From Yesterday
"From Yesterday" is a song by the American rock band Thirty Seconds to Mars, released as the third single from their second studio album, A Beautiful Lie.[1][2] The album, produced by Josh Abraham and released on August 30, 2005, by Virgin Records, features the track as its opening song.[3] The single version of "From Yesterday" was issued on November 7, 2006, and it became the band's first song to reach number one on the Billboard Alternative Airplay chart, holding the top position for two weeks in March 2007.[4] The song was written by Jared Leto, the band's lead vocalist and primary songwriter, and explores themes of regret, power, and self-reflection through metaphorical lyrics depicting a flawed leader grappling with past mistakes.[5] Musically, it blends alternative rock with orchestral elements, contributing to the album's cinematic sound.[6] Its release helped propel A Beautiful Lie to commercial success, with the album eventually certified platinum by the RIAA for sales exceeding one million copies in the United States.[1] The accompanying music video, directed by Jared Leto under his pseudonym Bartholomew Cubbins, was filmed at Hengdian World Studios in China, the world's largest film studio complex.[7][8] Premiering on MTV2 on November 20, 2006, the video is renowned for its epic scope, featuring elaborate costumes, choreography, and narrative sequences that extend its runtime to over 13 minutes in its full-length version, making it one of the longest music videos in history.[7][9] This ambitious production marked a turning point in the band's visual storytelling approach and received widespread acclaim for its artistic ambition.[5]Background and recording
Development
"From Yesterday" was written by Jared Leto, with the initial idea conceived by drummer Shannon Leto, during the songwriting sessions for the band's second studio album, A Beautiful Lie, released in 2005.[5] These sessions drew influences from the band's extensive touring experiences following their 2002 self-titled debut album, which profoundly shaped their creative direction and marked a thematic evolution toward more epic, anthemic rock elements reflective of personal growth, struggle, and introspection.[10] The decision to select "From Yesterday" as the third single from A Beautiful Lie came in 2006, after the releases of "Attack" and "The Kill," due to its inherent anthemic qualities and strong potential for a visually compelling music video treatment.[5] Jared Leto explained the choice in an interview, emphasizing the song's cinematic and surreal nature: "There's a lot of thought that goes into making the decision on the appropriate single... 'From Yesterday' [lends itself to being a video in that it's] a very cinematic song and a very visual song. It really is one of those songs that lets your imagination wander."[5] This aligned with the album's overarching narrative structure, where each track contributed to a cohesive story of life's complexities. Early development involved band input during pre-production phases conducted in Los Angeles studios, including Pulse Recording and The Laboratory, where initial demos were refined to capture the song's expansive sound and emotional depth.[11] These collaborative efforts solidified "From Yesterday" as a standout piece within the album's cycle, emphasizing the band's shift to broader, more immersive rock explorations.Production
The song "From Yesterday" was recorded at Pulse Recording and The Laboratory in Los Angeles during 2005, as part of the sessions for Thirty Seconds to Mars' second album, A Beautiful Lie.[11] The track's production was finalized that year ahead of the album's August release and the single's subsequent rollout in 2006.[11] Josh Abraham served as the primary producer for "From Yesterday," overseeing the recording process and contributing to the mixing to craft a layered, progressive rock aesthetic that emphasized dynamic builds and atmospheric depth. Abraham's involvement extended to integrating additional sonic elements, such as synthesizers programmed by Oliver Goldstein, which supported the track's expansive sound without overpowering the core instrumentation.[11] This approach helped refine the song for its single release, ensuring a polished, radio-friendly structure while preserving the band's experimental edge. The instrumentation featured Jared Leto on lead vocals and guitars, providing the melodic foundation and rhythmic drive; Shannon Leto on drums, delivering the propulsive beats that underpin the track's tempo shifts; Tomo Miličević on guitars, adding textural layers through riffs and harmonies; and Matt Wachter on bass, marking his final contribution to a Thirty Seconds to Mars recording before departing the band in 2007. These performances were captured live in the studio to capture the band's chemistry, with Abraham's production choices focusing on clarity and intensity to highlight the collaborative energy.Composition and lyrics
Musical elements
"From Yesterday" is classified as an alternative rock song incorporating progressive elements, characteristic of Thirty Seconds to Mars' blend of expansive arrangements and atmospheric soundscapes.[2][12] The track runs for 4:07, providing a concise yet dynamic listening experience. The song's structure begins with an atmospheric intro featuring synths and strings, transitioning into verses built on clean arpeggio guitar riffs.[13] This leads to a verse-chorus build-up, where choruses employ power chords and double stops for emphasis, followed by a pre-chorus with palm-muted rhythms. A bridge introduces a shift in intensity, culminating in an extended outro that reinforces the progressive layering.[13] Instrumentation centers on electric guitars, such as the Gibson Les Paul Custom and custom McSwain models, delivering the riff-driven verses and chord progressions, alongside acoustic elements for texture. Synthesizers contribute atmospheric effects throughout, enhancing the song's spatial quality in drop C tuning. Dynamic drumming drives the progression, starting subdued in the verses and building to a powerful crescendo in the choruses and outro.[13]Themes and interpretation
The lyrics of "From Yesterday," penned by Jared Leto, delve into themes of time, regret, and the cyclical nature of existence, portraying a protagonist haunted by the persistent pull of the past. The repeated refrain "From yesterday" underscores a profound sense of nostalgia and the inescapable inevitability of prior experiences shaping one's current reality, as seen in lines reflecting on fear and unresolved memories emerging relentlessly. Critics and listeners alike highlight the song's deliberate ambiguity, which eschews a clear narrative resolution in favor of evoking personal introspection and emotional resonance tailored to individual experiences. This open-ended quality fosters broad connections, allowing the track to mirror varied interpretations of regret and temporal flux without prescribing a singular meaning.[5]Release and promotion
Single formats
"From Yesterday" was released as a single on November 7, 2006, primarily in CD and digital download formats across the United States, United Kingdom, and international markets, with vinyl editions issued the following year. The digital download version offered the radio edit and full album track for purchase on platforms like iTunes, aligning with the growing availability of online music distribution at the time. Vinyl releases, including a limited white 7-inch single in the US and picture disc variants in the UK, featured the Chris Lord-Alge mix of the title track paired with acoustic live performances of other songs from the band's catalog.[14][2] The standard CD single, pressed by Immortal Records and Virgin, contained the radio edit of "From Yesterday" (3:52) as the A-side, backed by "The Story (Live @ AOL Sessions Under Cover)" (3:58) as a B-side track, providing fans with a live rendition from the band's sessions. Some editions were enhanced with multimedia content, such as the music video, to appeal to collectors and promote the visual release. This format was distributed widely in Europe and North America, emphasizing the song's accessibility in physical media during the mid-2000s transition to digital.[14][15] International variations included a UK-specific limited edition box set in 2008, which bundled multiple formats: a clear vinyl 7-inch with "From Yesterday," a red etched single-sided vinyl, and an enhanced CD featuring the radio edit, live acoustic versions like "The Kill (Bury Me) - Radio 1 Live Lounge Session," and embedded video content for interactivity. In Australia, the 2007 CD single mirrored the standard tracklist with the radio edit, live "The Story," and an included video, though promotional copies focused solely on the radio edit for radio play. These regional adaptations highlighted market-specific promotional strategies while maintaining core content consistency.[16][15]Marketing efforts
The single was promoted primarily through alternative rock radio airplay in the United States, beginning in October 2006, which contributed to its chart success. To engage fans, the campaign incorporated live acoustic performances recorded for platforms like AOL Sessions and BBC Radio 1's Live Lounge, featured as B-sides on various formats. The release coincided with the premiere of the music video on MTV2 on November 20, 2006, enhancing visibility without overlapping detailed video production covered elsewhere.[17][2]Critical reception
Contemporary reviews
Upon its release as a single in November 2006, "From Yesterday" garnered positive acclaim from several critics for its grand, anthemic quality and potential for mainstream appeal. Music News praised the track's "killer chorus" and Jared Leto's "soaring vocals" that build to a "massive crescendo," positioning it as a strong follow-up to the band's earlier hits and predicting significant chart performance.[18] Similarly, Drowned in Sound highlighted its "big, fist-in-the-air rock" style, aligning it with the energetic, crowd-pleasing ethos of publications like Kerrang!.[19] However, not all feedback was unqualified praise; NME offered a more tempered view in its assessment of the album, critiquing the overall sound as "myopic and utterly joyless" with a "tortured emo whine," suggesting the song's elaborate structure and runtime could feel occasionally overwrought despite its ambition.[20] In summation, "From Yesterday" emerged as a highlight of A Beautiful Lie, lauded for exemplifying Leto's dynamic vocal prowess amid the album's broader thematic explorations of illusion and reality.[18]Awards and recognition
"From Yesterday" won the Kerrang! Award for Best Single at the 2008 ceremony, with the band also receiving the Best International Band honor that year.[21]Music video
Filming and production
The music video for "From Yesterday" was directed by Thirty Seconds to Mars frontman Jared Leto under the pseudonym Bartholomew Cubbins. Filming occurred entirely in the People's Republic of China in 2006, marking the first American rock music video shot there in its entirety.[7] Principal shooting locations included the Forbidden City in Beijing and the Emperor Qin palace in Hengdian World Studios. The production employed more than 300 extras, 400 Chinese soldiers, to achieve a grand historical epic aesthetic drawing from ancient Chinese empires and martial arts.[7][22] The band completed the shoot over two weeks, navigating significant logistical hurdles related to securing permits for sensitive historical sites and addressing cultural sensitivities in a foreign production environment.[7]Content and versions
The music video for "From Yesterday" depicts the band members as masked ancient warriors transported to a dreamlike recreation of a Chinese dynasty, where they engage in a rebellion against a young emperor amid chaotic and surreal events. This narrative draws inspiration from Bernardo Bertolucci's The Last Emperor and the films of Akira Kurosawa, evoking themes of cyclical time, past burdens, and eternity through symbolic elements like repetitive battles and masked identities.[5][23] The visual style is highly cinematic, characterized by slow-motion fight sequences involving hundreds of extras, orchestral swells in the soundtrack, and dreamlike symbolism such as falling petals, static lines of 400 Chinese warriors, women bound for execution, and other bizarre tableaux that blend historical pageantry with abstract surrealism. Much of the video was filmed at Hengdian World Studios in China, marking the first full American music video shot entirely in the country—the production emphasizes epic scale and atmospheric tension to mirror the song's introspective intensity.[24][22][7] Multiple versions of the video exist to suit different broadcast formats. The original is a 13-minute-30-second short film directed by Jared Leto (under his pseudonym Bartholomew Cubbins), which includes extended scenes of palace intrigue, monologues, and a teaser for the next single "A Beautiful Lie" in the end credits. A condensed 7-minute-25-second edit serves as the standard video version, trimming non-essential footage while retaining the core narrative and visuals for music channels. A shorter 4-minute radio-friendly cut focuses primarily on performance elements for promotional airplay. This video marks the final appearance of bassist Matt Wachter before his departure from the band in 2007.[25][5]Commercial performance
Chart positions
"From Yesterday" achieved significant success on rock-oriented charts, particularly in the United States. It peaked at number one on the Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart (now known as Alternative Airplay) for one week in 2007, marking the band's first chart-topper in that format.[26] The single demonstrated strong longevity, charting for 26 weeks on the Alternative Airplay chart and reflecting sustained popularity on alternative radio stations.[26] On the mainstream Billboard Hot 100, "From Yesterday" reached number 76 in 2007. Internationally, the song performed well on genre-specific charts, peaking at number 14 on the UK Rock Chart.[27] It also entered the top 40 in Australia, reaching number 33 on the ARIA Singles Chart, and in Italy, where it peaked at number 40 on the Italian Singles Chart.[28]| Chart (2007) | Peak Position |
|---|---|
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 76 |
| US Alternative Airplay | 1 |
| UK Rock Chart | 14 |
| Australian ARIA Singles | 33 |
| Italian Singles (FIMI) | 40 |
Sales and certifications
The single received no major certifications in the United States or the United Kingdom from the RIAA or BPI, respectively. However, in retrospective digital metrics, it has accumulated over 122 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.[29]Track listings
CD and digital editions
The digital download single was released on November 7, 2006, featuring the album version (4:08).[30] In the UK, the enhanced CD single released in 2008 by Virgin (VUSCD340) contained the radio edit (3:52), an acoustic version of "Stronger" from the Radio 1 Live Lounge (6:01), and the music video (13:40) as multimedia content.[16]Vinyl and promotional versions
The limited-edition vinyl releases of "From Yesterday" catered to collectors and featured unique packaging and bonus tracks not available on standard formats. In 2007, Virgin Records issued a UK 7-inch picture disc single (catalogue number 5057527), pressed at 45 RPM and limited to a numbered run, with the album version of "From Yesterday" (mixed by Chris Lord-Alge, 4:14) on the A-side and an exclusive acoustic version of "A Beautiful Lie" (3:42) on the B-side.[31] The same year, a US white-label 7-inch vinyl (Immortal Records/Virgin, 0946 3 52597 7 3) was released, pairing the Chris Lord-Alge mix of "From Yesterday" (4:14) with a live acoustic rendition of "The Kill" recorded on VH1 (3:48).[32] Additional UK variants followed in 2008, including a limited-edition clear 7-inch (VUSX 340) and a single-sided red etched 7-inch (VUS340), both emphasizing the song's alternative rock appeal through specialty pressing techniques.[2] Promotional versions were primarily CD singles distributed to radio stations and industry professionals to support airplay ahead of the commercial release. A European promo CD (Immortal Records/Virgin, 0946 3 93291 2 0), housed in a cardboard sleeve, appeared in 2006 and included only the radio edit of "From Yesterday" (3:52), published by Apocraphex Music and manufactured in the EU.[33] In the US, a similar one-track promo CD (Immortal Records/Virgin, 0946 3 52597 2 8) with the radio edit (3:52) was issued in 2008, drawn from the album A Beautiful Lie and targeted at broadcasters under Virgin Records America.[34] A UK CDr promo also surfaced in 2008 (Virgin, no catalogue), further aiding promotional efforts in the alternative rock market.[2]Personnel and credits
Band members
The recording of "From Yesterday" featured the lineup of Thirty Seconds to Mars at the time, consisting of the following performing members.- Jared Leto – lead vocals, guitars, keyboards
- Shannon Leto – drums, percussion
- Tomo Miličević – lead guitar, keyboards
- Matt Wachter – bass guitar (his final recording with the band before departing in 2007)[35][10]