"Teenagers" is the fourth and final single and the eleventh track from My Chemical Romance's third studio album, The Black Parade (2006). It was the third United States single from the album, but the fourth released in the United Kingdom, the Philippines, Australia and Canada. The song was released to radio on May 15, 2007.[5]
"Teenagers" | ||||
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Single by My Chemical Romance | ||||
from the album The Black Parade | ||||
Released | July 9, 2007 | |||
Recorded | 2006 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 2:41 | |||
Label | Reprise | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) |
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My Chemical Romance singles chronology | ||||
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Additional cover | ||||
![]() Promotional cover | ||||
Audio sample | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Teenagers" on YouTube | ||||
Despite charting at #67 on the US Billboard Hot 100, "Teenagers" is their highest single on the Pop 100 at #23. It also made number 9 on the UK Singles Chart.
Gerard Way wrote the song after finding himself in a New York City Subway car full of high schoolers who were "running around, being all violent [and] breaking shit", which Way felt was very different from when he was teenager himself.[6] As he told The New York Times, "That was the first time I felt old...I was nervous and I was a target. I felt like I had become a parent figure or part of the problem."[7]
About the relationship between the song and concerns about gun violence, Way said:
That song almost didn't fit on the record but it's a topic that's so important to our culture. It's about a really big problem in America where kids are killing kids. The only thing I learned in high school is that people are very violent and territorial.[8]
A reviewer from NME wrote,
"Some bands go out of their way to do a song with a sound they're never bound to do, then release it as a single. They usually fail. My Chemical Romance tried a substantially different sound for this song, and it paid off. The message is simple, the chorus is catchy and Ray Toro's solo joins the chorus and bridge together so smoothly."
The song was rated 5 stars in both NME and AbsolutePunk.net and 4/5 from IMDb.[citation needed]
The song was #25 on Rolling Stone's list of the 100 Best Songs of 2007.[9] This song was also #80 on MTV Asia's list of Top 100 Hits of 2007.[10] The single is certified double Platinum by the RIAA.
The song entered the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart at #2, before debuting at #87 on the Hot 100 the following week as the "Hot Shot" debut of the week, and peaked at #67. It has reached #23 on the Pop 100, and #13 on Modern Rock Tracks. It also debuted at #42 in the UK, and became the band's fourth straight top 20 hit from The Black Parade and their third top ten hit from the album, peaking at #9. It debuted at number 16 on the ARIA Singles Chart.
The music video opens with an almost shot-for-shot tribute to the first scene of Pink Floyd's film The Wall. Further links to The Wall are seen when cheerleaders don gas masks in a similar manner to the masks worn by the teenaged and young adult fans in the film.[11]
The video was posted by the band via their YouTube channel on May 30, 2007, and has since obtained over 153 million views as of February 2022.[12] Sometime around November 1, 2007, the video passed the "Famous Last Words" video as the third most played video on the site. This version of the video cut out the word "shit". The MTV version differs from the YouTube version; notably the teenagers breaking in was cut out, as well as the words "gun", "shit", and "murder".[13] The video debuted on Total Request Live.
This video made its world premiere in New Zealand, which was also the first country in which The Black Parade reached number one.[14] Multiple pirated versions of the video surfaced on the Internet days before the American debut.
The music video version of the song (directed by Marc Webb) seems to have some added audio. During and after the lyrics "They say all teenagers scare the living shit out of me", there are piano notes playing in the background in the style of western music (during live performances, the piano plays along to the music even more so). The album version of the song does not have this piano playing until the coda.
Version 1 (promotional CD)
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Teenagers" (radio edit) | 2:38[15] |
Version 2 (CD and 7" vinyl)
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Teenagers" | 2:41 |
2. | "Dead!" (live from E-Werk in Berlin on October 14, 2006) | 3:16[16] |
Version 3 (7" vinyl)
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Teenagers" | 2:41 |
2. | "Mama" (live from the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham on March 22, 2007) | 5:00[17] |
Version 4 (CD)
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Teenagers" | 2:41 |
2. | "Dead!" (live at E-Werk in Berlin on October 14, 2006) | 3:16 |
3. | "Mama" (live from the National Indoor Arena in Birmingham on March 22, 2007) | 5:00[18] |
Version 5 (digital download)
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "Teenagers" | 2:41 |
2. | "Teenagers" (music video) | 2:51 |
3. | "I Don't Love You" (Video from AOL Sessions) | 3:57 |
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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United Kingdom (BPI)[35] | Platinum | 600,000![]() |
United States (RIAA)[36] | 4× Platinum | 4,000,000![]() |
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Region | Date | Format | Label |
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Canada | July 9, 2007 |
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Columbia |
United Kingdom | |||
United States | |||
Australia | August 31, 2007 | ||
New Zealand | |||
Germany | September 14, 2007 |
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Singles |
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Other songs |
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Tours |
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