Powerless (Say What You Want)

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"Powerless (Say What You Want)"
"Powerless (Say What You Want)" cover
Single by Nelly Furtado
from the album Folklore
Released December 8, 2003
Format Digital download, maxi single
Recorded 2003
Genre Pop/Rock
Length 03:53
Label DreamWorks
Writer(s) Anne Dudley, Gerald Eaton, Nelly Furtado, Trevor Horn, Malcolm McLaren, Brian West
Producer(s) Track & Field
Chart positions
  • #13 (UK)
Nelly Furtado singles chronology
"Fotografía"
(2003)
"Powerless (Say What You Want)"
(2003)
"Try"
(2004)

"Powerless (Say What You Want)" is a pop song written by Nelly Furtado and Anne Dudley, Gerald Eaton, Trevor Horn, Malcolm McLaren and Brian West for Furtado's second studio album Folklore (2003). It was produced by Track & Field and received a positive reception from music critics.[citation needed] Banjo player Béla Fleck appears on the track.

Nelly Furtado in the box in the music video.
Nelly Furtado in the box in the music video.

It addresses how Furtado herself was discriminated against in that her record company wanted to hide her ancestry: "Paint my face in your magazines/Make it look whiter than it seems/Paint me over with your dreams/Shove away my ethnicity/". Furtado said about "Powerless": "I get to see a lot of DJ-oriented performance stuff, and I'm into the heaviness of breakbeats, how raw and powerful they are. Everything lately has become so synthesized, but just the standard sound of breakbeats is inspiring. "Powerless" uses breakbeats like that; it's a real groove, a real vibe. It just carries you away. There’s a banjo mixed with a breakbeat from Malcolm McLaren's "Buffalo Gals". So right away you're bobbing your head. The lyrics are initially in-your-face, like, "Okay, I know I'm going to be stereotyped in my life because that is the world we live in; that's society." But the song tries to find some sense of order in this complicated world."

The song was chosen as the album's lead single and released in December 2003. It was a big hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart, peaking at number five, but it failed to chart on the Hot 100. The "Powerless" music video won the 2004 Canadian MuchMusic Award for "Best Pop Video".

[edit] Charts

Chart (2003/2004) Peak
position
Argentina 1
Australia 37
Austria 7
Chile 8
Dutch Top 40 5
Dutch Mega Single Top 100 6
Japan 12
Germany 8
Latvia 27
Mexico 18
New Zealand 16
Philippines 18
Portugal 8
Sweden 37
Switzerland 16
UK 13
United World Chart 9
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 20
U.S. Billboard Adult Top 40 5
U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Music/Club Play 5

[edit] See also

In other languages