"Paint Your Target" is the first single from the Fightstar album Grand Unification. Released in June 2005, Fightstar's first single charted at #9 in the UK. To 'paint your target' is a military expression which refers to identifying and marking a target so that it can be attacked by other forces.
There are two videos for this song, one was banned because of scenes of children running around pretending to shoot each other, however this can still be found on the internet on sites such as YouTube and the 2nd version with the band in a room playing the song. The room in the 2nd version is similar to the one used in Feeders Find the Colour video. In the banned video, children are simply shown playing at soldiers with CGI muzzle flashes and missiles. Near the end of the song, a girl is nearly hit by a rocket and led away by a disapproving teacher. At the end, the pupils head back inside, although one stays outside briefly; his irises briefly take the shape of a mushroom cloud. The video can be interpreted as an ironic comment on how war and fighting are sanitised in mainstream culture.
There are also 2 recorded versions of Paint Your Target. One, recorded by Chris Sheldon, was released as a single and appeared on both of the music video's. The other, recorded by Colin Richardson, appears on Grand Unification.
Read more about Paint Your Target: Track Listing, Chart Performance
Famous quotes containing the words paint and/or target:
“More significant than the fact that poets write abstrusely, painters paint abstractly, and composers compose unintelligible music is that people should admire what they cannot understand; indeed, admire that which has no meaning or principle.”
—Eric Hoffer (19021983)
“Well gentlemen, this is it. This is what weve been waiting for. Tonight your target is Tokyo. And youre gonna play em the Star Spangled Banner with two-ton bombs. All youve got to do is to remember what youve learned and follow your squadron leaders. Theyll get you in, and theyll get you out. Any questions? All right thats all. Good luck to you. Give em hell.”
—Dudley Nichols (18951960)