The Rapture moved from San Francisco to New York in 1999 and wrote "House of Jealous Lovers" the following year. They met
James Murphy and
Tim Goldsworthy of
DFA Records at one of their first performances in New York. Murphy and Goldworthy took a long time to persuade the band to work together because of a concern that making a
dance song would alienate their fans. While mastering "House of Jealous Lovers", Murphy used
techno music as a benchmark for the track's bass frequencies. After hearing the DFA's mix,
Sub Pop, the band's record label at the time, and the band both reacted negatively and initially refused to release it. Vocalist Luke Jenner hated the mix, feeling that it sounded unfinished. On the way to a gig, Murphy played the mix for
Jonathan Galkin; Galkin credited it for his decision to join DFA Records. The single included a remix by
Morgan Geist of
Metro Area as the second song on the A-side and a song titled "Silent Morning" as the B-side. The chaotic,
surreal video was inspired by the collage style of old punk fliers. It features footage of the band, animated newspaper headlines, scrapbook paraphernalia, and scenes of military conflicts. Pitchfork listed the video as the 27th best music video of the 2000s. ==Composition==