Open Your Heart (M People song): Difference between revisions
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| Released = 23 January 1995 |
| Released = 23 January 1995 |
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| Format = [[7" single]], [[12"|12" maxi]]<br/>CD single, [[cassette single|cassette]] |
| Format = [[7" single]], [[12"|12" maxi]]<br/>CD single, [[cassette single|cassette]] |
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| Recorded = 1994 |
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| Length = 3:41 |
| Length = 3:41 |
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| Genre = [[House music|House]] |
| Genre = [[House music|House]] |
Revision as of 16:18, 3 May 2016
This article needs additional citations for verification. (March 2011) |
"Open Your Heart" | |
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Song | |
B-side | "Remixes" |
"Open Your Heart" is the eleventh overall single from British band M People. It is the second single from their third album Bizarre Fruit (1994). Written by Mike Pickering and Paul Heard. Produced by M People. It was released on 23 January 1995. The song peaked at number nine on the UK Singles Chart.
Background
Hot on the heels of their single "Sight for Sore Eyes" and a Top 5 album Bizarre Fruitand a sold out UK Tour, M People released this single in a slight reshuffle, as "Search for the Hero" was meant to be the second single but the band were re-editing the Bizarre Fruit version to a more radio friendly edit so "Open Your Heart" was released instead. The band had been on holiday together over the New Year break in Grenada, while dance mixes of this single had been released early and on UK radio, Pete Tong had been rotating several mixes on BBC Radio 1.
Formats
This single was the first M People single to be available on two CD formats. CD1 and the 12" maxi were released on 23 January 1995 and CD2 was released on 30 January 1995 and was only available in the UK and contained the very sought after E-Smoove remix of Sight for Sore Eyes.
Chart Performance
The single entered the chart outside the Top 10 at number 11, but ever growing airplay and the release of the exclusive second CD meant that sales surged from 63,000 copies in its first week to 78,000 copies in its second. The single climbed from number 11 into the Top 10 at number 9 where it peaked, providing the band with their seventh consecutive top 10 hit in just two years since the release of How Can I Love You More. It spent in total four weeks in the top 10 and a total seven weeks on the Singles Chart.
The Bizarre Fruit album also underwent a resurgence in sales, re-entering the Album Chart Top 10 at number 8, so the band once again recorded simultaneous single and album Top 10s, being at numbers 9 and 8, respectively in the first week of February 1995 like the last two singles. It also became M People's second single to top the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart in the US in May 1995.
Airplay
Generally, radio support for the single grew relatively slowly, despite being serviced to radio in the first week of 1995, which is traditionally a very quiet time for single releases. Also predecessor Sight for Sore Eyes had remained in the airplay Top 20 two three months after entering. In the three weeks prior to airplay the single entered the chart at No. 195, scaling to number 35 and then moving to number 19. Only after physical release did the single enter the Airplay Top 10 and peak at number 5.
Sight for Sore Eyes re-entered the Airplay 20 at number 20 when Open Your Heart peaked, and so for the first and only time, M People had two singles in the UK Airplay Top 20.
The single stayed in the chart for 13 weeks but peaked lower than any of the other Bizarre Fruit singles; Sight for Sore Eyes: number 2, Search for the Hero: number 1, Love Rendezvous, number 4 and Itchycoo Park, number 3.
Remixes
With four remixes in total across both CD singles, from the likes of Armand Van Helden, Fire Island, Luv Dup and Brothers in Rhythm, "Open Your Heart" had a set of club versions. It also contained an exclusive re-mix of previous single Sight for Sore Eyes done bone by Producers: E-Smoove. For the first time, specifically for a remix, Heather went back into the recording studio for Brothers in Rhythm to re-sing both the verses and chorus in a different arrangement. The band had done all this during the promotion of "Sight for Sore Eyes" in the Autumn of 1994.
Artwork
The artwork for the single is a heart shaped tin can that half opened against a caustic bronze background. Photographed by Jason Tozer, it continues the metal artwork theme as seen on the artwork of previous single Sight for Sore Eyes with the corrugated metal sheets and the barbed-wire pear on the artwork of the Bizarre Fruit album.
Live
They also performed this song in a stripped down acoustic version on various occasions, most notable when they performed their M People special with Jools Holland in March 1998.
Music Video
The video was filmed over two days: 25/26 November 1994, before the Bizarre Fruit tour kicked off and was the most expensive video done to that point. Produced by Matthew Amos, this more adventurous offering showed the band in an elevator moving between floors and watching clubbers come in and out of the sliding doors exiting onto another dancefloor. Band members Mike Pickering, Paul Heard, and Shovell are in amongst the crowd dancing while Heather stands still singing in a red Oriental-style dress on the other side of the viewing glass, as people dance around her and then leave or even disappear as quickly as they arrived. As the video continues, the camera is continuously panning from right to left encircling the body of the elevator moving from the front where you can see the people dancing to round to the back where you can see the mechanisms in the lift shaft.
Other promotion
With two dance singles lifted off Bizarre Fruit and a European Tour beckoning, M People were nominated for the category Best British Dance Act at the 1995 Brit Awards for the second time. They won. They also performed with Best UK Male Artist winner Sting on his classic "If You Love Somebody Set Them Free". The band went on to promote the album in Switzerland, Denmark, Holland Italy, Norway and Greece as well as Sweden and Germany for three months.
Charts
Chart (1995) | Peak Position |
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Australia (ARIA)[1] | 25 |
Belgium (VRT Top 30 Flanders)[2] | 30 |
Germany (Media Control Charts)[1] | 54 |
New Zealand (RIANZ)[1] | 21 |
Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[1] | 36 |
United Kingdom (The Official Charts Company) | 9 |
References
- ^ a b c d ""Moving on Up", in various singles charts". Swedishcharts. Retrieved 12 January 2012.
- ^ Belgian peak
External links