SMILE LIKE YOU MEAN IT

21 years ago today, The Killers started a two-week run at number one on the UK charts with their debut album, Hot Fuss
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On this date in 2005, The Killers started a two-week run at number one on the UK charts with Hot Fuss. The third single, “Smile Like You Mean It”, has a special emotional resonance for me.

Often considered one of the more “sophisticated” and introspective tracks, The Killers state that “Smile Like You Mean It” was written in just eight minutes. The frontman Brandon Flowers mentioned that at the time of writing, he had been listening to a lot of U2, specifically The Joshua Tree and All That You Can’t Leave Behind, which influenced the track’s sound.

Bono once referred to the song as a “perfect piece of writing,” citing its ability to feel both vintage and modern. While Chris Martin (Coldplay) mentioned in an interview that he was “jealous” of the song’s synth hook, calling it one of the best melodies of that decade.

Rolling Stone described “Smile Like You Mean It” as “a synth-drenched mid-tempo masterpiece that keeps the album’s momentum without breaking the mood.” 𝘕𝘔𝘌 said, “It’s the kind of song that makes you feel nostalgic for a place you’ve never even been to—specifically, a neon-lit Las Vegas suburb.”

“I still play Hot Fuss… It’s one of the greatest debut albums of all time. Every track is a potential single,” commented Elton John about the album.

“It’s a collection of shiny, stadium-ready anthems that are unashamed of their 80s influences,” said Pitchfork.

Today, Hot Fuss is remembered as the moment The Killers transformed from garage-band dreamers into a global institution. It served as a bridge between the 1980s New Wave sound and 21st-century alternative rock, demonstrating that a group from the Nevada desert could redefine the musical landscape.

Other than the songs here, “Somebody Told Me”, and “Mr. Brightside”, what more tracks from Hot Fuss do you like?

💧 You might also like THE KILLERS: THIS CHARMING MAN.

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Featured image via Medium/Mike “DJ” Pizzo.

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Picture of Rudolf Dethu

Rudolf Dethu

Music journalist, writer, radio DJ, socio-political activist, creative industry leader, and a qualified librarian, Rudolf Dethu is heavily under the influence of the punk rock philosophy. Often tagged as this country’s version of Malcolm McLaren—or as Rolling Stone Indonesia put it ‘the grand master of music propaganda’—a name based on his successes when managing Bali’s two favourite bands, Superman Is Dead and Navicula, both who have become two of the nation’s biggest rock bands.
Picture of Rudolf Dethu

Rudolf Dethu

Music journalist, writer, radio DJ, socio-political activist, creative industry leader, and a qualified librarian, Rudolf Dethu is heavily under the influence of the punk rock philosophy. Often tagged as this country’s version of Malcolm McLaren—or as Rolling Stone Indonesia put it ‘the grand master of music propaganda’—a name based on his successes when managing Bali’s two favourite bands, Superman Is Dead and Navicula, both who have become two of the nation’s biggest rock bands.

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