Somebody Told Me


"Somebody Told Me" is a song by American rock band The Killers. It was released as the second official single from the group's debut studio album Hot Fuss, and was written by band members Brandon Flowers, Mark Stoermer, Dave Keuning and Ronnie Vannucci Jr.. In an interview with Rolling Stone, Brandon Flowers said: "This is the story of trying to meet someone in a club." It is written in the key of B-flat minor.
When the Killers first started out, their music was little noticed by music buyers and the media, which is why "Somebody Told Me" has been released twice in slightly different forms. The first, with the pink background cover, is the rarer version of the single as it was their first release of it; due to poor sales, not as many were produced. When re-released, the cover art sported a blue background color and is the more common version of the single.
The single peaked at number 51 on the United States Billboard Hot 100. In the United Kingdom, it charted at number 28 upon its first release in March 2004, becoming the band's first hit in the Top 40, it was then re-released in January 2005 and reached number three. Although not as successful as "Mr. Brightside", it still became one of the band's biggest hits to date.
In Australia, the song was ranked number four on Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2004. In 2009, it was voted at number nine in XFM's Top 100 Songs of the Decade.

Composition

Stylistically, "Somebody told Me" has been cited as alternative rock, new wave, and dance-rock. The song is in the verse-chorus form. The intro of the song is a Bm chord, leading into the first verse, which consists of a Bm–Em–G chord progression repeated twice, followed by an Am–F–G chord progression repeated twice.
The chorus follows the Bm–G–A–F chord progression repeated twice. The first time through the chorus, the last F chord is cut off. The song has a second verse and chorus, then has a bridge with the chord progression E–G–B–E–B–E–Am–G–E–E–G, which leads into the chorus for a final time.

Critical reception

Billboard called the song "wildly infectious", and "as addictive as nickel slots". Blender asserted that the single is a "superb blaze of synthesizers and guitars that builds to the year's best one-liner: 'Somebody told me you had a boyfriend who looked like a girlfriend I had in February of last year.'"
Entertainment Weekly hailed the single as "three smashingly punchy minutes of garage pop so tightly wound that singer Brandon Flowers seems to be accusing his girl of cheating on him with another woman." Rolling Stone said the single was a "nightclub anthem in the making" and continued, "the acid-tongued 'Somebody Told Me' blasts into outer space on a wave of synthesizers and singer Brandon Flowers' cheeky chorus."
Michael Paoletta of Billboard praised the remixes done by, respectively, Josh Harris and King Unique for "maintaining the original song's integrity" but recommended readers to buy the album, Hot Fuss, rather than the single.

Track listings

Original United Kingdom release

;CD
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "Under the Gun"
  3. "The Ballad of Michael Valentine"
;7"
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "The Ballad of Michael Valentine"

    United Kingdom re-release

;CD1
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "Show You How"
;CD2
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "Somebody Told Me"
  3. "Somebody Told Me"
  4. "Somebody Told Me"
;12"
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "Somebody Told Me"

    United States release

;12"
  1. "Somebody Told Me"
  2. "Somebody Told Me"
  3. "Somebody Told Me"
  4. "Somebody Told Me"

    Official versions

The music video for "Somebody Told Me", was filmed in February 2004 in California, and was directed by Brett Simon. It shows the Killers performing their song in the moonlight of a desert location, with a giant LED screen displaying rolling, and flashing images of their logo, as well as an alternate version of the video shot during the day.

Charts and certifications

Weekly charts

Year-end charts

Certifications

Accolades

Awards

Live performances

The band performed the song during an appearance on an episode of Saturday Night Live, hosted by Topher Grace in 2005. They also performed the song at the Sideshow Lollapalooza in June 2011.

In popular culture

The song can be heard in the episode of Six Feet Under, "Grinding the Corn", from 2004. The song appears as a master track in Rock Band 4. The song also appears in the background in a bar in a scene from the movie Rocky Balboa.