct. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- Artist Direct. Archived from the originalon April 11, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ^ Borjon, Jeremy (April 4, 2011). "Review: Hollywood Undead – American Tragedy". Revolver. Archived from the original on September 29, 2012. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ^ Solomon, Richard (April 13, 2011). "Hollywood Undead Rises Above the Sophomore Slump". The Minaret. Archived from the original on August 11, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2011.
- ^ "American single certifications – Hollywood Undead – Bullet". Recording Industry Association of America. Retrieved January 23, 2023.