So Called Life
"So Called Life" is a song by the Canadian rock band Three Days Grace, released on November 29, 2021, as the lead single from their seventh studio album, Explosions.[1][2] The track serves as the album's opening song and features lyrics expressing emotional numbness and frustration with everyday existence, delivered through the band's signature post-grunge and alternative metal style.[3] The single achieved significant commercial success, topping the Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart for four weeks beginning with the February 5, 2022, issue, marking Three Days Grace's sixteenth number-one hit on the ranking.[4][4] This accomplishment tied the band with Shinedown for the most leaders in the chart's history at that time.[4] An official music video, directed by Jon Vulpine and featuring the band performing amid surreal, desolate landscapes, premiered alongside the single's release.[5] Explosions, released on May 6, 2022, via RCA Records, includes "So Called Life" as its first track and went on to produce additional chart-topping singles for the band, further solidifying their position in the rock genre.[6][4]Background and recording
Development and songwriting
Following Adam Gontier's departure from Three Days Grace in January 2013 due to unspecified health issues, bassist Brad Walst's brother, Matt Walst of My Darkest Days, joined as the band's new lead vocalist, enabling the group to continue producing new material and marking a transitional phase in their career that culminated in the Explosions era. Matt Walst served as lead vocalist during this period, including the development of "So Called Life"; Gontier returned to the band as a co-lead vocalist alongside Walst on October 3, 2024.[7][8] The song "So Called Life" was developed during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, with writing beginning around February 2020 as part of the sessions for the band's seventh studio album, Explosions.[9] The chorus was initially composed before the lockdowns, serving as an upbeat, party-like element intended to provide relief, but the verses were added afterward in March 2020 amid the isolation, shifting the track toward a more introspective and emotional tone reflective of personal experiences during quarantine.[10] Credited songwriters include lead vocalist Matt Walst, bassist Brad Walst, guitarist Barry Stock, drummer Neil Sanderson, and external collaborator Ted Bruner, who contributed to the song's structure and lyrical content.[11] Band members drew inspiration from the frustrations and emotional strain of everyday life under global isolation, with bassist Brad Walst describing the track as capturing "emotions and frustrations of everyday life" that emerged naturally from remote collaboration via Zoom during the lockdowns.[12] Matt Walst elaborated in interviews that the seclusion influenced the verses, contrasting the pre-pandemic chorus's escapist energy to highlight the need for release amid hardship.[10] As the lead single from Explosions, released on November 29, 2021, it exemplified the album's themes of internal tension and catharsis.[13]Recording process
The recording of "So Called Life" took place during sessions spanning 2020 and 2021 for Three Days Grace's seventh studio album, Explosions, amid the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.[14] The band members initially collaborated virtually via Zoom and other digital tools, marking a departure from their traditional in-person approach, before transitioning to in-studio tracking as restrictions eased.[15] Primary recording occurred at Jukasa Studios in Ontario, Canada, along with Neil Sanderson's home studio, where the full band contributed: Matt Walst on lead vocals, Brad Walst on bass, Barry Stock on guitar, and Neil Sanderson on drums and programming.[14][16] The track was produced by Howard Benson, a Grammy-winning producer renowned for his work with rock acts including My Chemical Romance on their 2004 album Three Cheers for Sweet Revenge, alongside production credits from the band itself.[17][18] Due to pandemic protocols, the band recorded their parts separately across multiple locations for the album's 9-10 songs, with Benson overseeing the process through his Judge & Jury Records imprint, co-founded with Sanderson.[15] This remote workflow relied on file-sharing apps and technology to integrate elements, ensuring cohesive production despite physical separation.[14] Mixing and finalization emphasized the band's hard rock sound, with the song's runtime set at 3:26 to balance its energetic structure.[19] Benson's involvement extended to vocal production, drawing on his experience crafting layered, impactful rock recordings.[17]Composition and lyrics
Musical elements
"So Called Life" exemplifies Three Days Grace's signature post-grunge style, blending grunge-influenced hard rock with alternative rock elements through its aggressive, riff-driven sound.[20] The song is composed in D minor and maintains a tempo of 160 beats per minute, contributing to its high-energy pace.[21][22] It follows a conventional verse-chorus form, structured with verses, pre-choruses, choruses, and a bridge, featuring prominent heavy guitar riffs that build dynamically into an anthemic, soaring chorus.[21] Instrumentation centers on Barry Stock's distorted electric guitars delivering gritty, overdriven tones, complemented by Brad Walst's punchy bass lines that provide a solid low-end foundation.[23] Neil Sanderson's driving, rhythmic drumming propels the track forward with steady 4/4 beats, while Matt Walst's raw, emotive vocal delivery adds intensity to the overall arrangement.[23] These elements draw from 1990s grunge and post-grunge influences, reinforcing the band's established hard-edged rock aesthetic.[20]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of "So Called Life" center on themes of profound frustration and emotional numbness stemming from the mundane struggles of daily existence, portraying a sense of being trapped in an unfulfilling routine.[3][24] In the opening verse, lines such as "Can't laugh, can't cry, can't live, can't die / Can't do anything anymore, no" vividly capture this paralysis, reflecting an overwhelming disillusionment with life's repetitive demands and a yearning for any form of relief or escape.[3] Bassist Brad Walst has explained that the song encapsulates "emotions and frustrations of everyday life," emphasizing its raw depiction of bottled-up anger and the desire to break free from such constraints.[12][3] The chorus reinforces these ideas through the repeated plea, "Oh, give me something to take the edge off / Something to kick the night off / Something to keep my mind off / This so-called life," which symbolizes a desperate search for distraction amid existential turmoil.[3] This motif evolves in the second verse to express escalating rage, with imagery like "Feels like I wanna jump, wanna scream, wanna run / Wanna fucking put a chainsaw through the wall," highlighting the explosive tension of feeling isolated in a self-centered world.[3] Walst noted that the track originated from casual pre-pandemic jamming sessions by drummer Neil Sanderson's pool but unexpectedly developed into a "really angry" and heavy piece, shifting from a lighter creative intent to deeper introspection on personal and societal pressures.[12] Underlying these elements are undertones of mental health struggles, a recurring thread in Three Days Grace's discography, where the narrator grapples with numbness and the impulse toward self-destructive release as a form of resilience against despair.[3] The song employs poetic devices such as repetition in the pre-chorus—"What a time to be alive / Such a waste of fucking time"—to underscore sarcasm and emotional exhaustion, while its direct, profanity-laced language amplifies the authenticity of the turmoil.[3][24]Promotion
Music video
The official music video for "So Called Life" was directed by Jon Vulpine and premiered on the band's YouTube channel on November 29, 2021, coinciding with the single's release.[25][26] Produced by VILAS Entertainment[26] with cinematography by Justin Jones, the video emphasizes a raw, high-energy performance style captured using vintage analog equipment, including re-housed 1960s Japanese lenses for a gritty, high-contrast visual texture with intentional distortions.[5][25] Filmed in a cluttered 1970s-era apartment designed to resemble an abandoned hoarder's space, the video portrays the band—featuring vocalist Matt Walst, guitarist Barry Stock, bassist Brad Walst, and drummer Neil Sanderson—delivering the track amid piles of debris and dim lighting, evoking a sense of confinement and urgency.[5] Director Vulpine described the approach: "I wanted to make this video really raw and stripped down... We shot it with a bunch of old analog gear in this 70's apartment that looked like some hoarder died in it 20 years ago. The energy was high and the angles extreme with fast movements."[5] The footage intercuts dynamic close-ups of the musicians with wider shots of the chaotic environment, prioritizing an immersive, live-like intensity over explicit narrative elements. The video's aesthetic mirrors the song's themes of escapism and frustration through its unpolished, immersive presentation, avoiding traditional storytelling in favor of visceral performance energy.[13] It has since accumulated over 27 million views on YouTube as of November 2025, reflecting strong fan engagement from its launch.[25]Single release
"So Called Life" was announced by Three Days Grace on November 16, 2021, as the lead single from their seventh studio album, Explosions, and officially released on November 29, 2021, several months ahead of the album's May 6, 2022, launch date.[27] The single was made available immediately in digital download and streaming formats across major platforms, marking the band's first original music since their 2018 album Outsider.[13] The release strategy emphasized a phased rollout to build momentum. In the United States, the track was added to active rock radio playlists in January 2022, contributing to its rapid chart ascent.[28] Promotional efforts included teasers shared across the band's social media channels in the weeks leading up to release, generating buzz among fans, alongside interviews where band members discussed the song's development as a reflection of personal and collective evolution during challenging times. The single's launch was tied directly to Explosions pre-orders, with bundles offering exclusive merchandise and early access incentives to drive album anticipation. The music video premiered simultaneously with the single, enhancing its visual and thematic rollout.[29] In its initial weeks, "So Called Life" garnered approximately 796,000 streams in the United States during the tracking week of January 21–27, 2022, establishing strong early digital traction and underscoring the single's immediate appeal within the rock genre.[4]Commercial performance
Chart positions
"So Called Life" achieved significant success on rock-oriented charts, particularly in North America, following its release as the lead single from Three Days Grace's album Explosions. The track debuted on the Billboard Mainstream Rock Airplay chart dated December 25, 2021, after entering rotation in late December.[30] It ascended to the top spot on the chart dated February 5, 2022, marking the band's 16th number-one single on the tally and tying Shinedown for the most leaders in the chart's history at that time.[4] The song held the number-one position for four consecutive weeks, demonstrating strong radio support in the early months of 2022.| Chart (2021–2022) | Peak Position | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Canada Rock (Billboard) | 7 | [31] |
| US Mainstream Rock (Billboard) | 1 | [30] |
| US Hot Rock & Alternative Songs (Billboard) | 29 | [32] |
| US Rock & Alternative Airplay (Billboard) | 8 | [33] |
| Finland (Suomen virallinen lista) | 80 | [33] |