Nothing in My Way

"Nothing in My Way"
Single by Keane
from the album Under the Iron Sea
B-side "Thin Air"
"Tyderian"
Released 30 October 2006
Format 7" Vinyl, CD single, 512 MB USB memory stick
Recorded Heliocentric Studios, Rye, East Sussex
The Magic Shop, New York City
Genre Alternative rock
Length 4:00
Label Island
Writer(s) Tim Rice-Oxley, Tom Chaplin, Richard Hughes
Producer(s) Andy Green
Keane singles chronology
"Crystal Ball"
(2006)
"Nothing in My Way"
(2006)
"Try Again"
(2007)

"Nothing in My Way" is a song performed and composed by English alternative rock band Keane for their second studio album Under the Iron Sea (2006). The song was also released 30 October 2006 as the third commercial and fourth overall single from that album in the United Kingdom. After the French pop rock band Bubblies, the single's release is notable as being the first ever commercial music release in USB format, a special edition limited to 1,500 copies.

"Nothing in My Way" was included as part of the FIFA 07 video game soundtrack.

Track listing

CD single

Catalogue number: 1712175

  1. "Nothing in My Way"
  2. "Thin Air"
  3. "Tyderian"
UK 7" vinyl

Catalogue number: 1712200

  1. "Nothing in My Way"
  2. "Thin Air"
512 MB USB memory stick content

Composition and recording

It was composed by Tim Rice-Oxley in late 2004, debuting at the Rolling Stone Roadshow, Germany along with "Hamburg Song" on 20 October 2004. From 2004 to late 2005 (during the final sprint of the Hopes and Fears Tour) was called "Nothing in Your Way" though the lyrics remain almost the same. Chaplin plays his Hammond organ on live performances for the outro of this song.

It was recorded and at the Heliosentric Studios, Rye, East Sussex and at The Magic Shop, New York City in late 2005.

Musical structure

While the first demos and performances of this song were played in the key of C, the final studio version was recorded with a C sharp tuned 20 cts. above. For live performances this configuration is used too. The reminiscent "Somewhere Only We Know" intro (because of the "piano hammering") includes since then the distorted piano effect sound used in most songs on the album. Vocals are introduced with 24 seconds of playback. The introduction includes a riff created with Keane's distortion piano instrument. The song drives almost the same until the last chorus, when drumming becomes soft and Rice-Oxley plays a small riff with the piano to finally let Chaplin sing again becoming Rice-Oxley the backing vocalist of the outro.

Meaning

Pianist Tim Rice-Oxley gave this meaning on 16 May 2006:

Nothing in My Way came out of listening to a lot of the poppier end of hiphop on the radio, just kinda driving around and I think particularly the groove of "Lose Yourself" by Eminem got stuck in my head (...) and I guess I liked the idea of trying to do something similar. I guess it was never gonna sound like Eminem, but the groove of it was basically lifted from that, and the song just came from jamming around on a piano. So I guess as a result of all that, I guess it's a much funkier and kinda 'blacker' song than most Keane songs, and that was something that we really wanted to get into the record generally. We were listening to a lot of classic motown as well, much more driving rhythms and you can hear that in a lot of the songs (...)

The song's actually written about some people I know who are married, and their marriage was essentially just bringing a lot of misery to both of them, but for some reason they just refused to acknowledge it. I hate the idea of people being so much in denial that they're prepared to almost let their lives fall apart rather than acknowledge what's going on.

B-sides

Thin Air

This song was originally listed on Under the Iron Sea but was later retired. It was also set to appear on the second "This Is the Last Time" single, which could mean it was composed sometime in 2004. The song supposedly talks again about the Rice-Oxley-Chaplin relationship. It follows a chord playing similar to that of "Ladder To The Sun" by Coldplay with the alternance of a major chord with a major seventh (C + Fmaj7)

Tyderian

This is Keane's second instrumental, after "The Iron Sea". It has an unusual house-styled dance rhythm never seen before in their material. "Tyderian" is also Keane's first song totally produced, composed, recorded and mixed only by Rice-Oxley, and was recorded at his home.

Technical information

Song Length Tempo Key Time signature Genre
"Nothing in My Way" 4:00 86bpm Bbm/Db + 0.20 (Si flat minor, Re flat on bass, detuned + 20 cents) 4/4 on 16 beats Rock
"Thin Air" 3:58 122bpm C (Do major) 4/4 on 8 beats Piano rock
"Tyderian" 4:39 120bpm G (Sol major) 4/4+ on 32 beats House rock
"Nothing in Your Way" (Demo) 4:00 86bpm C6 (Do sixth major) 4/4 on 8 beats Piano rock

Chart performance

Although not one of Keane's highest-charting songs, "Nothing in My Way" did reasonably well on most charts. On the UK Singles Chart, the song entered the Top 20 at #19, which would become its peak. Over the next month, it dropped out of the Top 40 completely. It did well in Argentina, peaking at #3 and in Greenland, where it hit #7. In Most charts, the song charted in lower places in the Top 40.

Chart (2006-2016) Peak position
Mexican airplay (Alfa Radio) 3
Argentina 3
Greenland 7
UK Singles Chart 19
Nedelandse Tippeparade 18
UK Official Download Chart 20
Top France Airplay 100 20
Dutch Top 40 20
M4B Charts 21
Slovakia Singles Chart 26
Chile Charts 35
Latvian airplay 36
Polish Singles Chart 43
Russian Singles Chart 95[1]

Music video

The music video for "Nothing in My Way" is a live performance shot at ULU directed by Dick Carruthers and produced by Kit Hawkins for White House Pictures.

The US release music video for "Nothing in My Way" is the identical video for the UK single "Crystal Ball", without clips of the band interspersed through the story, and with subtitles added. At around the time of this single release it was announced that Tom Chaplin had gone into rehab for 'drug and alcohol addiction'. It is noticeable that the original video does not feature any close up shots of Chaplin, but several of Tim Rice-Oxley and Richard Hughes, though it is unknown whether this is deliberate.

References

  1. "Поиск". tophit.ru. Retrieved 2014-05-10.
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