MTT 420 RR Lyrics
It was February
I was cold, and I was high
It was February
I was cold, and I was high
[Verse 1]
He looked up
He lost control
He was de-gloved
He was jelly roll
[Refrain]
It was February
I was cold, and I was high
[Verse 2]
He wanted love
He wanted soul
There's not enough
To make him whole
[Refrain]
It was February
I was cold, and I was high
The swell of heaven on my dashboard
I can see my spinal cord rip high
Hey, hey, hey
It's raining glass like a fever storm
Every promise I have sworn tonight
Hey, hey, hey
The swell of heaven on my dashboard
I can see my spinal cord swing high
High
It's raining glass likе a fever storm
Every promisе I have sworn tonight
Hey
[Refrain]
It was February
I was cold, and I was high, high, high
It was February
I was cold, and I was...
[Outro]
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for the storm?
Are you ready for?
Are you ready for the storm?
About
On the ominous intro track, “MTT420 RR,” singer Joe Talbot plaintively recounts the story of a near-fatal motorcycle crash he was involved in, as he reflects upon his own mortality after years of addiction.
The MTT 420RR is the model of the motorcycle that overtook Talbot on the road, as he shares in a November 2021 press release:
This motorcyclist came up on the right of me on the highway, doing 120, 130 miles an hour. He was like half a foot away from instant death. ‘MTT 420 RR’ is the start of the story — the metaphor of the crash, and how lucky I am to still be around after years of addiction.
The intro track features a solemn melody that gradually builds in intensity over restrained guitars and electronic loops. Guitarist Mark Bowen provides insight into the creative direction of the song, in the same press release:
In the studio, the electronic artist SOPHIE had just died, and Joe was talking about the notion of one single moment or action when everything completely changes. There’s that feeling where you’re having to surrender to something and you’re not quite comfortable with it yet, and that’s the tension I definitely wanted to weave into this song.
Q&A
Find answers to frequently asked questions about the song and explore its deeper meaning
This whole album, I tried to be more of a storyteller than I’ve ever been before, and more poetic, which I think is more honest, in an ironic way, than trying to be as blunt and down the line as possible. This motorcyclist came up on the right of me on the highway, doing 120, 130 miles an hour. He was like half a foot away from instant death. ‘MTT 420 RR’ is the start of the story — the metaphor of the crash, and how lucky I am to still be around after years of addiction. During lockdown, I had the time to really appreciate it, document it, reflect on it and open up conversation to make people feel like they’re not alone.
— Joe Talbot via Consequence Track-By-Track (November 2021)
I started writing it over Christmas at my wife’s family’s house. I created loops in Ableton, but because my guitar wasn’t plugged into an amp, there’s a restraint to it that is also kind of menacing. It’s not what you’d expect from IDLES’ guitars at all. There’s this tension that never gets released. It’s like, when’s the big, crashy, boom boom IDLES time coming? In the studio, the electronic artist SOPHIE had just died, and Joe was talking about the notion of one single moment or action when everything completely changes. There’s that feeling where you’re having to surrender to something and you’re not quite comfortable with it yet, and that’s the tension I definitely wanted to weave into this song.
— Mark Bowen via Consequence Track-By-Track (November 2021)