| "Rope" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single byFoo Fighters | ||||
| from the albumWasting Light | ||||
| Released | March 1, 2011 | |||
| Recorded | 2010 | |||
| Studio | Dave Grohl's residence (Encino, Los Angeles) | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 4:19 | |||
| Label | RCA | |||
| Songwriters | ||||
| Producers |
| |||
| Foo Fighters singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
| Music video | ||||
| "Rope" onYouTube | ||||
"Rope" is a song by Americanrock bandFoo Fighters, the second track on their seventh studio album,Wasting Light (2011). Like the rest of the album, it was written by all band members and produced by the band alongsideButch Vig. The song originated during the tour supportingEchoes, Silence, Patience & Grace (2007), the band's sixth studio album. A demo version was recorded after the tour ended in 2008. Some acts that have been noted as influences on the song includeRush andLed Zeppelin.
"Rope" was released as the lead single ofWasting Light on March 1, 2011, throughRCA Records as a download. It was supported by a music video, shot almost entirely inVHS, that paid tribute to the claustrophobic space of the recording studio used for the album. A remix by Canadian producerDeadmau5 was later released as part of a limited edition12-inch single. "Rope" received favorable reviews from critics and performed well commercially. It was the year-end number-one song of 2011 for theBillboardRock Songs chart, peaked at No. 68 on theBillboard Hot 100, and reached the top 25 in five countries, including the United Kingdom.
"Rope" had its origins during theEchoes, Silence, Patience and Grace world tour, as frontmanDave Grohl played an acoustic guitar while waiting for thesoundchecks or to fly to the next city.[1] After the tour ended in 2008, the song had its first version recorded during sessions at Grand Master Studios in Hollywood. It would later be brought into theWasting Light songs which were recorded in Grohl's garage.[2]
The song's unusual rhythms and angular chords have a distinct influence fromRush[3] as well asLed Zeppelin's albumPresence, which Grohl declared "may be my favorite album of theirs".[1][4] The main progression of chords is a flat seventh, a fourth and a minor third, warranting guitaristChris Shiflett to comment that "What my guitar is doing over the bass makes no sense in a way. It does, but you don't know how." The intro is a sequence of minor sevenths with a suspended fourth, going from B minor to D, which Shiflett stated was "kind of illogical, in a way, to your ear",[4] and Grohl himself compared toTelevision andMission of Burma.[1] Thedelay on the intro was induced manually given the album was produced without digital instruments, with producerButch Vig synchronizing it with theclick track through adrum machine and ashake tambourine.[5]
The single premiered on radio on February 23, 2011 and was officially released on March 1, 2011.[6][7] The song was only released as a download single and no physical CD single was actually released. However, a 12-inch vinyl single was released on May 9, 2011.[8]
Canadianelectronic producerDeadmau5 produced a remix of the song that was released separately as part of theDeadmau5 Mix Edits EP. It was made available digitally on April 14.[9] The Foo Fighters performed the remix version at the 54th Grammy Awards with Deadmau5, along with "Walk".
The first televised performance of the single was part of a Foo Fighters set at the 2011NME Awards, at which the band was present forDave Grohl to collect the 'Godlike Genius' award.[10]

The music video, directed by Grohl, was shot entirely inVHS,[11] and shows the Foo Fighters performing inside a white cube set built inside a soundstage in Los Angeles. The "tight, claustrophobic space" was inspired by Grohl's garage, whereWasting Light was recorded.[12] The first verse and chorus of the song simply show the band performing, while the second verse and chorus show the band as silhouettes, and the instrumental bridge and final chorus shows lights of various colors flashing within the cube.
The music video made its worldwide premiere live from a MTV.com contest winner's house in Los Angeles, CA. An MTV and fan interview from the same house was conducted after the premiere, followed by a Twitter "question and answer" portion.[13]
"Rope" was well received by critics. On its review of the song,Rolling Stone said the single "rides lower to the ground that the usual Foos anthem, especially during the gnarled-guitar fire-fight at the end, without undercutting the modern-rock heroism that's become one of the few reliable guitar-based brands on contemporary radio."[14]Billboard described the song as having "a meaty guitar lick that sounds ripe forRock Band, a rip-roaring extended instrumental solo and a few choice "Yow!"s from frontman Dave Grohl",[15] praising the "raw, hard-hitting focus" and concluding that "'Rope' makes the listener feel like it's 1995 all over again."[16]
"Rope" was nominated for "Best Rock Track" at the2011 Teen Choice Awards,[17] and Deadmau5' remix was nominated for aGrammy Award for Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical.[18] It placed at No. 63 on the AustralianTriple J Hottest 100, 2011, the world's largest annual music poll.
The song is only the second in history to debut atop theRock Songs chart, after "The Catalyst" byLinkin Park in 2010.[19] It also gave the Foo Fighters their second song to top the chart, tying them withAlice in Chains,Three Days Grace and Linkin Park as the only artists with multiple number-ones on the chart (a record that they would break immediately after "Rope" ended its reign at number one). "Rope" spent an unprecedented 20 consecutive weeks on top of the chart, until the July 30 issue, when the album's second single "Walk", took the number one spot. This made the Foo Fighters the first ever artist to have two consecutive number one songs on the chart. "Rope" also charted at number 22 on theUK Singles Chart making it the twenty-first Foo Fighters single to reach the UKTop 40, and as of 2025, remains their last UK Top 40 hit. "Rope" is Foo Fighters' highest-charting single on theNetherlands Singles Chart, charting at number 31.
Foo Fighters
Additional personnel
Weekly charts[edit]
| Year-end charts[edit]
Decade-end charts[edit]
|
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| Australia (ARIA)[42] | Gold | 35,000‡ |
| Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[43] | Gold | 30,000‡ |
| New Zealand (RMNZ)[44] | Gold | 15,000‡ |
| United Kingdom (BPI)[45] | Silver | 200,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. | ||