House of Jealous Lovers

http://dbpedia.org/resource/House_of_Jealous_Lovers an entity of type: Thing

"House of Jealous Lovers" is a song by American indie rock band the Rapture. It was released as the lead single from their second studio album, Echoes, in March 2002, through DFA Records in the US and Output Recordings in the UK. It was eventually re-released in 2003. rdf:langString
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
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rdf:langString
rdf:langString remixes
rdf:langString "Alabama Sunshine"
rdf:langString "Silent Morning"
rdf:langString The Rapture - House of Jealous Lovers cover.png
rdf:langString The Rapture - House of Jealous Lovers cover art.jpg
rdf:langString Luke Jenner's strained vocals were described as an "alienated yelp" or "cat-strangle".
rdf:langString The Rapture - House of Jealous Lovers sample.ogg
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rdf:langString CD1
rdf:langString CD2
rdf:langString * DFA * Output
rdf:langString * DFA * Vertigo
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rdf:langString Killing
rdf:langString Give Me Every Little Thing
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
xsd:integer 2003
rdf:langString Ends remix
rdf:langString Maurice Fulton remix
rdf:langString Morgan Geist version
rdf:langString Tom Middleton remix
rdf:langString left
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
rdf:langString The Chair That Squeaks
xsd:integer 1998 2002
rdf:langString * The DFA * The Rapture
xsd:integer 2000 2003
rdf:langString Killing
rdf:langString "House of Jealous Lovers"
rdf:langString Alabama Sunshine
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers
rdf:langString House of Jealous Lovers: Cosmos vs. the Rapture
rdf:langString Silent Morning
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString * Luke Jenner * Vito Roccoforte * Matt Safer
rdf:langString "House of Jealous Lovers" is a song by American indie rock band the Rapture. It was released as the lead single from their second studio album, Echoes, in March 2002, through DFA Records in the US and Output Recordings in the UK. It was eventually re-released in 2003. Produced by James Murphy and Tim Goldsworthy of the DFA, the song was designed to market the band through dance music distributors. The accompanying music video for the song is influenced by punk imagery. Upon release, it became DFA's best-selling single and helped re-establish dance-punk. The song received acclaim from music critics and was rated 16th and 6th respectively on Pitchfork and NME's tracks of the decade lists. The song would go on to peak at number 27 on the UK Singles Chart. The song was used in the soundtrack for the video game NBA 2K15, which was curated by famed music producer Pharrell Williams.
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