Monkey Wrench (song)

"Monkey Wrench"
Single by Foo Fighters
from the album The Colour and the Shape
Released April 28, 1997
Format CD, CD-R, vinyl (7")
Recorded 1997 at Grandmaster Recorders in Hollywood, California
Genre Post-grunge, hard rock
Length 3:51
Label Roswell/Capitol
Writer(s) Dave Grohl, Nate Mendel and Pat Smear
Producer(s) Gil Norton
Foo Fighters singles chronology
"Alone + Easy Target"
(1996)
"Monkey Wrench"
(1997)
"Everlong"
(1997)
Alternate covers
CD2
Audio sample
file info · help

"Monkey Wrench" is the first single released from the second Foo Fighters album, The Colour and the Shape. The lyrics chronicle the 1997 disintegration of singer/songwriter Dave Grohl's four-year marriage to Jennifer Youngblood. The song peaked at number 9 on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Tracks chart,[1] and at number 12 on the UK Singles Chart.[2]

Musical analysis

Monkey Wrench is an up-tempo rock song, written in the key of B major and performed with distorted guitars in Drop-D tuning. The song opens with a descending guitar line over a chordal riff of B5/F#5/E5 for two bars. After a gap, the main verse enters with vocals and a choppier, palm-muted version of the intro riff. A pre-chorus using an E5 power chord then gives way to a chord-based chorus of B5/G#5/F#5/E5/F#5/E5/C5/B5.

Music video

The music video was directed by the band's lead singer/songwriter Dave Grohl. In the video, Grohl arrives at his apartment with groceries in hand. He walks into an elevator, as he tries to walk into the door he is stopped by the chain latch and peers in through the peephole. There a doppelganger set of the whole band is shown playing. The rest of the bandmates (save guitarist Pat Smear) walk out of their apartments and join Grohl as he views the band in his room. Smear then peers out of his apartment and is beckoned to join in the view. As the doppelganger band continues with the song Dave and his bandmates try to force their way into Grohl's apartment. As the lyrics go on, the doppel-Dave taunts the band, spitting onto the peephole lens and holding the door shut as he screams "free". When the door is finally opened, the musicians have left, and the first iteration of the band picks up their instruments to finish playing the song. Out in the hall, a third set of bandmates is listening, creating a recursive situation.

When Grohl is in the elevator heading up to his apartment, a muzak version of the Foo Fighters song "Big Me" can be heard.

The music video for the song was the first to feature Taylor Hawkins on drums, although the actual drum track is performed by Grohl.

Other versions

In other media

Personnel on record

Track listing

Promo:

  1. "Monkey Wrench"

European CD, Japan CD, Australian CD and UK CD1:

  1. "Monkey Wrench"
  2. "Up in Arms" (Slow version)
  3. "The Colour and the Shape"

UK CD2:

  1. "Monkey Wrench"
  2. "Down in the Park" (Tubeway Army cover)
  3. "See You" (Acoustic version)

Netherlands CD and UK 7" Vinyl:

  1. "Monkey Wrench"
  2. "The Colour and The Shape"

Chart positions

Chart (1997) Peak
position
Australia (ARIA)[3] 17
Canada Top Singles (RPM)[4] 37
Canada Rock/Alternative (RPM)[5] 3
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[6] 12
US Radio Songs (Billboard)[7] 58
US Alternative Songs (Billboard)[8] 9
US Mainstream Rock (Billboard)[9] 9

Accolades

References

  1. Foo Fighters - Mainstream Rock Chart History billboard.com. Retrieved 26 May, 2014.
  2. Foo Fighters - UK Singles Chart. officialcharts.com. Retrieved on Jan 20, 2013.
  3. "Australian-charts.com – Foo Fighters – Monkey Wrench". ARIA Top 50 Singles. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  4. "Top RPM Singles: Issue 3252." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  5. "Top RPM Rock/Alternative Tracks: Issue 3236." RPM. Library and Archives Canada. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  6. "Foo Fighters: Artist Chart History" Official Charts Company. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  7. "Foo Fighters – Chart history" Billboard Radio Songs for Foo Fighters. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  8. "Foo Fighters – Chart history" Billboard Alternative Songs for Foo Fighters. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  9. "Foo Fighters – Chart history" Billboard Mainstream Rock Songs for Foo Fighters. Retrieved November 13, 2016.
  10. Kerrang! magazine, issue 746, April 17, 1999. (voted by readers).
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