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Fell in Love with a Girl

2002 single by the White Stripes From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fell in Love with a Girl
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"Fell in Love with a Girl" is a song by the American rock duo the White Stripes and the fourth track on their third studio album, White Blood Cells (2001). It was released in January 2002 by XL Recordings. The lyrics were written by Jack White, and the music was composed by the band.

Quick Facts Single by the White Stripes, from the album White Blood Cells ...

"Fell in Love with a Girl" was praised by critics and fans for its upbeat sound and confidence. The song became their first entries on the Alternative Airplay, Bubbling Under Hot 100, and UK singles charts, and was certified gold in the United Kingdom. It was bolstered by the success of its music video, directed by Michel Gondry, which won three awards at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards.

"Fell in Love with a Girl" helped the White Stripes enter the mainstream. It is considered a staple of the band's discography and a seminal work of the garage rock revival of the 2000s. In January 2004, English singer Joss Stone released a cover version that charted internationally. Other artists who have covered or remixed the song include Richard Cheese and "Weird Al" Yankovic.

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Recording

Before writing and composing "Fell in Love with a Girl", Jack and Meg had sought success within the Detroit music scene releasing two albums between 1999 and 2000.[1] The song was then written and composed for the White Stripes' third studio album, White Blood Cells.[2] Though some lyrics on the album consisted of material Jack White had written in the band's early years,[3][4] "Fell in Love with a Girl" was a new song penned for the record in early 2001.[5] It was recorded and mastered at Easley-McCain Recording in Memphis, Tennessee during the album's three production days;[6] Meg White was initially hesitant about rushing the recording process, believing the songs needed more practice.[7]

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Composition

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"Fell in Love with a Girl" is an up-tempo alternative rock and garage punk song and runs for a duration of one minute and fifty seconds.[8] The song is built on a slashing rhythm guitar groove played by Jack, which is set to a high-speed, stuttering beat played by Meg White with thrashing crash cymbals and skipped snare drum patterns.[8] It is written in the time signature of common time, with a fast tempo of 192 beats per minute.[9]

The song opens with Jack singing his lines with a manic vocal delivery at loud volume. His breathless performance exudes visceral intensity and quirky, exaggerated inflections.[8] White's lyricism contains a dense slew of words laced with anxious banter and snappy humor.[8] The musical arrangement comes to an abrupt halt at the last line of each verse.[8] In substitution of a chorus, "Fell In Love with a Girl" features an infectious backing vocal line. After each verse, Jack and Meg incessantly belt a wordless sing-along composed of "ah-ah-ah-ah" harmonizing.[8]

It is composed in the key of B major, while Jack White's vocal range spans from a low of B3 to a high of A4.[9] The song has a basic sequence of B–A–D–E during the introduction and verses and follows F–A–D–E–F–A–F at the refrain as its chord progression.[9]

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Release

White Blood Cells was released through the Sympathy for the Record Industry label in mid 2001,[10] but "Fell in Love with a Girl" would not receive a single release until January 21, 2002, instead by XL Recordings.[11] The track was reissued as a 7-inch vinyl record for Black Friday Record Store Day 2012 on opaque red vinyl by Third Man Records, and later issued on standard black vinyl.

Reception

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The record peaked at number 21 on both the US Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart and the UK Singles Chart. It was also the band's first single to enter the US Modern Rock Tracks chart, peaking at number 12. "Fell in Love with a Girl" was met with widespread critical acclaim. Comparing it to that of the Ramones, Tom Maginnis from AllMusic called it "an attention-grabbing chunk of primal punk rock confection that flames out in a breathless one minute and 50 seconds. ... Surrendering is the only option; to fight against the infectious brutal and relentless energy of "Fell in Love With a Girl" is an exercise in futility."[8]

The May 3, 2007, issue of Rolling Stone magazine listed the song as one of the forty songs that changed the world.[12] In 2011, NME placed it at number 6 on its list "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years".[13] The Times said that the track "mixes the blues with the Pixies."[14] The Village Voice's "Pazz & Jop critics' poll named "Fell in Love with a Girl" the sixth-best song of 2002. Paste, The Guardian, and Stereogum ranked the song number six, number three, and number two, respectively, on their lists of the greatest White Stripes songs.[15][16][17] Paste also included it on their list of "The 50 Best Garage Rock Songs of All Time".[18] Staff at Billboard ranked it one of the best rock love songs.[19]

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Music video

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Background

The music video is a Lego animation directed by Michel Gondry. Gondry's son was featured at the beginning of the video, building Lego blocks. It was shot frame by frame with each frame having the Lego bricks rebuilt, sometimes in a complex manner to seem as if it were an actual shot, and then formed together to give the illusion of motion. The video mostly consists of red, white, and black color. The White Stripes couldn't strike a deal with Lego, so they had to buy a large amount of Lego boxes for the video.[20]

In The Work of Director Michel Gondry interview, Jack also said that the White Stripes contacted the Lego Group in hopes of having a small Lego set packaged with each single of the record, with which one could build a LEGO version of Jack and Meg. The Lego Group refused, saying: "We don't market our product to people over the age of twelve."[21]

Reception

The music video bolstered the success of the single, and received four nominations for Video of the Year, Breakthrough Video, Best Visual Effects, Best Editing at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards, winning the latter three. Entertainment Weekly said that "the images enhance the lyrics...You can take the metaphor even deeper. As with Legos, love and sex can ultimately take whatever form your imagination desires."[22] Entertainment Weekly included it on its end-of-the-decade, "best-of" list, saying, "An idea so simple it's a wonder no one thought of it before 2002: rock & roll Legos!"[23] Pitchfork deemed it the best video of the decade.[24]

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Track listings

More information No., Title ...
More information No., Title ...

Personnel

Personnel are taken from the UK CD1 liner notes.[25]

Charts

More information Chart (2002), Peak position ...

Certifications and sales

More information Region, Certification ...

Release history

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Joss Stone version

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Quick Facts Single by Joss Stone, from the album The Soul Sessions ...

Background

In 2003, English singer Joss Stone covered the song, retitled "Fell in Love with a Boy", for her debut studio album, The Soul Sessions (2003). It was released in the United States on January 12, 2004, as the album's lead single.

Reception

In the United Kingdom, a limited-edition 7-inch single and CD single were issued on January 26, 2004. "Fell in Love with a Boy" debuted and peaked at number 18 on the UK Singles Chart. The song also peaked at number 23 in New Zealand and number 36 in Italy.

The single received mostly positive reviews from critics. Dorian Lynskey of The Guardian raved that "Fell in Love with a Boy" is the best track from The Soul Sessions as well as "the freshest and most deliciously inauthentic."[37] PopMatters reviewer Jason MacNeil commented that Stone gives the song "a groove-riddled, funky hip-shaker that never loses momentum."[38] Rolling Stone said the tune sounded like "a lost Memphis-soul classic."[39] However, Jim Greer of Entertainment Weekly viewed her version as "the only misguided ploy" on the album.[40] Andrew McGregor wrote for BBC Music that it "blends so well into the funky soul landscape that those less familiar with contemporary rock might miss the ironic juxtaposition altogether."[41]

Track listings

  • UK and European CD single[42]
  1. "Fell in Love with a Boy" (radio version)
  2. "Victim of a Foolish Heart" (live at Ronnie Scott's, London, November 25, 2003)
  • UK limited-edition 7-inch single[43]
A. "Fell in Love with a Boy" (album version)
B. "Super Duper Love (Are You Diggin' on Me?) Part 1"
  • European maxi-CD single[44]
  1. "Fell in Love with a Boy" (radio version)
  2. "Victim of a Foolish Heart" (live at Ronnie Scott's, London, November 25, 2003)
  3. "Fell in Love with a Boy" (acoustic version)

Credits

Credits are adapted from the liner notes of The Soul Sessions.[45]

Studios

Personnel

Charts

More information Chart (2004), Peak position ...

Release history

More information Region, Date ...
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Covers and media

References

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