The Art of Losing (song)

"The Art of Losing" is the first single from American Hi-Fi's second album The Art of Losing. It has been featured in Freaky Friday, American Wedding, and one episode of Malcolm in the MiddleS4 E13, ‘Stereo Store’. It was also used in trailers for The Perfect Score, Fever Pitch, Hot Rod, Mr. Woodcock, and Speed Racer.[citation needed]

"The Art of Losing"
Single by American Hi-Fi
from the album The Art of Losing
ReleasedApril 14, 2003
Genre
Length3:25
LabelIsland
Songwriter(s)Stacy Jones
Producer(s)Nick Launay
American Hi-Fi singles chronology
"Another Perfect Day"
(2001)
"The Art of Losing"
(2003)
"The Breakup Song"
(2003)

Track listings

edit

US single

  1. "The Art of Losing"
  2. "Flavor of the Weak" (Live)
  3. "When the Breeders Were Big"
  4. "The Art of Losing" (Video)

Japan single

  1. "The Art of Losing"
  2. "Deceiver"
  3. "Flavor of the Weak" (Live)

Content

edit

"The song is about being the underdog, but learning to do things your way...People say, ‘Hey, you could do it this way or that way to be more successful.’ But the song is about telling them, ‘I’ll do it my way."[1]

Music video

edit

The video (directed by Chris Applebaum) features American Hi-Fi visiting the house of a fan in Hays, Kansas, where the band is seen performing the song in the living room, with the house surrounded by hundreds of partying locals.[2] The video was deliberately less slick than the normal polished rock production, filmed with normal fans in a normal town in the 'middle of nowhere'. "It was great because we don't think of ourselves as these f---in' rock star dudes. I don't like there to be a line drawn between the band and the fans" said Jones.[2]

Chart positions

edit
Charts Peak
position
Australia (ARIA Hitseekers)[3] 15
UK Singles (OCC) 75
US Billboard Modern Rock Tracks 33

References

edit
  1. ^ Kagan, Wendy. "American Hi-Fi". Retrieved July 30, 2012.
  2. ^ a b Wiederhorn, Jon (January 9, 2003). "American Hi-Fi Master Art Of Losing, Art Of Partying". MTV.com. Archived from the original on January 29, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2012.
  3. ^ "ARIA Report: Issue 689" (PDF). ARIA. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 22, 2008. Retrieved November 3, 2023.
edit