Alanis Morissette You Oughta Know Single

1995 single by Alanis Morissette

1995 single by Alanis Morissette

"You lot Oughta Know"
You Oughta Know single.jpg
Unmarried by Alanis Morissette
from the album Jagged Little Pill
B-side
  • "You Oughta Know" (The Jimmy the Saint Blend)
  • "Perfect" (acoustic version)
  • "Wake Upwards"
Released July 6, 1995 (1995-07-06) [1]
Recorded June 1994 – Feb 1995[two]
Genre
  • Alternative rock
  • post-grunge
Length 4:09
Label
  • Maverick
  • Reprise
Songwriter(southward)
  • Alanis Morissette
  • Glen Ballard
Producer(s) Glen Ballard
Alanis Morissette singles chronology
"(Change Is) Never a Waste matter of Time"
(1993)
"You Oughta Know"
(1995)
"Hand in My Pocket"
(1995)
Music video
"You Oughta Know" on YouTube

"You Oughta Know" is a vocal by Canadian vocaliser Alanis Morissette, released as the lead single from her third studio album, Jagged Little Pill (1995) on July half dozen, 1995. After releasing two studio albums, Morissette left MCA Records Canada and was introduced to manager Scott Welch. Morissette began working on new music after moving from her hometown of Ottawa to Toronto, only made picayune progress. In Los Angeles, she met producer Glen Ballard, with whom she wrote songs including "You lot Oughta Know".

"You Oughta Know" signaled Morissette's departure from bubblegum popular to culling rock, and features guitarist Dave Navarro and bassist Flea of Cherry Hot Chili Peppers. It outperformed the label'south expectations and received positive reviews. After the influential Los Angeles modern rock radio station KROQ-FM began playing it, the single reached the top x in Canada, Australia and the United States. It was a multiformat hit in several United states of america genre charts, and fabricated the elevation 40 in Belgium, Iceland, holland, New Zealand, Sweden and the United Kingdom.

A music video was directed by Nick Egan. The single was added in the set listing for Morissette'south 1995 world bout; since so, it has been included in her albums MTV Unplugged (1999), Feast on Scraps (2002), and The Collection, besides as 1997 Grammys and the MTV Unplugged compilation albums. It has received numerous accolades; in 1996, the single was nominated for iii Grammy Awards, winning the awards for Best Stone Song and All-time Female Rock Vocal Performance.

Background [edit]

In 1991, MCA Records Canada released Morissette's debut studio album Alanis, which went platinum in Canada.[3] This was followed by her second album, Now Is the Time, but information technology was a commercial failure, selling only a petty more than half the copies of her first album.[4] [5] With her ii-album deal with MCA Records Canada complete, Morissette was left without a major characterization contract. In 1993, Morissette's publisher Leeds Levy at MCA Music Publishing introduced her to manager Scott Welch.[6] Welch told HitQuarters he was impressed by her "spectacular voice", her character and her lyrics. At the fourth dimension she was all the same living with her parents. Together they decided it would be best for her career to move to Toronto and outset writing with other people.[6]

Subsequently graduating from loftier school, Morissette moved from Ottawa to Toronto.[4] Her publisher funded part of her evolution and when she met producer and songwriter Glen Ballard, he believed in her talent enough to allow her use his studio.[4] [6] The two wrote and recorded Morissette's first internationally released album, Jagged Fiddling Pill, and by the spring of 1995, she had signed a bargain with Maverick Records. According to Welch, every label they had approached had passed on Morissette apart from Maverick.[half-dozen]

Recording and mix [edit]

Ballard met Morissette on March 8, 1994, after his publishing company matched them upward.[2] According to Ballard, the connection was "instant", and within 30 minutes of meeting each other, they had begun experimenting with different sounds in Ballard's home studio in San Fernando Valley, California.[seven] Ballard likewise alleged to Rolling Stone, "I just connected with her as a person, and, near parenthetically, it was like 'Wow, you're nineteen?' She was and so intelligent and fix to have a chance on doing something that might have no commercial awarding. Although there was some question virtually what she wanted to do musically, she knew what she didn't want to practise, which was anything that wasn't accurate and from her eye."[viii]

"You Oughta Know" was co-written by Morissette and Ballard. Morissette stated that she wrote the song from her "hidden": "I wasn't aware of what was coming out of me. I'd get into the booth when the ink wasn't even dry and sing. I'd mind the next day and not really remember it."[ix] The demo was recorded on November 28, 1994, and additional vocals were recorded on November 30. Initial rhythm recording began with Los Angeles engineer Chris Fogel on December 1, 1994. Matt Laug played drums and Lance Morrison played bass. On December five, Benmont Tench of Tom Footling and the Heartbreakers recorded Hammond organ. Boosted guitars were recorded on December 9.

In early 1995, LA producer Jimmy Boyle recruited guitarist Dave Navarro and bassist Flea of the Scarlet Hot Chili Peppers to play on the track.[10] According to Navarro, "In that location were no guide tracks, nosotros just had the vocal to piece of work from.... and we basically jammed until we found something we were both happy with. Alanis was happy too."[11] Flea said, "When I first heard the rail, it had a unlike bassist and guitarist on it; I listened to the bassline and thought, 'That'southward some weak shit!' Information technology was no flash and no nail! But the vocal was strong, so I just tried to play something good."[12]

Two mixes of the vocal announced on Jagged Little Pill. Track 2 was mixed by Chris Fogel, and is the about widely known version of the song. Rail 13 is the "Jimmy the Saint Alloy" and was mixed by Jimmy Boyle and it was just used in the original music video from 1995, replaced in 2022 past the Chris Fogel mix.

Lyrical interpretation [edit]

Morissette has never publicly identified a person as the ex-boyfriend portrayed in the song. In 2008, she said,

Well, I've never talked almost who my songs were about and I won't, because when I write them they're written for the sake of personal expression. So with all due respect to whoever may run across themselves in my songs, and it happens all the time, I never really annotate on it because I write these songs for myself, not other people.[13]

Withal, in comments made on different occasions, actor-comedian Dave Coulier has alternatively admitted to[14] [15] and denied[16] being the bailiwick of the vocal. In 1997, the Boston Herald reported that Coulier "admitted the lines are very close to abode. Especially the one about 'an older version of me' and bugging him [Coulier] 'in the centre of dinner.'"[17] Coulier's former television co-star Bob Saget said in one interview that he was nowadays when Morissette made that call during dinner.[xviii]

Other celebrities have been rumoured to exist the lover in the vocal, including: Mike Peluso, hockey player for the New Jersey Devils;[17] Matt LeBlanc, the actor who appeared in the video for Morissette's single "Walk Away" in 1991;[17] and Leslie Howe, a musician and the producer of Morissette's first two albums in the early 1990s.[17]

Release and reception [edit]

Maverick Records released Jagged Little Pill internationally in 1995. The album was expected only to sell plenty for Morissette to make a follow-upward, but the situation changed apace when KROQ-FM, an influential Los Angeles modernistic rock radio station, began playing "You Oughta Know", which was released as the album's get-go single.[19] The song instantly garnered attending for its scathing, explicit lyrics.[4]

Upon release "You lot Oughta Know" was met with positive reviews from critics. Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic praised the song's "vengeful" lyrics and stated that the song propelled the album'due south success and encouraged the public to embrace the "women in rock" movement.[20] Similarly David Browne of Entertainment Weekly praised the single's lyrical content, calling them "spiteful and seething" continuing to state that Morissette was able to plow "jealous bile into something worth hearing."[21] Music & Media commented, "Jeez, this woman is really cross. Her human being has walked away with 'another', and she can't hide that jealousy, which is stirred by a hateful beat and an aggressively rocking wah guitar."[22] British mag Music Week rated it iii out of v, adding, "The Canadian songstress shows startling maturity for her years, and this debut single from her album Jagged Little Pill is made all the stronger past guests Flea and Dave Navarro of the Chili Peppers."[23]

"You Oughta Know" was ranked at number twelve on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 90's in Dec 2007.[24] In 1996, the single was nominated for three Grammy Awards, winning the awards for Best Rock Vocal and Best Female Stone Song Performance simply losing the Grammy Award for Vocal of the Twelvemonth to Seal'southward song "Buss from a Rose". Additionally, the song entered About.com'south "Peak 10 Alanis Morissette Lyrics" list at number iii, with Neb Lamb picking the lyrics, "And every time you speak her proper noun, Does she know how yous told me, You'd hold me until you lot died, Till you died, but you're still alive" equally the best.[25]

Commercial performance [edit]

Morissette held the record for longest run by a woman atop the Billboard Alternative Songs chart, which was afterward surpassed by Lorde's "Royals" in 2013.

The song was but a pocket-size hit in Morissette's native Canada at starting time, initially reaching number 20 on the RPM Elevation Singles chart and number 21 on the RPM Rock/Alternative chart concurrently with its peak chart performance in the U.s.a.; it so began to pass up on the charts before having a late rally in the fall to attain a new acme chart position of number six in the week of October 16, the week later the album'southward second single "Hand in My Pocket" debuted on the chart. Music journalists have attributed the song's uneven chart performance to resistance from Canadian radio programmers,[26] because the aggressive, hard rock nature of the song marked a dramatic shift from Morissette's established image as a teen trip the light fantastic-pop star.[26] Even in Morissette's ain hometown of Ottawa, most radio stations resisted the song, with contemporary hitting radio stations deeming it too rock-oriented for their formats and rock stations deeming it too trip the light fantastic-pop.[26] It was the only single from the anthology not to hitting number one or two on the Canadian pop charts. Despite the vocal's initially poor chart performance, however, the video reached number 1 on MuchMusic and number three on MusiquePlus in the summertime,[26] and overall anthology sales of Jagged Little Pill were comparable to those in the United States fifty-fifty while the single's performance was faltering.[26]

"Yous Oughta Know" received moderate to major success worldwide. In New Zealand, the song was released twice: in one case every bit a solo single, then as a double A-side with "Ironic" in 1996. The solo release saw the vocal acme at number 25 and stay in the top 50 for 25 nonconsecutive weeks, while the re-release with "Ironic" allowed the song to reach number three. Information technology was certified gold past Recorded Music NZ (RMNZ), for shipments of 15,000 copies.[27] Well-nigh notably, the vocal was a top ten striking in three unlike genre charts in the United states of america, peaking at number iii on the agile rock charts, seven on the gimmicky hit radio charts and number 1 for five weeks on the Billboard Alternative Songs chart, retaining the record for longest run by a woman atop that chart until it was surpassed by Lorde's "Royals" in 2013.[28] In improver, the song was a top ten hit in Australia, and reached the tiptop 40 in Belgium, the Netherlands, and Sweden.

The song saw some success in the Uk, debuting at number seventy six on the week ending of July 25, 1995; over the form of the next few weeks "You lot Oughta Know" rose to fifty three, forty and finally peaked at twenty two. The song held its meridian position for a 2d calendar week earlier falling to number thirty, the song continued to drop on the charts and after eight weeks it brutal off the charts completely.[29]

Music video [edit]

Directed by Nick Egan and produced by Mark Fetterman, the music video for the runway was filmed in the Mojave Desert. In the video, Morissette aggressively runs around the desert landscape and sings into a microphone on a mock-upwardly stage with her then band-members performing – including Taylor Hawkins. Throughout the video, Morissette switches from a short black apparel to a white tank-top and coat, to a blueish silk shirt in the climax – all signifying her change in image.

Promotion [edit]

The single was added in the set list for Morissette's concert bout, Jagged Little Pill World Bout (1995).[30] The song was added to the tour's video album Jagged Little Pill Alive (1997).[xxx] Since then, the song has been included in her albums MTV Unplugged (1999),[31] Banquet on Scraps (2002),[32] and The Collection,[33] every bit well as 1997 Grammys and the MTV Unplugged compilation albums.[34] [35]

Comprehend versions [edit]

"You Oughta Know" has been covered past several artists, such as Britney Spears (left) and Beyoncé (right).

Since the song'south initial release, it has been covered by numerous artists. American musician and parodist "Weird Al" Yankovic utilized a portion of this song for The Alternative Polka, which appeared on his anthology Bad Hair Day, released the twelvemonth later on the song was released. Richard Cheese and Lounge Confronting the Auto covered the vocal in a comedic lounge music mode on their 2005 anthology Aperitif for Destruction.

Britney Spears performed the song during her 2009 The Circus Starring Britney Spears bout.[36] [37] Mike Bruno of Entertainment Weekly wrote, "she rocked it. What better manner to silence the critics than to pace up to the mic, say to hell with information technology all, and spew some of that bile. Hot, confident Britney, alive vocals, a dash of rebellion…"[37] Afterwards a number of Jonathan Coulton'southward fans compared Morissette's encompass of "My Humps" to his cover of "Baby Got Dorsum", he covered "Y'all Oughta Know" himself.[38]

The song was sampled by American R&B vocalizer Beyoncé during her 2009 I Am... Bout,[39] likewise as at the 2010 Grammys[twoscore] and the Glastonbury Festival 2011.[41]

In August 2015, Taylor Swift invited Morissette on stage in Los Angeles to sing the song with her.[42] Many of Swift's fans at the concert, who had been born since the song'southward release, expressed cliffhanger as to her identity. In Slate, Amanda Marcotte suggested it was better they didn't, criticizing the song in the process. "I am happy for these teenagers who don't know who Alanis Morissette is. I envy you, teens," she wrote. "[W]eirdly enough, 'You Oughta Know' was held up in 1995 as some kind of feminist anthem of empowerment, an angry yalp of rebellion from ladies who had enough," she recalled. While she establish nix wrong with that thought in principle, she compared Morissette's perspective in the song to men who lash out at women who they believe accept put them in the "friend zone." "It's still a vocal almost refusing to take no for an answer. This is a 'yeah ways yes' world. There'southward no reason for the teens of this world to know anything nigh Alanis Morissette."[43]

On November 22, 2015, Demi Lovato and Morissette teamed up to perform "You lot Oughta Know" at the 2022 American Music Awards.[44] The functioning was met with critical acclamation and turned out to be "one of the most talked-virtually moments" of the 2022 edition of the awards bear witness.[45] [46] [47]

Rail listing [edit]

CD Single

  1. "You Oughta Know"
  2. "You Oughta Know" (The Jimmy the Saint Blend)
  3. "Perfect" (Acoustic)
  4. "Wake Up"

Personnel [edit]

The following people contributed to "Y'all Oughta Know":[48]

Musicians

  • Alanis Morissette – vocals
  • Glen Ballard – programming
  • Dave Navarro – guitar
  • Flea – bass
  • Benmont Tench – organ
  • Matt Laug – drums

Engineering

  • Chris Fogel – recording and mix
  • Chris Bellman – mastering
  • Jimmy Boyle – additional recording and mix

Charts and certifications [edit]

See also [edit]

  • "The Terrorist Attack", an episode of Curb Your Enthusiasm that includes the identity of the song'southward subject as a joke
  • "Y'all're So Vain", a Carly Simon song with another mystery subject
  • "P.S. I Beloved You", a song performed past Cobie Smulders in character equally "Robin Daggers" Scherbatsky in the eponymous episode of How I Met Your Mother, parodying the controversy of "You lot Oughta Know", including the suspicion that the subject is Dave Coulier.

References [edit]

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Oughta_Know

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