2005’s the year I came to know Nine Black Alps. It’s a story I’ve told before, last time in the post for ‘Not Everyone’. But the summary is, couple videos appeared on MTV2, I wasn’t into them. ‘Not Everyone’ appeared on the radar. I really got into that. And then at Christmas, I got FIFA 06 and Burnout Revenge as presents. The band were on the soundtracks for both games. ‘Cosmopolitan’ on the former and today’s song, ‘Shot Down’, on the latter. Someone at EA Sports must have been a fan. And because of countless hours of playing both games on my part, singing along to either tune in the process, I eventually became one too. Still got my physical copy of Everything Is sitting on a shelf. One of my favourite albums, and I don’t think anyone knows about it.
To a ten-year-old, there’s not much more fun you can think of than crashing cars without having to consider the consequences. And that was essentially what Burnout Revenge was all about. The soundtrack was killer. You had the ‘Red Flag’ demo by Billy Talent which was always better than the final version. OK Go’s ‘Do What You Want’. ‘Helicopter’ by Bloc Party, which funnily enough was in FIFA 06 as well. I could go on. It was stacked. So many great hits. And it always felt so cathartic when you crashed into a car on a specific downbeat or emphatic moment in a tune. Oh, what a thrill. Those were the days, man. Getting choked up just thinking about it now. If ‘Shot Down’ appeared during a race or whatever, it never got a skip. It was another track that added to the pent-up energy the game already provided. I came to later find out that the song as it was in the soundtrack was censored by EA, with the mention of guns and killing sons being slightly altered. It’s funny to hear the EA version now. My mind was made up. I had to get the Nine Black Alps album that all these songs were on. And I did, wanna say a few months later.
‘Shot Down’ is the eighth track on Everything Is. The record up to that point is a whole heavy but melodic affair, bar for the one serene acoustic moment, and ‘Shot Down’ carries on the same feel. Some people listening to the track for the first time may get a sense of rhythmic displacement. Feeling like singer Sam Forrest begins singing too early or something. Explanation is, during the intro, the guitars are struck on the upbeat rather than the down. Knowing this, I can still lose the timing sometimes. Usual guitarist David Jones and then bassist Martin Cohen switched roles on this tune for whatever reason, but the results are still A1. References in the song regarding laying low, saving oneself, hiding guns and killing sons (like I said earlier) reinforce a feeling I’ve always had that the LP had a concept about living during wartime. There’s lots of other references of the like scattered in other songs on there too. So I’ve always thought ‘Shot Down’ is more or less part of that story. What that story is, I’m not sure. I could maybe tweet Sam Forrest about it one day. But I feel there’s a thread there. The music video for it, above, was also the first one the band ever made. So that’s a nice note.