Photograph (Nickelback song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Photograph"
"Photograph" cover
Single by Nickelback
from the album All the Right Reasons
B-side(s) "We Will Rock You (cover)" (Australian version)
Released September 27, 2005
Format CD single
Airplay
Digital download
Recorded April 2005 in Dallas, Texas
Genre Alternative rock
Length 4:22 (album version)
3:54 (radio edit)
Label Roadrunner
Writer(s) Nickelback, Chad Kroeger
Producer(s) Nickelback
Certification 2x Platinum
Chart positions
  • #1 Canada
  • #2 United States
  • #3 Australia
  • #29 UK
Nickelback singles chronology
Because of You
(2004)
Photograph
(2005)
Animals
(2006)

Photograph is a single released by the Canadian band Nickelback, the first from their fifth studio album, All the Right Reasons (2005).

Presumably, its lyrics look back at the adolescence of frontman Chad Kroeger, who was responsible for writing the song. The single became the band's third top ten hit in the United States, peaking at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. "Photograph" has sold over 1.3 million digital downloads in the U.S., according to Nielsen SoundScan, though it is currently certified only as Gold (500,000) by the RIAA, since Roadrunner Records has not yet requested and paid for an updated certification. The song also topped the Billboard Pop 100 chart.

The single was also a huge success on the Canadian charts, peaking at #1 and staying there for 7 weeks.

The song is an up-tempo track that is reminiscent of country music. The music video for the song was filmed in Hanna, Alberta, Canada, hometown to the majority of the band.

Contents

[edit] Music Video

The music video begins with Chad Kroeger, the video's protagonist, walking along a lonely, sparsely populated streeted, holding up a photograph of him and Nickelback's producer Joey Moi. As the song progresses to, "This is where I grew up", he walks to a rusty mailbox, address number 29025. As he speaks of sneaking out, the camera does not show the house itself, but does show a view from the inside looking out at him, possibly suggesting someone else lives there now. He continues walking, and comes to Hanna High School, announcing "This is where I went to school". He and his three other band members enter the gym with their gear and put on a seemingly impromptu concert alone. (Banners on the gym wall announce "Go Hawks go") During the chorus, two band members goes to an old junkyard and reminesce about a field where the rest of the band and their girlfriends are partying. Another experiences a similar event near an abandoned train yard, seeing his old girlfriend run near the tracks and kissing his younger self. The camera then switches to flashbacks of various people ("I miss that town, I miss the faces") As the video ends, the flashback people get in their cars to go home as the band finishes the song.

The video, and the song, plays upon everyone's feelings of, at one time or another, missing their youth and hometown friends. In that sense, it is similar to songs like Summer of '69 by Bryan Adams, Crocodile Rock by Elton John, Night Moves by Bob Seger and several other nostalgia-based songs. What makes this song unique is the fact that it talks about closure and letting go of those memories ("It's hard to say it, time to say it, Goodbye, Goodbye"). It talks about closing doors to a part of your life that will never come back, and reshaping your dreams in the reality of now rather than the holding on to the dreams your long-lost past created ("I wonder if it’s too late, Should I go back and try to graduate?, Life’s better now than it was back then, If I was them, I wouldn’t let me in").

There have also been various radio station contests that try to figure out the answers to two questions in the song ("How did our eyes get so red?, And what the hell is on Joey's head?"). The participants in these contests have come up with various answers to these questions, especially the one involving "Joey".

The only other given name mentioned in the song is "Kim" in the second verse ("Kim's the first girl I kissed").

[edit] Charts

Chart Peak
position
Canadian Singles Chart 1
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 2
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Airplay 6
U.S. Billboard Pop 100 1 (1 week)
U.S. Billboard Pop 100 Airplay 4
U.S. Billboard Hot Digital Songs 1 (1 week)
U.S. Billboard Hot Digital Tracks 1 (6 weeks)
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 2
U.S. Billboard Adult Top 40 1 (18 weeks)
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary 16
U.S. Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 3
U.S. Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks 1 (7 weeks)
ARC Weekly Top 40 2
Canadian MuchMusic Countdown 1 (2 weeks)
UK Singles Chart 29
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 3
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart 4
VH1 Top 20 Countdown 1 (1 week)
Dutch Top 40 4
Austrian Singles Chart 10
Swedish Singles Chart 40
Swiss Singles Chart 27
Lithuanian Singles Chart 11
World Tracks Top 40 6


[edit] Chart Trajectories

Billboard Hot 100
Week 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Position 25
4
3
2
3
4
5
5
Hot Digital Songs
Week 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
Position 36
2
2
1
2
2
3
3
3

[edit] External links