Begging You

"Begging You" is a song by The Stone Roses, released as the final single before their break-up a year later, and was the third single from the album Second Coming. "Begging You" was released in the UK and Australia, peaking at #15 on the UK Singles Chart.

"Begging You"
Single by The Stone Roses
from the album Second Coming
Released30 October 1995
Recorded1993-1994
(Written 1993)
GenreMadchester, alternative dance, Britpop
Length4:52
LabelGeffen
Songwriter(s)Ian Brown, John Squire
Producer(s)Simon Dawson, Paul Schroeder
The Stone Roses singles chronology
"Ten Storey Love Song"
(1995)
"Begging You"
(1995)
"All for One"
(2016)

"Begging You" was a loud cacophonous track with heavy drum beats, soaring guitars, pulsing bass and apocalyptic lyrics. John Squire said that the song was loosely based on material from Public Enemy's Fear of a Black Planet. The song also contains many references to Aesop's Fables.

The song was used on the Boys (1996) film's soundtrack. In 2010, it was used by the BBC for its MotoGP coverage.

Background and composition

"Begging You" was inspired by the group's memory of a dark turn of events in Manchester's hedonistic club scene, where ravers would take too many drugs and drugs would become adulterated as "dealers try to maximise profit margins," leading to the emergence of drug gangs. Ian Brown explained, "too many people take one too many." He described the song as "like when you're in a club and everything's beautiful and you're E'd up, and you've got some voice going in your ear saying how can they get you a gun or an ounce of this and that."[1]

Aside from Squire's guitar figure, which has been described as musical punctuation, the music sits at the bottom end, with a "deep, heavy repeated riff" from Mani and Reni. The rhythmic lyrics feature references to Aesop's Fables: "The fly on the coach wheel told me that he got it / And he knew what to do with it / Everybody saw it / Saw the dust that he made."[2]

Cover artwork

John Squire designed the "Begging You" cover with the insides of floppy disks. The disks were supposedly used to teach Squire how to use samplers and sequencers for the track. Squire found the process too complicated and decided to smash the disks and use them for a piece of art instead.

Squire took the insides of the disks and set them in plaster. He arranged them in a grid motif and painted the piece with colours "borrowed" from an Edgar Degas painting.

Critical reception

When Second Coming was released, Select invited several "experts, Roses associates and over-opinionated pundits" to review the album's songs. Radio DJ Mark Radcliffe described "Begging You" as a great song that resembled "the Mondays meets 'The White Album'," while presenter Tracey MacLeod praised the song's techno style "only done with real instruments" and felt it was "like a Steppenwolf for the '90s," and Tricky described it as "wicked."[3]

Writer Simon Reynolds called "Begging You" the "most thrilling track" on Second Coming. Describing it as a "hyperkinetic rock/techno fusion of ballistic blues riffs and looped beats," and highlighting the churning groove and "turbine-roar" guitar, he felt the song accurately simulates "the panic rush of an E'd-up raver wondering how and why the rave dream's dying all around him".[1] David Pollock of The Guardian named it among the Stone Roses' ten best songs in 2016, saying "it still sounds fresher than most of its contemporaries," writing: "It is to drum and bass what the BeatlesTomorrow Never Knows was to acid house."[2] NME called the song a "high-speed dancefloor dogfight,"[4] while Louder Than War writer John Robb called it an indie dance track with a "disturbed helter skelter, pile driving, neo-industrial nature" that made it ideal for remixing.[5]

Music video

The music video for "Begging You" features a scantily clad female dance troupe wearing masks of the band members' faces, and scenes of the band performing live, intercut with archival film footage of traditional folk dances from various cultures around the globe.

Track listing

12" vinyl (Geffen GEFST 22060)
  1. Begging You (Album Version) (4:52)
  2. Begging You (Chic Mix) (5:32)
  3. Begging You (Cox's Ultimatum Mix) (6:33)
  4. Begging You (Stone Corporation Vox) (6:24)
Cassette (Geffen GFSC 22060)
  1. Begging You (Album Version) (4:52)
  2. Begging You (Chic Mix) (5:32)
CD (Geffen GEFSTD 22060)
  1. Begging You (Album Version) (4:52)
  2. Begging You (Lakota Mix) (7:48)
  3. Begging You (Stone Corporation Vox) (6:24)
  4. Begging You (Chic Mix) (5:32)
  5. Begging You (Young American Primitive Remix) (5:25)
Australian Tour Edition CD (Geffen GEFDM 22061)
  1. Begging You (Album Version) (4:52)
  2. Begging You (Lakota Mix) (7:48)
  3. Begging You (Stone Corporation Vox) (6:24)
  4. Begging You (Chic Mix) (5:32)
  5. Begging You (Young American Primitive Remix) (5:25)
  6. Begging You (Radio Edit Version) (3:48)
Promo CD (Geffen WGSTD 22060)
  1. Begging You (Radio Edit) (3:48)
  2. Begging You (Chic Edit) (3:45)
Promo 12" vinyl 1 (Geffen WGFST 22060)
  1. Begging You (Stone Corporation Vox) (6:24)
  2. Begging You (Cox's Ultimatum Mix) (6:34)
  3. Begging You (Overworld Mix) (6:31)
  4. Begging You (Lakota Mix) (7:48)
Promo 12" vinyl 2 (Geffen WGFSX 22060)
  1. Begging You (Album Version) (4:52)
  2. Begging You (Chic Mix) (5:32)
  3. Begging You (Stone Corporation Dub) (5:46)
  4. Begging You (Young American Primitive Remix) (5:25)

References

  1. Reynolds, Simon (1999). Generation Ecstasy: Into the World of Techno and Rave Culture. Routledge. pp. 108–109. ISBN 0-415-92373-5.
  2. Pollock, Dave (15 June 2016). "Stone Roses – 10 of the best". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  3. "Is This What You Wanted". Select. February 1995. pp. 66–75. Retrieved 15 May 2019 via Select Magazine Website.
  4. "Album A&E – The Stone Roses, 'Second Coming'". NME. 31 March 2011. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
  5. Robb, John (4 October 2011). "Stone Roses 'Second Coming' album re-evaluated". Louder Than War. Retrieved 15 May 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.