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Country sounding intro. So? Doesn't make it folk punk.
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| Format = [[Compact Disc single|CD single]], [[Gramophone record|vinyl]]
| Format = [[Compact Disc single|CD single]], [[Gramophone record|vinyl]]
| Recorded = March–April 2000 at Studio 880, [[Oakland, California]]
| Recorded = March–April 2000 at Studio 880, [[Oakland, California]]
| Genre = [[Pop punk]], [[folk punk]]
| Genre = [[Pop punk]]
| Length = 2:49
| Length = 2:49
| Label = [[Reprise Records|Reprise]]
| Label = [[Reprise Records|Reprise]]

Revision as of 21:44, 29 April 2011

"Minority"
Song
B-side"Brat", "86", "Jackass"

"Minority" is a song by American punk rock band Green Day. It was released as the lead single from their sixth studio album, Warning. The song was number 1 for five weeks on the Billboard Modern Rock chart in late 2000.

Track listing

  1. "Minority" (Radio version)
  2. "Brat" (Live from Tokyo) - 1:42
  3. "86" (Live from Prague) - 2:59

AU Single

  1. "Minority" (Album version) - 2:49
  2. "Brat" (Live from Tokyo) - 1:42
  3. "86" (Live from Prague) - 2:59
  4. "Jackass" (Album version) - 2:47

7"

Side A

  1. "Minority"
  2. "Brat" (Live from Tokyo) - 1:42

Side B

  1. "Jackass"
  2. "86" (Live from Prague) - 2:59

7" vinyl box set

  1. "Minority" - 2:49
  2. "Warning" - 3:42
  3. "Hold On" - 2:56
  4. "Outsider" - 2:17

Promo Single

  1. "Minority" (Radio Edit)
  2. "Minority" (Album Version) - 2:49

Meaning

In an interview, frontman Billie Joe Armstrong said that "The song is about being an individual and how you have to drift through the darkness to find where you belong."[1]

Billie Joe Armstrong commented that this was the point in which their song writing became slightly more politically based. The lyrics "I pledge allegiance to the under world, one nation under dog..." were taken from the American Pledge of Allegiance but "twisted upside down a bit."

The lyric "down with the moral majority" from the chorus refers to the now dissolved socially conservative American organization called the Moral Majority.[citation needed]

Composition

The acoustic introduction to the song launches straight into the main riff, behind which a catchy bassline adds to the feel. The upbeat jig that runs throughout the song makes "Minority" a live favorite as Green Day nearly always include it in their live sets. "When we play 'Minority', that's the point which I always think the floor's gonna cave in," commented Mike Dirnt.[citation needed]

Music video

The music video was released in September, 2000 and directed by Evan Bernard (who also directed the "Nice Guys Finish Last" video). It shows the band on a parade float, playing their instruments in the middle of New York City (specifically Broadway) followed by a very reduced amount of people. There are also computer-generated balloons made to look like each individual member. In the end they destroy the float (this is typical of a Green Day music video: destruction of instruments, props and buildings can also be seen in a number of their other videos, including "Walking Contradiction", "Basket Case", "Longview", "Hitchin' a Ride" and "American Idiot"). The video was released uncut on International Supervideos!. It was filmed in downtown San Diego. When he first sings the phrase "Fuck 'em all!" you can see Billie Joe giving the middle finger to the buildings to the left and right. The video marks the last appearance of one of Billie Joe's replicas of his first guitar (a Fernandes), 'Blue'.

Other versions

  • A live version on Tune in, Tokyo.
  • Another live version on the CD/DVD Bullet in a Bible.
Preceded by Billboard Modern Rock Tracks number-one single
September 30, 2000
Succeeded by

References