Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before

For the 2003 compilation album, see Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before...
"Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"
Single by The Smiths
from the album Strangeways, Here We Come
B-side "I Keep Mine Hidden"
Released 1987
Format CD, vinyl
Genre Alternative rock
Length 3:32
Label Sire (US)
Writer(s) Morrissey, Johnny Marr
The Smiths singles chronology
"Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me"
(1987)
"Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"
(1987)
"There Is a Light That Never Goes Out"
(1992)

"Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before" is a 1987 song by The Smiths.

Smiths original

The Smiths' song, written by the usual combination of Morrissey and Johnny Marr, came out on the group's 1987 album Strangeways, Here We Come.

The song was originally supposed to be released as a single and a music video was filmed by the director Tim Broad,[1] and opens with a picture of the poet Oscar Wilde hanging on a brick wall, and features scenes of the group-iconic Salford Lads Club and surrounding areas being bicycled through by the lads and friends. Because of a reference to "plan a mass murder" in one lyric it was banned from daytime airplay by the BBC because of the then recent Hungerford massacre, so the band decided not to release it in the UK, however it was released in various other regions including North America, Europe, Australia and Japan.[2]

"Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before" was subsequently included on the compilation album Stop Me and on The Very Best of The Smiths. The song is also included in the music game Rock Band 3.

The cover of the single is a picture of British actor and singer Murray Head from a film still of the 1966 film The Family Way (a movie that would also be the source of the photograph on the cover of I Started Something I Couldn't Finish). There are four different versions of the cover, each tinted a different colour (red, orange, blue and grey) depending on the region.

Track listing

12 " and CD single (Germany, red cover)
No.TitleLength
1."Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"  3:33
2."Work Is a Four-Letter Word"  2:47
3."Girlfriend in a Coma"  2:02
4."I Keep Mine Hidden"  1:57
12" (Netherlands, grey cover and Australia, orange cover)
No.TitleLength
1."Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"  3:33
2."Pretty Girls Make Graves" (early cello version)3:35
3."Some Girls Are Bigger Than Others" (live)5:03
7" (Germany, red cover)
No.TitleLength
1."Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"  3:33
2."Girlfriend in a Coma"  2:02
7" (Netherlands, grey cover and Australia, orange cover)
No.TitleLength
1."Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"  3:33
2."Pretty Girls Make Graves" (early cello version)3:35
7" (North America, blue cover)
No.TitleLength
1."Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before"  3:33
2."I Keep Mine Hidden"  1:57

Mark Ronson version ("Stop Me")

"Stop Me"
Single by Mark Ronson featuring Daniel Merriweather
from the album Version
B-side "No One Knows"
Released 2 April 2007
Format CD, 10" vinyl
Genre Neo soul, funk
Length 3:54
Writer(s) Morrissey
Johnny Marr
Holland-Dozier-Holland
Mark Ronson singles chronology
"Just"
(2006)
"Stop Me"
(2007)
"Oh My God"
(2007)
Daniel Merriweather singles chronology
"NYC Rules"
(2004)
"Stop Me"
(2007)
"Cash in My Pocket"
(2008)

In 2007, the song was re-composed as "Stop Me" with additional lyrics from the song "You Keep Me Hangin' On" by The Supremes by British DJ Mark Ronson featuring Daniel Merriweather on the vocals. Merriweather admitted in an interview with The Guardian that he was not very familiar with the original before he recorded Mark Ronson's revised version. He explained: "Mark said, 'I want you to sing on this – it's my favourite Smiths song,' so I listened to it. I'd heard it once before, but I was never a Smiths fan. But I thought it was beautiful."[3] The song was later released as a single on 2 April 2007 on Columbia Records with the shortened name "Stop Me", and featured on the compilation album Version. The music video, released at the same time as the song, features a man who finds a pair of trainers that control him and force him to run along the motorway near the Blackwall Tunnel. This version was released in the United Kingdom. The international version showed people crying animated tears. Live versions by Mark Ronson and/or Stu Zender featuring Merriweather have appeared on Conan O'Brien (on July 2007), BBC Radio 1 and Jimmy Kimmel Live!).

The single reached number two in the UK Singles Chart, number one in the UK Download Chart and gained considerable praise and reference, as well as controversy from loyal Smiths fans despite its chart success being the highest ever UK chart position for a Smiths song.[4] The music review site ThisisfakeDIY gave the single a 5-star rating, citing that its popularity stemmed from its abstraction from a typical Smiths song, resembling a "sweeping, orchestral pop song with horns to boot … soulful, evocative vocals … a stirring mix".[4] This song was number 80 on Rolling Stone's list of the 100 Best Songs of 2007.[5][6]

It received a mixed review from musicOMH reviewer Jenny Cole, who remarked that the notion of "discoing up a Smiths track" was a "travesty", and queried that "Morrissey would no doubt hate the idea of someone who has previously worked with Christina Aguilera and Robbie Williams" re-composing his songs.[3] However, despite such reservations, the reviewer remarked that despite its composition "in a mad way it works … Electronic, cheery and danceable, it's really not half bad" but that the addition of The Supremes to the song was "just mad".[3]

A slightly shorter edited version (where the lyrics start at the first verse) was released to mainstream radio in October 2007.[7] A remix by Kissy Sell Out features on Ministry of Sound 2008 compilation The Annual. Trance DJ Paul Oakenfold also remixed the song exclusively for his 2007 compilation album Greatest Hits & Remixes. After the win and performance of Ronson at the 2008 edition of the Brit Awards, "Stop Me" climbed as high as number 31 on the iTunes Top 100 and re-entered the UK Top 75 Singles chart at number 51. The song featured prominently in the opening scenes of the premiere of the second half of Nip/Tuck's fifth season. The song featured on the 2013 show reel for Seattle-based b-boy crew, Art of Movement, uploaded by Korean-American singer and member of the crew, Jay Park.[8]

The single also includes a cover version of Queens of the Stone Age's "No One Knows" with vocals by Domino Kirke.

Track listing

  1. "Stop Me"
  2. "Stop Me" (A Chicken Lips Malfunction)
  3. "Stop Me" (Dirty South remix)
  4. "No One Knows"
  1. "Stop Me"
  2. "No One Knows"
  1. "Stop Me"
  2. "No One Knows"

Other versions

Plan B

British rapper/singer Plan B did a cover of the song for Triple J's Like a Version segment. The performance also appeared on the compilation album.

Groove Armada

On 2 May 2007, Groove Armada covered the song in the Live Lounge on BBC Radio 1, with ex-Jamiroquai bassist Stuart Zender on bass. On the Australian network jtv, Plan B performed a live acoustic version for the segment "Like a Version" and after admitting his unfamiliarity with the song until the release of the Mark Ronson cover.

Vision

On their 1996 album, One and the Same, New Jersey hardcore band Vision covered the song as "Stop Me".

References

  1. Zuberi, Nabeel (2001). Sounds English : transnational popular music. Urbana [u.a.]: University of Illinois Press. p. 48. ISBN 978-0252026201.
  2. Smiths, The – Stop Me If You Think You've Heard This One Before Discogs
  3. 1 2 3 Cole, Jenny (2007) "Mark Ronson – Stop Me: track review" OMH Media: musicOMH
  4. 1 2 McCaighy, Stuart (2007) "Mark Ronson – Stop Me: Track Review" ThisisfakeDIY: DIY Records
  5. The 100 Best Songs of 2007 Rolling Stone, 11 December 2007; Retrieved 21 December 2007 Archived 30 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine.
  6. Rolling Stone Magazine The 100 Best Songs Of 2007 PopCrunch, 13 December 2007
  7. Mainstream Radio Promo Only, October 2007
  8. Park, Jay. "Art of Movement (2013)". Art of Movement. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.