Superman's Dead

Our Lady Peace

Song Category Released
Live Count 811 Performances
Lyrics
Do you worry that you're not liked? How long till you break? You're happy cause you smile But how much can you fake? An ordinary boy, an ordinary name But ordinary's just not good enough today Alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone I'm thinking Why, yeah, superman's dead Yeah is it in my head? Yeah we'll just laugh instead You worry about the weather and Whether or not you should hate And are you worried about your faith? Kneel down and obey You're happy you're in love You need someone to hate An ordinary girl, an ordinary waist But ordinary's just not good enough today Alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone, alone I'm thinking Why, yeah, superman's dead Yeah is it in my head? Yeah we'll just laugh instead You worry about the weather and Whether or not you should hate Doesn't anybody ever know Doesn't anybody ever know Doesn't anybody ever know That the world's a subway, subway Doesn't anybody ever know Doesn't anybody ever know Doesn't anybody ever know That the world's a subway, subway That the world's a subway, subway Doesn't any, any, any, any, any Doesn't any, any, any, any, any Doesn't any, any, any, any, any That the world's a subway, subway That the world's a subway, subway
Discography
Summary 4 Albums / 4 Promos / 1 Singles
Albums Singles Promos Live Performance History
Live Debut 1997-01-16
Loyalist College
Most Recent 2026-03-31
Toad's Place
2026
14
2025
53
2024
15
2023
17
2022
22
2021
15
2019
42
2018
26
2017
36
2016
16
2015
11
2014
7
2013
6
2012
40
2011
6
2010
32
2009
48
2008
3
2006
22
2005
45
2004
1
2003
57
2002
82
2001
54
2000
33
1999
14
1998
47
1997
47
Song Notes
Mike Turner:
The original, pure, heroic picture of Superman -- this superhero who is utterly uncorruptible -- was an ideal that you could look up to. And now they've done a marketing work-over on him: "Well, it seems your demographics are a little weak. We've brought in a stylist for the suit." There's such a loss of that naive innocence and maybe that's what's being reflected on the album.


Arnold Lanni, Words and Music, July 1997:
On Superman's Dead, Raine does this very playful little vocal thing. That happened because I asked him for something that wasn't just a guy singing. We struggled and he came up with this yodeling Raine-ism. I wanted a piece of everybody on the record. I told them just give me whatever it is you are. I don't want anything brilliant, because I don't know what that is. I want something only you can do.


Raine Maida, Express Writer, 29 Aug. 1997:
It's just about how hard it is for kids to grow up today. They're inundated with the media and images and cliques they try to have to fit into. Two images that are really strong for me lyrically are `ordinary's just not good enough today,' and when I think of kids today, I would never think of a group of eight-year-olds going out to a baseball park and throwing the ball around.

It doesn't happen any more. I have a nine-year-old brother; he's either inside playing Nintendo or staying up late on a school night watching Beavis & Butt-Head. And you juxtapose that against the old Superman, on the black and white series. He was a real hero, good values, strong willed, a gentleman, but I think Beavis & Butt-Head wins today.


Mike Turner, Canoe, 29 Nov. 1997:
Media in general has made it pretty impossible to have an innocent view of heroism. No one can be a hero without there being an ulterior motive. You're not doing it because you're nice, you're trying to get something. That's sort of an element of what we're talking about in 'Superman.' It's not good, kids don't have their own identity because they get one made for them. Their told by advertisers, media and entertainment. What they like, who they should be friends with, what music they listen to, what clothes they wear. They have a complete identity that they learned to conform to by they're 15 or 16. They've had absolutely no personal investment in getting their own identity and that's not good.


Jeremy Taggart, Hard Rock Live, 3 Apr. 2001:
I think its [the lyric "the world's a subway"] basically saying, "Life is moving fast." It doesn't really stop, it just gathers speed. You can get off or stay on.