Something Beautiful
2003 single by Robbie Williams From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Something Beautiful" is a song co-written by English musicians Guy Chambers and Robbie Williams. Originally offered to Welsh singer Tom Jones,[citation needed] it was released as the third single from Williams' fifth studio album, Escapology (2002).[2] The track was issued in Japan on 21 May 2003 and in Europe two months later, in July. "Something Beautiful" reached number three on the UK Singles Chart and peaked within the top 10 in Denmark, Ireland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Romania.
"Something Beautiful" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
![]() | ||||
Single by Robbie Williams | ||||
from the album Escapology | ||||
Released | 21 May 2003 | |||
Studio | Los Angeles, London | |||
Genre | Soul[1] | |||
Length |
| |||
Label | Chrysalis | |||
Songwriter(s) |
| |||
Producer(s) |
| |||
Robbie Williams singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Music video | ||||
"Something Beautiful" on YouTube |
Music video
Summarize
Perspective
The video of the song is influenced by reality shows like Pop Idol, and is one of the few with two different endings. An interactive version of the video was created to run on Sky Digital by weapon7 where viewers could vote through the red button and discover the backstory of the participants. A spokesman for Robbie Williams told the Daily Mirror, "We wanted to find someone with the 'essence' of Robbie to perform the new track in the video – it could be a woman."[3]
At the start of the video, fans from all over Europe try to impress judges during the audition stage of fictional reality show Manufactured Miracles; one of the members on the selection panel is Williams' real-life father Pete Conway. Several contestants are put through to the next round, but only three emerge finalists: actor/singer Peter Caruana from Manchester, and students Rebecca Durrant and Bjorn Wenner from Essex and Hamburg respectively.[4] They are groomed by a choreographer and singing coach, and given makeovers by stylists whilst experiencing the celebrity status lifestyle, with an interview at Capital FM and a stay at a luxury hotel before competing in the live shows, each finalist representing a different stage in Williams' career.
Two endings were filmed. In the first, viewers are asked to vote on Williams' website for whom they thought was the best performer. The second version of the video ends with Peter winning the competition before meeting Williams at a bus stop, the latter reading a newspaper with the headline "Robbie For a Week: Back to Reality for Final Three"—a reference to reality stars abandoned by once-loyal fans and management following brief success.[5] As Peter was unaware he would meet Williams, his surprise was genuine.
Rebecca Durrant, who later became a police officer, told the Sunday Mirror the experience put her off fame stating "After I filmed the video I realised I didn't want to face the pressure, the secrecy, the non-stop filming and constant hair and make-up touchups... the closest I get to singing now is karaoke in my local pub."[6] Similarly, in an interview with the Salford Advertiser, Peter Caruana stated, "I decided it was time to give Robbie a rest – he's been good to me, but enough is enough. In a way I think it has held me back and I really want to get back to treading the boards, because that's what I trained for." He has since featured in commercials for Chicago Town Pizza as a Simon Cowell lookalike.[7]
Track listings
UK and Australasian CD single[8]
UK and Australian DVD single[9][10]
|
UK cassette single[11]
European CD single[12]
Japanese CD single[13]
|
Credits and personnel
Credits are taken from the Escapology album booklet.[14]
Recording
- Recorded in Los Angeles and London
- Mixed at The Record Plant (Los Angeles)
- Mastered at Marcussen Mastering (Los Angeles)
Personnel
- Robbie Williams – writing, lead vocals
- Guy Chambers – writing, piano, Wurlitzer, Hammond organ, production, arrangement
- Katie Kissoon – backing vocals
- Tessa Niles – backing vocals
- Gary Nuttall – backing vocals, electric guitars
- Claire Worrall – backing vocals
- Paul Williams – backing vocals
- Neil Taylor – electric guitars
- Yolanda Charles – bass guitars
- Phil Spalding – bass guitars
- Andy Wallace – Hammond organ
- Jeremy Stacey – drums
- Luís Jardim – percussion
- Dave Bishop – brass
- Simon Gardner – brass
- Neil Sidwell – brass
- Steve Sidwell – brass
- The London Session Orchestra – orchestra
- Gavyn Wright – concertmaster
- Nick Ingman – orchestral arrangement
- Steve Price – orchestral engineering
- Tom Jenkins – assistant orchestral engineering
- Isobel Griffiths – orchestral contracting
- Jim Brumby – programming, additional engineering
- Steve Power – production, mixing
- J.D. Andrew – assistant mixing
- Richard Flack – engineering, programming
- Steve Marcussen – mastering
Charts
Weekly charts
|
Year-end charts
|
Release history
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.