"Pure and Simple" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Hear'Say | ||||
from the album Popstars | ||||
B-side | "Bridge over Troubled Water" | |||
Released | 12 March 2001 | |||
Studio | Mayfair, The Strongroom (London, England) | |||
Length | 3:47 | |||
Label | Polydor | |||
Songwriter(s) | ||||
Producer(s) | Jiant | |||
Hear'Say singles chronology | ||||
|
"Pure and Simple" is a song by British pop group Hear'Say, the winners of the UK version of Popstars . It was a cover of the original version recorded three years earlier by British-Dutch girl group Girl Thing, who were dropped from BMG before the song was given to Hear'Say. It was written by Pete Kirtley, Tim Hawes, and Betty Boo (under her real name, Alison Clarkson). The song was released on 12 March 2001 as the lead single from Hear'Say's debut studio album, Popstars (2001). The B-side is a cover of Simon & Garfunkel's "Bridge over Troubled Water".
"Pure and Simple" debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart after selling 550,000 copies in its first week, which, at the time, made it the fastest-selling debut single of all time in the United Kingdom. It spent a total of three weeks at the top and has sold over 1.08 million copies in the UK. As of 2012, it is the seventh biggest-selling debut single of the 21st century in that country. The song also topped the New Zealand Singles Chart for five weeks and reached number three in Ireland.
This section needs additional citations for verification .(October 2021) |
The song was co-written by Pete Kirtley, Tim Hawes and Betty Boo (under her real name of Alison Clarkson); however, nearly 14 years after the song was released, Linzi Martin of the band Girl Thing made the assertion that she was responsible for the majority of the song's composition, having written the verses after Pete Kirtley (her then boyfriend) had brought the chorus of the track to her as a gift. In the 2014 series of The Big Reunion, other members of the band including Michelle Barber recall the band being present and contributing to the song, but none received credit as co-writers. Girl Thing then found out, after the song was written, that their manager Chris Herbert (who also managed Hear'Say) had given the song to the newer band as their debut single, an act that upset Girl Thing. [1] Band member Nikki Stuart described the incident as "digging the knife in."
Many critics noted that the song had a distinct resemblance to Oasis's "All Around the World" and All Saints' "Never Ever". [2] [3] BBC Radio 1 DJ Chris Moyles even recorded a parody version of "Pure and Simple" that included the song lyrics from these two songs. [4] Despite this, Noel Gallagher took no legal action due to his own self-confessed borrowings from other artists. [5] The song and band were also criticised by several contemporary musical acts at the time, including Stereophonics, David Gray, and Blur. [1]
"Pure and Simple" was released on 12 March 2001 in the United Kingdom and received a continental European release in April 2001. [6] [7] On 18 March 2001, "Pure and Simple" debuted at number one on the UK Singles Chart. It sold 160,000 copies during its first day on sale and 549,823 copies during its first week, becoming the fastest-selling debut single of all time in the UK, [1] [8] a record beaten a year later by Will Young, the winner of the first series of Pop Idol , with his debut single "Evergreen" / "Anything Is Possible". [9] It was also the third-fastest-selling single in UK chart history at that point, behind "Do They Know It's Christmas? by Band Aid and "Candle in the Wind 1997" by Elton John. [10] The song spent a total of three weeks at the top of the UK chart. [11]
"Pure and Simple" sold 1.07 million copies in 2001, making it that year's second best-selling single. It was beaten only by Shaggy's "It Wasn't Me", which sold 80,000 copies more. [12] By the time Hear'Say split up in 2002, the song had been certified double platinum for sales of over 1.2 million copies, [13] making it one of the few singles to achieve that feat during the 2000s. It is also one of only 167 singles ever to sell 1 million copies in the UK, and has sold over 1.09 million as of November 2016. [14] "Pure and Simple" is the seventh biggest-selling debut single of the 21st century in the UK, [9] the second biggest seller by a mixed-gender group [14] and the UK's 96th best-selling song of all time. [15] The song was also a number-one hit in New Zealand, where it topped the RIANZ Singles Chart for five consecutive weeks in July and August 2001, earning a gold certification for selling over 25,000 copies. [16] [17]
UK CD single [18]
UK cassette single [19]
European maxi-CD and Australasian CD single [16] [20]
| UK DVD single [21]
|
Credits are lifted from the Popstars album booklet. [22]
Studios
Personnel
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
New Zealand (RMNZ) [17] | Gold | 5,000* |
United Kingdom (BPI) [32] | 2× Platinum | 1,090,000 [14] |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
United Kingdom | 12 March 2001 |
| Polydor | [6] |
Europe | April 2001 | CD | [7] | |
Australia | 7 May 2001 | [33] | ||
United States | 5 June 2001 | Universal | [34] |
"Pure and Simple" was covered by America's Got Talent winner Bianca Ryan for her self-titled debut album in 2006.
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Peter Edward Kirtley is an English songwriter, record producer and music entrepreneur. He has produced over 200 records worldwide with sales exceeding 15 million and 100 million streams, including seven number-one hit singles worldwide, tracks on seven number-one albums, eight UK top-ten hits and thirty-five top-forty hits in Europe. He has written and/or produced for artists such as Tiësto, the Sugababes, Armin Van Buuren, Hear'Say, Newton Faulkner, Mutya Buena, Boyzone, Peter Andre, Lee Ryan, Heather Small, Kim Wilde and Alexander O'Neal. His production collaborations include Ryan Tedder, Guy Chambers and Stargate and metaverse music collaborations include Izzy Bizu and Nina Nesbitt.
Popstars (UK) is a British reality television show produced for ITV that aired for two series. The first series, Popstars, aimed to find five singers to form a new pop group. During the second series, Popstars: The Rivals, two music groups were formed to compete for the Christmas number-one single in the United Kingdom.
Popstars is a reality music competition series that was broadcast on ITV in early 2001. It was the first British series of the international Popstars franchise and was billed as a documentary on the formation of a modern pop group. The programme began with audition rounds of aspiring singers performing covers of classic songs before a panel of judges. The best performers were selected to come to London for further rounds of auditions. Over the weeks, the judges eliminated various singers from the auditions until just a few singers were left in contention. In the final weeks, five contestants were chosen by the judges to form the new pop group Hear'Say. The programme then showed the group recording and promoting their first single, documenting their first ventures into the music industry.
Popstars is the debut album by British pop group Hear'Say, formed through the ITV television show Popstars. It was released in the United Kingdom on 26 March 2001. Hear'Say worked with a number of British and Scandinavian producers, including Stargate, and Quiz & Larossi. The album drew comparisons to similarly co-ed pop groups such as S Club 7 and Steps.
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