Who'd Have Known

"Who'd Have Known"
Single by Lily Allen
from the album It's Not Me, It's You
Released 30 November 2009
Format CD single, digital download
Genre Pop
Length 3:50
Label Regal
Writer(s) Lily Allen, Gary Barlow, Howard Donald, Greg Kurstin, Jason Orange, Mark Owen, Steve Robson
Producer Greg Kurstin
Lily Allen singles chronology
"22"
(2009)
"Who'd Have Known"
(2009)
"Back to the Start"
(2010)

"Who'd Have Known" is the fifth and final international single (fourth and final in the United Kingdom) by British recording artist Lily Allen from her second studio album, It's Not Me, It's You. Written by Allen and Greg Kurstin, while interpolating Take That's single "Shine", the song was released as the fifth and final single from the album, but fourth in the United Kingdom, on 30 November 2009 by Regal Recordings. Contemporary critics complimented the song and Allen's warm vocals, while the music video portrays her as a groupie of Elton John.

The song is prominently sampled in American rapper T-Pain's 2011 song "5 O'clock".

Contents

Background and composition

Before the release of the album, Allen posted the song, then titled "Who'd of Known", on her MySpace account, revealing that she sampled Take That's single "Shine" and wrote: "I ripped off the chorus from Take That and can't be bothered with the paperwork.",[1] for which the single was almost not included on It's Not Me, It's You.[2] The singer pointed out in an interview that "Greg [Kurstin] just played the chords and I sang and we were like, 'That's great, really hooky.' Then when we played it back to someone, they pointed it out that it was, essentially, 'Shine'", and, while the band did not agree to sing on it, they gave her permission to record it, as they liked the song.[3] The group was also credited as co-writer.

Musically, "Who'd Have Known" is set in common time and has a metronome of 84 beats per minute.[4] It is played in the key of F major and follows the chord progression FFmaj7/AE♭E♭5Gm7F, while the piano and guitar are used for the background music.[4]

Critical reception

When reviewing the album, Jody Rosen from Rolling Stone magazine called the song a potential single, being "the ballad with the album's most surefire hook".[5] Neil McCormick from The Daily Telegraph noticed the song in particular, claiming it to be a "tender evocation of friendship turning to love", while Allen's vocals highlight affection. He also added that, on tracks such as this, "Allen still sounds like a real person telling us the most intimate details of her real life, only with better hooks".[6] Drowned in Sound reporter James Skinner suggested that the song "lucidly details the furtive thrills and giddy excitement that lie at the outset of a romantic endeavour" and, in comparison with "Shine", "in slowing the tempo some though, substituting its vapid generalities and platitudes with a warmth both insightful and agreeable, she bests the original considerably".[2] Ryan Dombal from Pitchfork Media concluded that the song "is prime Lily 2.0, growing up without the heavy-handed, 2D 'maturity'; it's a knowing ode to early love and all the uncertainty, excitement and irrationality that goes along with it".[7]

Commercial performance

The single debuted at sixty-four on the UK Singles Chart in the issue of 22 November 2009 and rose to forty-nine the next week. the song entered the top forty on the 6th December 2009 at number thirty-nine.[8]

Music video

The music video for "Who'd Have Known" captures Allen as an obsessed fan of Elton John. It starts off with her character lying in bed, watching Elton John's concert on television, while DVDs and magazines portraying him are scattered throughout her room, with a big poster of him on her wall.[9] John, portrayed by an actor, receives a letter from the singer declaring her love, accompanied by a badly photoshopped picture of the two of them, but ignores it. Upon exiting his home, he gets in a car to discover that Allen is in fact the driver. She locks the car doors, kidnaps him, and takes him to her home, where she ties him to a chair.[9] There, she plays the piano, drinks wine, skims magazines, hugs him, makes him eat and draws a portrait of him. Afterwards, she puts a telephone to his ear and makes him say "I want you to know that I have fallen deeply in love with Lily" to an unknown receiver.[9] Afterwards, they both sit on the sofa, watching John perform at the piano on TV. As Allen falls asleep, he manages to wriggle free from the tied ropes on his feet. The video ends with John taking a final glance at Allen asleep before escaping from the building and running off.[9]

Track listing

  1. "Who'd Have Known" — 3:51
  2. "Who'd Have Known" (Instrumental) — 3:48
  1. "Who'd Have Known" — 3:48
  2. "Who'd Have Known" (Instrumental) — 3:51
  3. "The Fear" (Death Metal Disco Scene Vocal Remix) — 5:42

Credits and personnel

Charts

Chart (2009) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[12] 54
Dutch Tipparade (Bubbling Under)[13] 4
UK Singles Chart[8] 39

References

  1. ^ Harmsworth, Andrei. "Lily admits: I ripped off Take That". Metro (Associated Metro Limited). Associated Newspapers Ltd. http://www.metro.co.uk/fame/article.html?in_article_id=217346&in_page_id=7. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  2. ^ a b Skinner, James (2009-02-03). "Review/Lily Allen - It's Not Me, It's You/Releases". Drowned in Sound. http://drownedinsound.com/releases/13956/reviews/4136186. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  3. ^ "Who'd Have Known by Lily Allen Song Facts". Songfacts. http://www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=14214. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  4. ^ a b "Lily Allen: Who'd Have Known Sheet Music". musicroom.com. Music Sales. http://www.musicroom.com/se/ID_No/0545626/details.html. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  5. ^ Rosen, Jody (2009-02-04). "It's Not Me, It's You Review". Rolling Stone Magazine. Jann Wenner. http://www.rollingstone.com/reviews/album/25574875/review/25885625/its_not_me_its_you. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  6. ^ McCormick, Neil (2009-02-22). "Lily Allen – It's Not Me, It's You: Pop CD of the week review". The Daily Telegraph. Telegraph Media Group. http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/culturecritics/neilmccormick/4317076/Lily-Allen---Its-Not-Me-Its-You-Pop-CD-of-the-week-review.html. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  7. ^ Dombal, Ryan. "Album Review: Lily Allen: It's Not Me, It's You". Pitchfork Media. pitchfork.com. http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/12662-its-not-me-its-you/. Retrieved 2009-12-19. 
  8. ^ a b "Lily Allen - Who'd Have Known Music Charts". acharts.us. http://acharts.us/song/52035. Retrieved 2009-11-23. 
  9. ^ a b c d "Lily Allen - Who'd Have Known". 95.8 Capital FM. Global Radio. http://www.capitalfm.com/music-showbiz/music/music-videos/lily-allen-whod-have-known/. Retrieved 2009-10-18. 
  10. ^ "Lily Allen - Who'd Have Known". SwissCharts.com. Hung Medien. http://swisscharts.com/showitem.asp?interpret=Lily+Allen&titel=Who'd+Have+Known&cat=s. Retrieved 2009-10-11. 
  11. ^ http://itunes.apple.com/gb/album/whod-have-known-ep/id340237589
  12. ^ http://pandora.nla.gov.au/pan/23790/20100105-0000/issue1033.pdf
  13. ^ Megacharts. "Dutch Tipparade". Megacharts. http://www.top40.nl/Tipparade.aspx?&jaar=2010&maand=3&week=11. 

External links