1996Released
4:16

Did You Know?

Interesting facts and trivia about The World I Know (45 version). By Songfacts®.

Ed Roland worked to make it in music for more than a decade before forming Collective Soul in the early '90s with a group of younger musicians, including his brother, Dean. Their first single, "Shine," was an unexpected hit, sending them on a lengthy tour in 1994 that pulled them far from their hometown of Stockbridge, Georgia. Much of their second album was written on the road around this time, including "The World I Know." Roland came up the lyric when he went for a walk on a rare day off in New York City. "There was still some grit and dirt to New York City," he said in a Songfacts interview. "Especially around Times Square and Union Square back then. I literally walked out of the room, took a two-hour walk around New York, and just absorbed and observed from the highs and lows of what society was offering in the greatest city in the world. Back then, there were still homeless people living in cardboard boxes. Then, somebody pulled up in a nice limousine, with fur coats on, and walked right by. Just to be in that big city, I was looking at what the good was, what the bad was, but also, you don't know what good feels like until you feel bad. You don't know what bad feels like until you feel good. So, I was trying to use that whole imagery and using it with New York City as I walked around."

This is one of the few Collective Soul songs not credited entirely to Ed Roland. The band's guitarist, Ross Childress, is listed as a co-writer. The pair developed the song out of an instrumental piece Childress came up with.

This song has an amazingly expressive video to go with it. It's about a businessman becoming disillusioned with the world and impulsively deciding to kill himself, before being saved by a pigeon who lands on his arm and cheers him up right when he is about to jump. He also draws a comparison to the ants scurrying for crumbs and the people in the streets. He ends up tossing his money to the crowd below. Anyone pondering the Libertarian moral of the above story need look no further for the explanation than to band leader Ed Roland, confirmed Objectivist, who pulled the name of the band straight out of Ayn Rand's The Fountainhead. Collective Soul took a hands-off approach to their videos, letting the directors do their thing. This one was helmed by Guy Guillet, who also did the "Fu-Gee-La" video for the Fugees.

Song Analysis

Key, BPM (tempo) and time signature of The World I Know (45 version).
DKey
MajorMode
4/4Time Signature
154BPM

Album

The album The World I Know (45 version) is released on.

Released By

The record label that has released The World I Know (45 version).
Concord Music Group
1996 Concord Music Group, Inc.
1996 Concord Music Group, Inc.

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