Swing, Swing

Album: The All-American Rejects (2002)
Charted: 13 60
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Songfacts®:

  • All-American Rejects guitarist Nick Wheeler writes the music for most of their songs, while lead singer Tyson Ritter handles the lyrics. Ritter was 18 when he wrote "Swing, Swing," where the tangles of his heart have been crushed by a former love. It was inspired by real events: He had a rough relationship and found it difficult to move on after the breakup. "That was written when it sucked real bad," he told MTV.
  • "Swing, Swing" was The All-American Rejects' first single, released in 2002 on the indie label Doghouse Records along with their self-titled debut album. The song got airplay on the very influential Los Angeles radio station KROQ (K-Rock), earning them a deal with DreamWorks, who picked up the album from Doghouse.

    Their next singles, "The Last Song" and "Time Stands Still," were also about young heartache, but they didn't chart. Their next album, Move Along, came out in 2005 and included the hit title track and also "Dirty Little Secret." They had another hit with "Gives You Hell" from their 2008 album When The World Comes Down, but got diminishing returns in the 2010s. After touring for their 2012 album Kids In The Street they were much less active. They didn't tour again until 2023, when they joined New Found Glory and Motion City Soundtrack on a '00s nostalgia tour.
  • "Swing, Swing" was just a modest chart hit, peaking at #60, but it became one of the band's most famous songs and one they almost always play in concert.
  • In a 2012 Songfacts talk with Nick Wheeler, he explained how this song came together and what it was like getting courted by DreamWorks:

    "'Swing, Swing' just really came to us, and we knew that was special. We wrote it and we put it aside. That was when we were writing our first record. We'd just gotten signed to Doghouse Records, we only had five songs to our name. We're like, All right, cool. Give you a three-album deal, finish writing the songs, let's go make the first record. Okay. So the next month, we wrote six more songs, 'Swing Swing' was one of them. We knew that was special, but we were on a little label that didn't really talk to radio or MTV. Turns out it turned the heads of a lot of publishers and label people, and we got to go on this incredible ride. This was when record labels still flew bands out to LA and New York and they still signed - they weren't dropping them left and right. They took us out to these lavish dinners, threw this cash at us - we'd go to strip clubs, it was retarded. You don't get to do that anymore. Being in a new band right now has got to be the most difficult thing. There are no guitars on the radio. It's just different right now. But thanks to that song and thanks to the fact that it was 10 years ago, it really did us right."
  • His heart may have been crushed by a former love, but Tyson Ritter soon found a new one: the model/actress Kim Smith, who has a starring role in the 'N Sync "Bye Bye Bye" video. Ritter and Smith dated for about six years.

    This meant he had to evolve as a songwriter. With no more real-life heartbreak to draw from, he had to create drama for songs like "Dirty Little Secret" and "Gives You Hell."

    After his breakup with Smith, Ritter went through an understandable period of boorish behavior and lack of productivity, but was once again able to write from experience on songs like "Beekeeper's Daughter." In 2012, Nick Wheeler, who went through a similar breakup, told Songfacts how they got through it: "What we learned in writing this record (Kids In The Street, 2012) is we just really had to push ourselves even harder. Lyrically, Ty had to dig way deeper than he had before. We've been doing this for a decade and we've had lots of life-changing experiences, both personally and professionally, and there's plenty to say, there's plenty to write about. It's just, in order to air this stuff out in public, it takes some digging, and some confidence, and a lot of bravery."
  • Note that in the second verse, Tyson Ritter finds some clarity:

    I'm moving on
    Sweet beginnings do arise


    "I liked this other chick, so that's what the second verse is about... moving on to another girl, or just moving on," he told MTV.

Comments: 2

  • Adrian from Qld AutraliaThis song is a guilty pleasure.... It's so far removed from what I'd consider my normal taste in music. Anyway, I've said it now.. it's out there on the internet.
  • AkariIt's pretty self explanatory. He loves her. She has another guy. He's moving on. She likes him as soon as he moves on. Classic love story, however the only difference is that this one doesn't end with them being together. That's my take at least. Please feel free to correct me or comment your opinions.
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