Broken Strings

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"Broken Strings"
Single by James Morrison featuring Nelly Furtado
from the album Songs for You, Truths for Me
B-side "Say It All Over Again"
Released 8 December 2008
Format CD single, digital download
Genre Pop rock
Length 4:14
Label Polydor
Writer(s) James Morrison, Fraser T Smith, Nina Woodford
Producer(s) Mark Taylor
Certification Gold (RIANZ)[1]

James Morrison singles chronology
"Nothing Ever Hurt Like You"
(2008)
"Broken Strings"
(2008)
"Please Don't Stop The Rain"
(2009)
Nelly Furtado singles chronology
"Win or Lose"
(2008)
"Broken Strings"
(2008)
"Manos al Aire"
(2009)
Music video
"Broken Strings" on YouTube

"Broken Strings" is the third single by British singer-songwriter musician James Morrison from his second studio album, Songs for You, Truths for Me, and was released in December 2008. The song is a duet with Canadian singer-songwriter Nelly Furtado. The single became Morrison's most successful single to date, peaking at number two on the UK Singles Chart in January 2009, as well as in the top ten on many other European charts while topping the charts in Germany and Switzerland. It was featured in episode 16 of series 2 of the American television drama The Vampire Diaries.

When the album was released in Japan in March 2009, "Broken Strings" was re-recorded as a duet with R&B singer Ai replacing Furtado, as a bonus track.[2] A remix of the song, "Broken Strings (Kocky & Trash Remix)," was featured on Ai's album Viva Ai (2009).[3]

Reception

The song received positive reviews from the critics. According to Michael Menachem from Billboard,

Broken Strings offers two of the most vulnerable performances yet from each artist, venting an obvious metaphor for the struggles at the close of a relationship beyond repair. Their voices are richly expressive, harmonizing in an aural marriage as the midtempo ballad quietly builds to an intense climax as they belt: "Oh the truth hurts and lies worse/How can I give anymore when I love you a little less than before?" Producer extraordinaire Mark Taylor energizes "Broken Strings" with just enough accompaniment to showcase the paralyzing performances. Morrison is a staple hitmaker overseas, but in the US, phenomenal singles like "You Give Me Something" and "Wonderful World" were snubbed. Furtado's visibility has already vaulted the song to most-added status at adult top 40. At last, Morrison gets his due.[4]

Girls Aloud performed a cover of the song at their Out of Control Tour in 2009, and JLS performed a cover of the song in their ITV1 Christmas special in 2010, later appearing as the B-Side to their single "Eyes Wide Shut".

Chart performance

"Broken Strings" was released as the second single from Songs for You, Truths for Me. The track was released in November 2008. It entered the UK Singles Chart at number seventy-three and slowly rose for four weeks before, following a performance of the song with Girls Aloud on The Girls Aloud Party, broke into the top ten at number six, giving Morrison his fourth top ten hit. The following week the song rose to a new high, rising to number four on the 2008 Christmas chart. This makes Broken Strings Morrison's most successful single by peak position to date in the UK as, on 11 January 2009 it climbed to number two.[5] In the week ending 30 January, it reached #1 in Germany marking his first #1 in the country and Nelly Furtado's second. On the issue date 21 February 2009 the song reached at number 1 on the European Hot 100 becoming his first number one single on that chart and Furtado's third. In Canada it debuted at #95 on the Canadian Hot 100 and rose to number #41.

In Japan, the version sung with Ai was released to airplay in March 2009, reaching number 19 on the Billboard Japan Hot 100.[6]

It ended up selling 850,000 copies in the UK.

Music video

A music video in support of Morrison's "Broken Strings" made its world premiere on 17 November 2008. The video features Morrison performing the new track with Furtado also appearing in the video. Micah Meisner directed the video. Parts of the video are inspired by the film Paris, Texas, while the reversed explosion is inspired by the film Insignificance. Furtado and Morrison filmed their parts on different days. On the video, Morrison is in a hotel room and Furtado is behind the glass of the room, Morrison starts to sing the song and when Furtado starts to sing her part, behind the glass, things begin to break, such as the guitar, the television and more. When the video is ending, everything that is broken goes back to normal and Furtado disappears.

Formats and track listings

CD single[7]
  1. "Broken Strings" (featuring Nelly Furtado)
  2. "Say It All Over Again"
Maxi-CD single[citation needed]
  1. "Broken Strings" (featuring Nelly Furtado)
  2. "Say It All Over Again"
  3. "Broken Strings" (Live At Air Studios)
  4. "You Make It Real" (Live At Air Studios)
  5. "Broken Strings" (Video)
Promo CD single[8]
  1. "Broken Strings" (Remix) (featuring Nelly Furtado)
  2. "Broken Strings" (featuring Nelly Furtado)

Charts

Charts

Chart (2008/2009)[9] Peak
position
Austrian Singles Chart 2
Belgium Singles Chart (Flanders) 12
Belgium Singles Chart (Wallonia) 1
Canadian Hot 100 41
Danish Singles Chart 4
Dutch Top 40 5
European Hot 100[10] 1
French Singles Chart 6
German Singles Chart[11] 1
Irish Singles Chart 2
Israeli Singles Chart[12] 2
Italian Singles Chart 4
Japan Hot 100[6]
  • "featuring Ai"
19
New Zealand Singles Chart 10
Norwegian Singles Chart 14
Poland (Airplay Chart)[13] 5
Spanish Singles Chart 11
Swedish Singles Chart 5
Swiss Singles Chart 1
UK Singles Chart 2
US Billboard Adult Pop Songs[14] 34

Year-end charts

Chart (2009) Year-end
position
Austrian Singles Chart[15] 34
European Hot 100[16] 9
German Singles Chart 12
Italian Singles Chart[17] 11
Swiss Singles Chart[18] 5
UK Singles Chart 19

Decade-end charts

Chart (2000–2009) Peak
position
UK Top 100 Songs of the Decade[19] 63

Certifications

Country Certifications
(sales thresholds)
Germany Gold[20]
Switzerland Gold[21]

Preceded by
"Hot n Cold" by Katy Perry
German Singles Chart number-one-single
30 January 2009 – 5 March 2009
Succeeded by
"Irgendwas bleibt" by Silbermond
Swiss Singles Chart number-one-single
15 February 2009 – 7 March 2009
European Hot 100 number-one-single
21 February 2009 – 6 March 2009
Succeeded by
"Poker Face" by Lady Gaga
Preceded by
"Right Round" by Flo Rida featuring Ke$ha
Belgian (Wallonia) Singles Chart number-one-single
2 May 2009 – 8 May 2009
Succeeded by
"C'est dit" by Calogero

References

  1. Radioscope: New Zealand Gold Certification
  2. "[CD] ソングス・フォー・ユー / ジェイムス・モリソン" [Songs for You / James Morrison]. Neowing (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 September 2012. 
  3. "[CD] VIVA A.I. [通常盤] / AI". Neowing (in Japanese). Retrieved 11 September 2012. 
  4. "UK singles chart". Chartstats. Archived from the original on 2012-07-23. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
  5. 6.0 6.1 "Japan Billboard Hot 100". Billboard Japan. 16 March 2009. Retrieved 11 September 2012. 
  6. "Broken Strings CD single". Discogs.com. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
  7. Broken Strings Promo CD single
  8. Steffen Hung. "James Morrison feat. Nelly Furtado - Broken Strings". hitparade.ch. Retrieved 2012-02-08. 
  9. http://www.billboard.com/#/charts/european-hot-100?chartDate=2009-02-21
  10. Steffen Hung (2009-01-30). "Deutsche Charts - Singles Top 10 30.01.2009". germancharts.com. Retrieved 2012-02-08. 
  11. "Media Forest: Airplay chart". mediaforest.biz. 
  12. "Nielsen Music Control". Archived from the original on 2009-02-03. 
  13. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/james-morrison-mn0000915816/awards
  14. "Austria Top 40 - oe3.ORF.at". Charts.orf.at. Retrieved 2012-06-20. 
  15. http://www.billboard.com/charts/year-end/2009/european-hot-100-singles
  16. "FIMI - Federazione Industria Musicale Italiana - Ricerche e dati di mercato". Fimi.it. 2010-01-19. Retrieved 2010-12-18. 
  17. Steffen Hung. "Schweizer Jahreshitparade 2009". hitparade.ch. Retrieved 2012-02-08. 
  18. Radio 1 Official Chart of the Decade, as broadcast on BBC Radio 1 on Tuesday 29 December 2009, presented by Nihal
  19. "Gold-/Platin-Datenbank ('Broken Strings')" (in German). Bundesverband Musikindustrie. 
  20. Steffen Hung. "Die Offizielle Schweizer Hitparade und Music Community". Hitparade.ch. Retrieved 2012-02-08. 

External links

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