"The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power)" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by The Flaming Lips | ||||
from the album At War with the Mystics | ||||
Released | April 17, 2006 | |||
Format | 7", CD, Maxi-CD | |||
Recorded | 2004 - 2005 | |||
Genre | Alternative rock, Psychedelic Rock | |||
Length |
4:55 (album version) 5:22 (full version) |
|||
Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Songwriter(s) | Wayne Coyne, Michael Ivins, Steven Drozd | |||
Producer(s) | The Flaming Lips, Dave Fridmann, Scott Booker | |||
The Flaming Lips singles chronology | ||||
|
"The Yeah Yeah Yeah Song (With All Your Power)" is a song by The Flaming Lips, released as the second single from their 2006 album At War with the Mystics. It is their highest-charting single so far in the UK, peaking at #16.
The theme of the lyrics is more political than their earlier material, as it asks listeners what they would do if they had all the power in the world. The questions asked are answered by a chorus of repetitive "yeah"s for some questions and "no"s for others. Wayne Coyne has repeatedly stated that the song does not directly refer to George W. Bush, as members of the media have speculated, but serves as a general statement about abuse of power. Coyne summarized his intended interpretation to the band's audience at the Austin City Limits Music Festival that "Power is like money. It should be earned, not given to you."
This song was used in Intel's "Raise Your Hand" ad campaign, which features text question over shots of people in various settings raising their hand while the chorus "Yeah Yeah Yeah" was repeated. It was also used over the opening scenes and credits of The Brothers Solomon. A recent television commercial for a Kraft salad dressing features this song in the background, as does a wind power commercial for the group's hometown utility company, OG&E (Oklahoma Gas & Electric), in which Coyne appears along with other Oklahoma luminaries and representatives of the general public. The song was also used in the trailer for the film Moving McAllister, as well as the movie I Love You, Man, and the pilot for the Fox show Sons of Tucson. It was also featured on a commercial in late 2006 for Cartoon Network's Squirrel Boy. It was also featured in the soundtrack of the game FIFA Street 2.
The music video has three segments. In the first, Asian women forcibly tape hamburgers to a businessman and then he is let loose, chased by several shirtless obese men and watched by amused but non-interfering police officers played by Flaming Lips members Michael Ivins, Steven Drozd and Kliph Scurlock. In the second segment, a woman resembling Gwen Stefani is similarly covered by doughnuts (suggesting that the three Asian women are supposed to criticize Stefani's objectification of her entourage of four women who play "Harajuku Girls"), and is chased by the police officers. In the third segment, frontman Wayne Coyne - who portrays a ruthless leader - has raw steaks and some lengths of intestine stapled to him and gets chased by a werewolf.