The song was derived from the early Manic Street Preachers songs "Go, Buzz Baby, Go" (with which it shares the chord structure and the phrase "Motorcycle Emptiness" late in the song over the verse chords) and "Behave Yourself Baby", a rough demo with a similar structure, that has the lines "All we want from you is the skin you live within", similar to "All we want from you are the kicks you've given us" in this song. Nicky Wire said of the song's creative process "A real amalgam. Part of a song called
Go Buzz Baby Go, and before that was a song called
Behave Yourself Baby which was the bridge. The lyric took a long time. We crammed so many words in there, and it is bizarre, so busy. It was the first time we looked at each other as a band and thought perhaps we can actually do something."
Sean Moore said "It's something like four songs put together. The main guitar part was the producer, Steve Brown, telling James that we needed a riff going through the song", while
James Dean Bradfield recalled "We'd had the demo for that since we were about 17, but played in more of a
New Order style then. Steve Brown said it needed a solo, and he just left me in the studio and gave me an hour. He came back and went: "You're a guitar god now!" It sounds corny, but he made this white-trash
Taff feel good. He told me I had to find my
Slash moment. That's good production, as far as I'm concerned." Some of the lyrics are taken from the poem "Neon Loneliness" (the first line of the chorus, "Under neon loneliness", is a direct lift) by Welsh poet
Patrick Jones, the brother of Manics bass guitarist and lyricist
Nicky Wire. "Motorcycle Emptiness" was also included on
Forever Delayed, the Manics' greatest hits album, in October 2002, and released as a reissued single from the compilation in February 2003. == Release and reception ==