Smile (Lily Allen song)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

“Smile”
“Smile” cover
CD 1 cover
Single by Lily Allen
from the album Alright, Still
B-side "Cheryl Tweedy", "Absolutely Nothing"
Released 3 July 2006 (worldwide)
25 December 2006 (U.S.)
Format CD single, digital download, 7" single
Recorded 2006
Genre Pop, ska
Length 3:13
Label Regal Zonophone
Writer(s) Lily Allen, Iyiola Babalola, Darren Lewis

Sample written by Jackie Mitoo.

Producer Future Cut
Lily Allen singles chronology
"Smile"
(2006)
"LDN"
(2006)
Alternate cover
CD 2 cover
CD 2 cover


"Smile" is Lily Allen's first mainstream single release, and was penned by Lily Allen, Iyola Babalola and Darren Lewis (the duo who produced the track as Future Cut). The organ riff is a sample of Jackie Mittoo playing keyboards on "Free Soul" by The Soul Brothers, written by Jackie Mittoo.

Contents

[edit] About the record

Allen announced through her MySpace blog that her first official single would be "Smile", taken from her debut album entitled, Alright, Still. The track was sent to radio a few weeks later, and was added to radio playlists immediately. The music video premiered in early June on all mainstream music channels in the UK. Allen also appeared on the cover of The Observer Music Monthly as well as performing on UK TV shows, such as Top of The Pops.

"Smile" was released to iTunes UK on 26 June 2006, ahead of the physical CD release on 3 July. It spent most of its first week at number 1 on the iTunes chart before entering at number 13 in the Official UK Top 40. The physical single is backed by two B-sides including "Cheryl Tweedy", a track which generated publicity (Allen states she wishes she looked like Girls Aloud member Tweedy in the lyrics). The single rose to number one in the UK on 9 July, selling 39,501 copies in that week. It amassed 2 weeks at the number one spot selling a further 35,228 copies, falling to number four in its fourth week (the same week the album was released). The single ended 2006 as the UK's eleventh best selling single of the year. The single peaked at number forty-nine in the US, mainly due to digital sales. [1]

There is a remix ft. Robin Thicke and Samantha Jade to be released on 16 August 2007.

In the April 2007 issue of FourFourTwo it is suggested that the song is about Ashley Cole. This would mean "the girl next door" is a personifying metaphor of Chelsea and it would also explain having Cheryl Tweedy on the B-side.

[edit] Music video

Allen watching her ex-boyfriend getting beaten up.
Allen watching her ex-boyfriend getting beaten up.

The music video, directed by Sophie Muller (who also directed the video of previous UK number-one "Hips Don't Lie" by Shakira), shows Allen getting revenge on an ex-boyfriend who cheated on her. She pays some thugs to beat him up, then takes him to a cafe to console him while the thugs trash his apartment and scratch his vinyl records. At the cafe, she puts laxatives in his coffee so he gets diarrhea. Later, as a result of the laxatives, he has to come to her house to use the toilet as his has been blocked by the thugs. The video finishes with Allen walking down the street smiling while the ex-boyfriend is DJing in a nightclub only to find that all his vinyl records have been scratched. Allen commented in an interview that the video was banned on MTV because it contained mugging.[citation needed] It also has a profanity in its first verse; the offending lyric 'But you were fucking that girl next door' is censored in some releases, but present in others. "I got really offended when my single, Smile, got banned from MTV in the UK because it had the word f--- in it!"[2]

[edit] Promotion

On the day of the official release of "Smile", Allen performed and did an exclusive record signing at private record store Sister Ray in Soho, London. She performed four songs from her debut album Alright, Still: "LDN", "Knock 'Em Out", "Littlest Things" and "Smile", followed by the signing. Earlier the same day, Allen performed on the BBC Radio 1 Live Lounge with DJ Jo Whiley, performing an acoustic version of "Smile", and a cover of The Kooks' "Naïve", to apologise for insulting them via her MySpace blog.

The song was re-recorded by Allen in Simlish, the fictional language used in The Sims games. The Simlish version was used in the Sims expansion pack The Sims 2: Seasons,[3] in which Allen also had her own character.

At the 2007 South By Southwest music festival, Allen said she was "so sick of this song" before performing it.[4]

The song is featured on the 2007 Judd Apatow film Knocked Up.

The song was the first song author J.K. Rowling listened to after completing the seventh and final installment in the Harry Potter series, Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.

[edit] Other versions

Rapper Example has recorded a new version of "Smile" called "Vile", which is an answer song written from the perspective of the ex-boyfriend (although he was never actually Allen's boyfriend[5]). Both songs were then parodied by Chris Moyles on his Radio 1 breakfast show in a song called "Piles".

[edit] Formats and track listings

These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of "Smile".

CD1 (UK and 7" Vinyl)
  1. "Smile" — 3:13
  2. "Smile" (Aaron LaCrate's Gutter Mix) — 2:59
  3. "If You Don't Know me By Now",(Simply Red Cover) 3:27
CD2 (UK)
  1. "Smile" — 3:13
  2. "Cheryl Tweedy" — 3:15
  3. "Absolutely Nothing" — 4:04
  4. "Smile" (music video)
12" Vinyl (Promo)
  1. "Smile" (Digital Soundboy Mix) — 5:00
  2. "Smile" (Digital Soundboy Dub) — 5:00

Digital Soundboy remixes by Shy FX.

CD (Australia)
  1. "Smile" — 3:13
  2. "Cheryl Tweedy" — 3:15
  3. "Absolutely Nothing" — 4:04
  4. "Smile" (Aaron LaCrate's Gutter Mix) -2:59
Digital download release (U.S.)
  1. "Smile" — 3:13
  2. "Smile" (Aaron LaCrate's gutter mix) -2:59
  3. "Cheryl Tweedy" — 3:15
  4. "Absolutely Nothing" — 4:04

[edit] Charts

Chart (2006)[6] Peak
position
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 14
Ö3 Austria Top 40 39
Brazilian Hot 100 Songs & Tracks 69
Belgian Ultratop 50 Singles 27
Croatian Singles Chart[7] 1
Dutch Top 40 10
French Singles Chart 16
German Singles Chart 67
Irish Singles Chart 6
Italian Singles Chart 23
New Zealand Singles Chart 6
Polish National Top 50 1
Portuguese Singles Chart 15
Swedish Singles Chart 38
Swiss Singles Chart 21
UK Singles Chart 1
United World Chart 12
Chart (2007)[8] Peak
position
Canadian Hot 100 86
Chile Top 100 49
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 49
U.S. Billboard Pop 100 43
U.S. Billboard Hot Adult Top 40 Tracks 20

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Preceded by
"Hips Don't Lie"
by Shakira
UK Singles Chart number-one single
July 9, 2006July 23, 2006
Succeeded by
"Don't Stop Me Now"/"Please, Please"
by McFly
Preceded by
"Maneater" by Nelly Furtado
Polish National Top 50 number-one single
August 28, 2006
Succeeded by
"Słowa" by Gosia Andrzejewicz