Album: Romance (2024)
Charted: 60
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Songfacts®:

  • If you were to imagine Fontaines D.C. frontman Grian Chatten with a magnifying glass, inspecting the various twists and turns of love, loss, and personal growth, you'd have the essence of "Bug." The song is an exploration of heartbreak, missed connections, and the delicate dance between vulnerability and defiance. Layered with driving guitars, a robust bassline, and drums that seem to both march and sway, it's a track that builds like a gathering storm, with Chatten's raw and emotive vocals leading the charge.
  • Drummer Tom Coll told Apple Music that "Bug" came together effortlessly. "It's one of those buzzy, all-of-us-in-the-same-room tunes," he said. "I fought for it to make the record because it felt right. No need to overthink or dress it up - it's great as is. And live? Oh, it's going to be something else."

    Guitarist Carlos O'Connell echoed the sentiment, marveling at how quickly it all fell into place.
  • Chatten sings about wanting to call someone but falling instead for a "MUA (make-up artist) at Carnegie Hall." It's vivid, specific, and yet open to interpretation.

    If this all sounds deeply personal, it probably is. Chatten is no stranger to drawing from his own life. Take "Starburster," a song that includes a panic attack he experienced at St. Pancras station. But "Bug" leans more toward universal themes - breaking free, self-discovery, and figuring out who you are when life insists on changing your plans.
  • Why is the song called "Bug"? The title doesn't appear in the lyrics, which leaves us guessing. Maybe it's a nod to transformation, like how a caterpillar becomes a butterfly (though hopefully with less goo). Or perhaps it's about those things that keep "bugging" us - irritations, vulnerabilities, glitches in life's grand design.
  • "Bug" is just one part of Romance, an album that marks a departure from the band's earlier raw, live-first philosophy. This time, they've embraced a richer, more polished sound, thanks to producer James Ford (of Arctic Monkeys and Blur fame).

    "We didn't want to be just a typical two guitars and a bass band anymore" Coll explained to Crack magazine.

    The result is an album that dips its toes into a variety of genres and moods, all while keeping that unmistakable Fontaines edge.
  • Andrea Arnold (American Honey, Fish Tank) directed the video, which features unseen footage from her 2024 film Bird. Barry Keoghan (Masters Of The Air) plays the character Bug, an often shirtless free spirit. Fontaines' music is woven into Bird, and Carlos O'Connell makes his big-screen debut in the movie, further connecting the band to the film project.

    "I've loved Fontaines since I first heard them. Some music just sits in your bones like it always belonged, like you know it already, like it's part of you," said Arnold.

    "Extending the images and my Bird world for the 'Bug' track felt like the most natural thing in the world, like part of the same thing," she added. "I wouldn't have done it had I not felt that and I would hardly do it for anyone."

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