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Why have The Killers written a song about Mike Tyson?

Mark Savage
BBC Music reporter
ANTON CORBIJN The KillersANTON CORBIJN
The Killers (L-R): Ronnie Vannucci, Brandon Flowers, Mark Stoermer

It's 9am on 11 February, 1990. Mike Tyson enters the ring at the Tokyo Dome as the undefeated heavyweight champion of the world.

His opponent, Buster Douglas, is a textbook underdog. Most bookmakers refused to take bets for the fight. The Mirage Casino in Las Vegas was one of the few that did - and they made Tyson the 42-1 favourite.

But then, in the 10th round, Tyson was taken down by a furious four-punch volley - right, left, right, left.

He was left scrabbling around on the floor, badly disorientated and searching for his gum shield, as referee Octavio Meyran counted him out.

Back in Tyson's home town of Las Vegas, an eight-year-old Brandon Flowers watched the fight in disbelief.

Rex / Shutterstock Mike Tyson knocked out by Buster DouglasRex / Shutterstock
Tyson's knock-out has gone down as one of the biggest defeats in sporting history

"Mike Tyson was perfect to me," he tells the BBC. "He created such excitement around the world - but he lived in Las Vegas, and he got my dad excited, he got my uncles excited, so that made me want to be excited about it.

"My friend Edwin Speight, his dad worked for the mayor in Henderson - so he got the fight at his house on pay-per-view. I it was 50 bucks.

"We went to his house to watch it - he lived across the street - and I can still see his living room and feel his Kush carpet. It was kind of dusky and twilight.

"Then Tyson got knocked out [and] my whole view on the world changed.

"It wasn't supposed to happen."

Twenty-seven years later, Flowers is the front-man in one of the world's biggest rock bands, The Killers. But that 1990 night is indelibly imprinted on his mind.

"This vision reoccurs," he says. "I see it a lot and I don't know why. So I started to explore it with a song."

That song, an open-road anthem called Tyson vs Douglas, will appear on The Killers' fifth album later this September.

"When I saw him go down, it felt like somebody lied," sings Flowers in the chorus. "I had to close my eyes just to stop the tears."

But in the third verse, the focus shifts to Flowers in the present day, "looking out the window" at "my boy and his mother".

"I have a son now who is the same age I was when [the Tyson fight] happened," he explains. "And to him and his two little brothers, I am as perfect as Mike Tyson - and I don't want to go down."

Belligerence

Back in 1990, Tyson put his failure down to a lack of preparation. "I was out of shape, more or less," he said after the fight.

"I didn't consider Buster Douglas much of a challenge. I didn't even bother watching any of his fights on video. I had easily beaten everybody who had knocked him out."

Flowers is determined not to make that mistake. Relaunching The Killers after a five-year break, he's lean, fit and match-ready. He's even written a song about it - a strutting slice of glam-rock called The Man.

Island Records Brandon Flowers in the video for The ManIsland Records
The singer gets to dress up in his Las Vegas finest in the video for The Man

"I got gas in the tank / I got money in the bank," he preens. "I got news for you baby, you're looking at the man."

Flowers says the lyrics are about "re-inhabiting my 21-year-old self" - a much more confrontational character, prone to Liam Gallagher-style belligerence.

"Emo, pop-punk, whatever you want to call it, is dangerous," he said of the artists coming up at the same time as The Killers in the early 2000s. "There's a creature inside me that wants to beat all those bands to death."

"It was a naïve, bold place I was coming from," he says today. "I hadn't faced rejection or any real trials in my life at that point, and so I had a different outlook on life. I just went at the world chest-first."

These days, the band isn't so cocksure. When they played a secret set at Glastonbury last month, they weren't sure anyone would turn up.

"You never know what other band is nipping at your heels, or whether people still care about you," says drummer Ronnie Vannucci.

"Our version of time is different than the fans' version of time. We're working on stuff, but everyone else's lives are still going on.

"So Glastonbury was such a great feeling. We didn't expect it to be so good."

Despite their hiatus, the band have never been far from the public's consciousness in the UK.

Their debut single, Mr Brightside, was streamed 26 million times last year - meaning that, 13 years after release, it features in the UK Top 100 almost every week.

That's pretty good going for a song that only managed four weeks in the chart when it first came out.

"We get little glimpses of stuff like that and it's just incredible," says Flowers. "As fans, we know what that feels like.

"Whether it's Enjoy the Silence from Depeche Mode or Where The Streets Have No Name from U2 - those songs belong to everyone.

"To be a part of it, on the other side of it, it's nothing that we can really explain. But it's really cool."

Still, the phenomenal success of Mr Brightside, and the band's debut album Hot Fuss, are big things to live up to.

They it they felt that pressure as they reconvened to make their fifth album.

"One of the nagging things that I was carrying with me was asking myself, 'Where do the Killers fit in? And what do they have to contribute":[]}