We wanted to get a balance between a kinda dream sequence - it starts very quietly, and I love the idea of being in a plane, like a Spitfire or something, being so high up in the sky that you can't hear the guns below you and so on. And it's almost got a serene silence which is what this Yeats poem seemed to really express. The song starts very quietly, but it gets huge and angry as it goes on - the big distorted washy piano sound in the middle is a pretty vast sound and it's I guess an attempt to express all that anger bursting out." - Tim - Podcast 3 (30th May 2006)
Yeah - Tom's singing a song that I've written about him. But I think the great thing about the way we make music is that anything that I write is almost reflected in what the other guys feel most of the time, and that's why things work so well for us creatively. There are lots of songs that I write that the other guys just don't get - they might mean a lot to me, but unless the song really touches a nerve with all three of us, we won't do anything with it basically. But yeah, Broken Toy is a really intense one for us. It's great to be able to sing about those things, and to play that music and feel that you're somehow dealing with those things on a really primal level." - Tim - Podcast 6 (19th June 2006)
It's quite a chirpy song - it's a weird one. I've always loved bands (The Smiths is an example that spring to mind), bands that can write a song that's really energised and ... 'pop' I guess, but is also really meaningful, but also really powerful and sad. And Morrissey is just the king of that, and I think the Pet Shop Boys were another band that did that really well - and those were two of the first bands I ever got into, so I think that's still a big part of our music; and I guess Crystal Ball is probably the best example of that." - Tim - Podcast 5 (12th June 2006)
Lyrically I guess it's about... again, it's a bit like Atlantic, it's about a fear of what we've got slipping away and I guess it's a plea just to remember what a great thing it is to have a bond between people. And even if you all go off and you do different things and you make different friends and have all these adventures as people do - it's just a plea that at the end of it all you're still the backstop in someone's life, as it were.
When we demoed it up, we did it very very simply, and then started to play it live a little bit and we played it very very simply, and Tom's just playing an organ on it. And there was definitely a temptation to turn it into this big ballad, and we just felt ... we actually tried it; we thought we better try it, so we tried putting some drums on it, and that song is all about atmosphere - in fact the whole record, the most important thing was to capture an atmosphere. And we just felt that the best way to do that with Hamburg Song was the way that we'd done it to start off with, which was really really stripped back and simple, so we kept it that way." - Tim - Podcast 3 (30th May 2006)
The song generally is... I guess you could say it's a very political song. It's just trying to make sense of the fact that Britain could be attacking other countries on very devious grounds, when we've always grown up thinking that you're always a part of society that's essentially a power for good in the world. and I think a lot of people of our generation have suddenly found it very unsettling to start to feel that we've taken that for granted that we've always been contributing to a society is a power for a good, and suddenly you realise you realise that half the world really hates us(!) and on a personal level that makes you start to doubt yourself a bit I think.
The song is not an attempt at some sort of wide-sweeping political statement, it's just about just seeing things from a personal level - what are you supposed to believe, what is actually right? How can you work out what is the truth, and what is the right thing to do? And there's so many different opinions, and you're supposed to have an opinion on what your country is doing, and yet it is so hard to even begin to gather all the facts. It's really distressing thing for people of our generation I think, the feeling of not being able to do anything about that. I guess that was something we were all feeling very acutely in the song. And I think the sounds of the song sum that up in a very tangible way.
I suppose once we'd hit upon the idea of using the piano through loads of vintage effects, and trying to make it sound as far from a piano as possible, we started to think in terms of what we wanted it to sound like on a particular song. If I was trying to find a particular sound, I'd want it to sound like something like from a Beatles song, or a Smiths song, or anything really! On Is It Any Wonder? we were thinking that a kinda Jimi Hendrix riff would be a great way to start a song that had so much bustling confusion and anger in it...so that was basically my attempt to rip off Jimi Hendrix!" - Tim - Podcast 2 (22nd May 2006)
Lyrically Nothing In My Way is I guess about really being in denial - I hate it when people refuse to acknowledge their own feelings and reactions to something, because they see it as being a weakness to say that they're scared, or upset about something, or whatever. 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." - Tim - Podcast 1 (15th May 2006)
Lyrically, it was around that time Richard was going through a messy fall-out from a break-up with a girl that he'd been going out with for seven or eight years... so I guess it was a kinda friendly slap in the face or something! I think Tom and I were both feeling that he was getting really bogged down in this world of regret, and looking backwards all the time, and we just wanted to offer a way of picking him up and moving forward." - Tim - Podcast 4 (5th June 2006)
Is about Johnny Borrell (lead singer of Razorlight).
"In fact, probably not even 'The Frog Prince' - the bitter spiralling finale to second album 'Under The Iron Sea', complete with the kind of Johnny Borrell-baiting lyrics Luke Pritchard would never have had the balls to write: 'An old fairytale told me/ A toad will be our king.'" - NME Wednesday 16th August 2006 - Source
"Will the identity of 'The Frog Prince' ever be revealed?
It was correctly identified by an NME journalist in a piece about us a few weeks ago." - Source
it's mainly about regret. i was thinking about how you can have a huge amount of affection for someone and yet not have that magic spark that makes you feel like you're in love. whenever i hear the song i feel it's a snapshot of the moment of two people saying their goodbyes...i can actually see them stood facing each other. what a rotten moment that is eh.
anyway so you have a bond with someone but you don't want to stay with them forever. so you decide to go. but you're not saying 'i hate you and i'm leaving'...you're trying to say 'i think you're great but i've seen that there's something more perfect and magical out there for me and i need to find it. but i will always be your friend if you need me.' does that make sense? so the bridge ('something i wasn't sure of...etc') is about the sense that there's something more magical to be found. making that decision to leave something comfortable to search for something perfect is difficult, so the alternating lines of the chorus are almost a debate going on in your head...you're saying 'this is the last time we'll share these intimate moments, time will make things better, and of course you can turn to me whenever you want to, i don't mind.' if you split the chorus into two parts using alternate lines it makes sense! i guess the feeling of conflict within yourself and the difficulty of making that decision is what the song is really about. it's not sarcastic or anything but it is certainly confusing. sorry!
i like trying to write about confusion and grey areas because life is not normally very clear-cut and simple, especially when it comes to the way people interact. hence the album's title. how many songs are there at the moment about how you're not good enough for me so **** you? the eamonn/frankee nonsense being an obvious example but look at any number of recent hits. how often is life really that simple? i guess that's why 'dry your eyes' was such a popular song...it talks about the confusion and mess of breaking up, and that's a reality that people recognise." - Tim - messageboard - Source
Without me really wanting it to, it came out as a very modern ... - I always think about it as being a commuter's love song. There's something weird about that feeling of being on a train really really late at night when there's just a handful of you there, and I always wonder what everyone's story is - especially people who've been to work and probably got up at some horrendous hour of the morning, and they're traipsing back to their home somewhere in the suburbs. And it always seems to me, as if youth has started to be replaced by a dreary routine, and with that all the hopes and dreams of being a young person gradually, without even noticing, they start to ebb away; and a love that's at the start of the marriage or whatever it is, just starts to disappear. And it seems like there's something seriously fundamentally wrong with the way we conduct our lives in Britain definitely - it's probably the same all over the world - and it always makes me really sad, and I guess the idea of the song is just as if... when it gets to the middle 8 of the song, it's as if your eyes opened for a moment and you suddenly realise you've waited so much time and want to have one chance kinda grab it back and make up for all that lost time. It's a really sad song, but it's one of the few songs on the record that has a sort of glimmer of hope(!)." - Tim - Podcast 5 (12th June 2006)