Rabbit in Your Headlights

"Rabbit in Your Headlights"
Single by Unkle featuring Thom Yorke
from the album Psyence Fiction
ReleasedOctober 12 1998
RecordedJuly 1997
GenreTrip hop
Length6:18
LabelMo' Wax
Songwriter(s)Thom Yorke, Josh Davis
Producer(s)Unkle
Unkle featuring Thom Yorke singles chronology
"Last Orgy 3"
(1998)
"Rabbit in Your Headlights"
(1998)

"Rabbit in Your Headlights" is a song by the British electronic duo Unkle, released on their debut album, Psyence Fiction (1998). It features vocals from the Radiohead singer, Thom Yorke, who wrote it with the Unkle member Josh Davis. The music video, directed by Jonathan Glazer and starring Denis Lavant, was named among the greatest by Rolling Stone and Pitchfork.

Recording

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Stereogum described "Rabbit In Your Headlights" as a "haunting deconstructed piano ballad ... a smoky jazz horror show that blasts Yorke's supernatural falsetto into the bowels of hell".[1] Yorke recorded his vocals in California in 1997 while on tour with his band Radiohead.[2] It was written by Yorke and the Unkle member Josh Davis (also known as DJ Shadow), whose 1996 album Endtroducing influenced Radiohead's 1997 album OK Computer.[3] It contains dialogue sampled from the 1990 film Jacob's Ladder.[4]

Music video

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Denis Lavant in the music video

The music video was directed by Jonathan Glazer, who had directed the videos for Radiohead's singles "Street Spirit" and "Karma Police".[5] Glazer was unsatisfied with his "Karma Police" video, saying he had "missed emotionally and dramatically". He made the "Rabbit In Your Headlights" video as a companion, and felt he achieved what he had failed to with "Karma Police".[5]

The video stars Denis Lavant as a man walking along a road in a tunnel, muttering. He is struck by several cars, but gets to his feet. Eventually he removes his coat and walks shirtless. A car collides with him at speed; the man remains standing, his arms outstretched, and is engulfed in smoke.

Pitchfork wrote that the tunnel evoked the fatal car crash of Princess Diana the previous year and "walking toward the light at the end of one's life".[6] In 2010, Pitchfork named it the eighth-greatest video of the 1990s, writing: "Pre-millennial tension rarely got this dark; technical accomplishments rarely this re-watchable."[6] In 2021, Rolling Stone named the video the 28th-greatest of all time, writing that it was a "prime example of sustaining a sense of mounting dread and delivering an odd yet thrilling payoff" and that Glazer had "found that Venn diagram centre of creepy and ecstatic he'd been chasing".[7]

Legacy

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In 2016, Pitchfork credited "Rabbit in Your Headlights" as a "turning point" for Yorke, placing his vocals in the context of experimental electronic music for the first time and foreshadowing Radiohead's 2000 album Kid A.[8] Covering Psyence Fiction in Stereogum for its 20th anniversary, Chris Devile wrote of "Rabbit In Your Headlights": "That's a great music video, but the song is even more of an achievement ... 'Rabbit In Your Headlights' alone makes Psyence Fiction worth remembering."[1] Yorke's side project Atoms for Peace performed "Rabbit in Your Headlights" on their 2013 tour, with the bassist, Flea, reciting the Jacob's Ladder dialogue.[4]

References

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  1. ^ a b DeVille, Chris (24 August 2018). "Unkle's Psyence Fiction turns 20". Stereogum. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
  2. ^ Randall, Mac (2011). Exit Music: The Radiohead Story. Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-1849384575.
  3. ^ Randall, Mac (1 April 1998). "The Golden Age of Radiohead". Guitar World. Archived from the original on 3 September 2017.
  4. ^ a b Dean, Jonathan (14 July 2013). "Nuclear energy". The Times. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
  5. ^ a b Kaufman, Anthony (12 June 2001). "Interview: Shooting the 'Beast'; Jonathan Glazer Tames the Gangster Genre". IndieWire. Retrieved 5 July 2021.
  6. ^ a b "The Top 50 Music Videos of the 1990s". Pitchfork. 23 August 2010. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
  7. ^ Fear, David (3 August 2021). "Unkle feat. Thom Yorke, 'Rabbit in Your Headlights'". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2 July 2024.
  8. ^ Scheim, Benjamin (6 May 2016). "The history of Thom Yorke on other people's songs". Pitchfork. Retrieved 19 July 2019.
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