Right Behind You (Mafia)

"Right Behind You (Mafia)"
Single by Our Lady Peace
from the album
Spiritual Machines
Released July 2, 2001[1]
Format Promo-only CD single
Recorded 2000
Genre Alternative rock, post-grunge
Length 3:14
Label Columbia 2574
Writer(s) Raine Maida
Producer(s) Arnold Lanni & Raine Maida
Our Lady Peace singles chronology
"Life"
(2000)
"Right Behind You (Mafia)"
(2001)
"Somewhere Out There"
(2002)

"Right Behind You (Mafia)" is a song by Canadian alternative rock group Our Lady Peace. It was released in July 2001 as third and final single from their fourth studio album, Spiritual Machines. The single underperformed, ultimately causing its release as well as that of its music video to be aborted. It was also their last single released with founding guitarist Mike Turner in the band. Matt Cameron of Pearl Jam performed the drums on this song while Our Lady Peace's own drummer, Jeremy Taggart, was recovering from injury.

Background

This song like many others on the album, were inspired by Ray Kurzweil's book The Age of Spiritual Machines. According to Raine, it was written as more of a retort to Kurzweil's predictions which Raine noticed didn't involve the human spirit as a factor. "..[which is] not an 'F-You' to Kurzweil. It's like 'I believe [much of] what you're saying, but we're going to fight it as well because there is a soul and there is a spirit.'"[2] Its original title was "Spirit Mafia" or just "Mafia". While being the first song on the album, it is the second track following Kurzweil's 6-second introduction.

Music video

The music video for "Right Behind You" was directed by Oli Goldsmith, who created all of the artwork for the Spiritual Machines project. The video was not released until 2008 on OurLadyPeace.com. The video shows the band performing within a collage of pictures of buildings and people in the fetal position mixed with live action videos.

References

  1. OLP Bandology at OurLadyPeace.cc
  2. Bliss, Karen "Making Peace With the Future: Man just might have created a monster -- the computer." - What Magazine February 2001. Retrieved November 16, 2001


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