Ive Been on Since 2005 and You Know This Been So Loud Lyrics

1994 single by Dawn Penn

1994 single by Dawn Penn

"You Don't Dearest Me (No, No, No)"
You Don't Love Me (No, No, No) single cover.jpg
Unmarried by Dawn Penn
from the album No, No, No
Released 17 Feb 1994 (1994-02-17)
Genre
  • Rocksteady
  • reggae
  • dancehall
Length 4:37
Label Big Beat
Songwriter(due south)
  • Dawn Penn
  • Bo Diddley
  • Willie Cobbs
Producer(s) Steely & Clevie
Official video
No, No No (Official Video) on YouTube

"Y'all Don't Beloved Me (No, No, No)" is a song by Jamaican recording artist Dawn Penn, released as the first single from her first studio album, No, No, No (1994). The song'south lyrics are credited to Penn, Bo Diddley and Willie Cobbs, and production was handled by Steely & Clevie.

Penn had originally recorded a version of Cobbs' 1960 vocal "Y'all Don't Love Me" in 1967, incorporating elements of its music and lyrics. It is claimed that the Cobbs song was, in turn, based on Diddley's 1955 song "She's Fine, She'southward Mine". Thus, both are credited as songwriters on Penn's recording.[ clarification needed ] In 1994, after a 17-year break from the music industry, she re-recorded a dancehall version of the song retitled "You lot Don't Beloved Me (No, No, No)".

Penn's 1994 version of the vocal became a commercial success worldwide. In the U.k., it peaked at number iii on the UK Singles Chart. The song also reached the top 20 in Republic of austria and Switzerland, and the height forty in the Netherlands and New Zealand. In the The states, the single likewise charted at number 58 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart and at number 42 on the Hot R&B Singles chart. Multiple recording artists have performed embrace versions and sampled "You lot Don't Honey Me (No, No, No)" in their own works. Barbadian singer Rihanna remade the song for her debut studio album, Music of the Dominicus (2005), and American entertainer Beyoncé performed the song on her I Am... World Tour concert tour (2009–10). NME magazine ranked it at number 24 in their listing of the fifty best songs of 1994.[1]

Background [edit]

In Jamaica in 1967, Penn recorded a version of American R&B vocaliser Willie Cobbs's vocal "Y'all Don't Dearest Me", which "she first sang for Studio One.[2] At to the lowest degree i writer claims Cobb had based his vocal on R&B vocalizer Bo Diddley'south 1955 recording "She's Fine, She's Mine".[three] Penn's cover of Cobb'south song was recorded at Kingston's Studio 1 by influential producer Coxsone Dodd.[4] [five] Dodd, who had lived for a while in the United States, imported American rhythm and blues records to play for his sound organisation entertainment businesses.[6] [seven] Penn's song used lyrical and melodic elements of Cobbs' vocal, but was performed in the emerging rocksteady manner – a precursor to reggae.[two] [4] [v] It starts out with a pulsate roll, "then a chugging bass line kicks in and Penn's dreamy vocalization wails":[5]

No no no, yous don't love me and I know at present (2×)
'Cause you left me babe, and I got no place to become now ...

Dawn Penn's "Yous Don't Dearest Me" was a major hit in Jamaica.[four] Based on this success she recorded another songs, such as "Blue Yes Blue" and a reggae cover version of Scottish singer Lulu's "To Sir with Love".[4] Despite her initial success, Penn decided to take a break from singing, which lasted 17 years.[iv] In the late 1980s, after working for banks, auditor agencies, and airlines, she returned to Jamaica in the hopes of reviving her career.[4] In the early 1990s, she re-recorded a version of "You Don't Love Me" with the new title "You Don't Love Me (No, No, No)".[4] The noted Jamaican production team Steely & Clevie produced information technology[iv] [viii] and it featured an updated dancehall arrangement.[4] Songwriting is credited to Penn, Cobbs, and Diddley.[9]

Critical reception [edit]

AllMusic editor Alex Henderson noted that Penn's voice "has held up well over the years, and she'south in mostly good form".[10] Larry Flick from Billboard wrote that Penn's "sultry song presence on this sailing, instantly memorable dancehall jam belies the pensive nature of the vocal's story of lost love. An easy-paced groove chugs along with a hip-hop-ish vibe that could prove accessible to crossover and urban formats."[xi] Dave Sholin from the Gavin Report stated, "Sure, to catch listeners' attending is this unique product from this Jamaican singing sensation."[12] Music writer James Masterton described it as a "haunting reggae ballad" in his weekly Uk chart commentary.[13] Pan-European mag Music & Media commented, "Nutty dreadlocks where art thou? Is existent reggae still existence fabricated, with all those pale-faced pretenders effectually? Yes here, with all the dub production gadgets and all."[xiv] Andy Beevers from Music Week gave the song four out of v, declaring it equally "a reggae masterpiece."[15] Some other editor, Alan Jones said, "This unproblematic lovers rock tune initially fails to brand an impression, but is a real grower."[16]

Paul Ablett from the magazine'due south RM Trip the light fantastic toe Update stated that "this Studio I classic from the golden age of reggae has been brilliantly re-recorded with the ragga production geniuses Steely & Clevie." He added, "Despite digital drum and bass, it recaptures the original magic and once that horn break kicks in, yous'll play it forever – an essential buy if e'er at that place was one."[17] James Hamilton described it as a "gorgeous calmly moaned haunting elementary quondam fashioned Studio 1-style 81bm rock steady reggae swayer".[18] John Kilgo from The Network Forty commented that "it'due south hard to believe that a woman in her early 50's tin can spark such a rasta-rhythm tune. Boasting unique vocals with a grooving beat, "You Don't Love Me (No, No, No)" is sexy and infectious."[19] Charles Aaron from Spin said that producers "quirked-up remake of the 1967 reggae classic made my speakers rumble and swoon when a radio DJ finally wised upwardly. Penn's mesmerizing voice plea is and then precise and cocky-possessed that you figure she'll be fine whether her baby asks her to go down on her knees and pray or not. Inspiration for Luscious Jackson's masterfully strokin' "Daughters of the Kaos."[20]

Nautical chart operation [edit]

In the United States, "You Don't Love Me (No, No, No)" peaked at number 58 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart; it remained on the chart for 12 weeks.[21] Information technology also peaked at number 42 on the Billboard Hot R&B Singles chart,[22] number 41 on the Billboard Hot R&B Airplay chart,[23] and number 45 on the Billboard Hot 100 Airplay chart.[24] In the Flanders region of Belgium, "You Don't Honey Me (No, No, No)" debuted at number 44 on the nautical chart week of 23 July 1994, and peaked at number viii in its 8th calendar week; it remained on the nautical chart for a total of thirteen weeks.[25] The song placed within the top 20 in Austria and Switzerland, peaking at numbers 13 and 17, respectively.[26] [27] "Yous Don't Beloved Me (No, No, No)" likewise reached number 25 in New Zealand and number 38 in kingdom of the netherlands,[28] [29] and peaked at number 41 in both French republic and Germany.[30] [31] In the United Kingdom, the vocal debuted at number nine on the UK Singles Chart during the week of 11 June 1994, afterwards peaking at number iii and remaining in the position for two sequent weeks.[32]

Impact and legacy [edit]

NME mag ranked "You Don't Love Me" at number 24 in their list of the "50 all-time songs of 1994".[33]

BBC Radio one disc jockey Chris Goldfinger picked the song every bit 1 of his favourites in 1996, calculation, "This is the original version — she's been effectually a long time. I just honey her vocals and the lyrics."[34]

Q Mag placed the song at number 477 in their listing of the "1001 Best Songs E'er" in 2003.[35]

Blender listed it at 186th place on their listing of "500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born" in 2005. They wrote: "...dancehall producers Steely & Clevie polished her signature tune into her global comeback hit, wrapping Penn's heartbroken desperation in the sound of a lazy summer's afternoon. Emotional masochism never sounded so sweetness."[36]

Charts and certifications [edit]

Covers and other versions [edit]

In 1994, French rapper and vocalist Melaaz released a cover version titled "Non, Non, Non" with French lyrics.[50]

Reggae group Aswad sampled "You Don't Love Me (No, No, No)" for their song "You're No Good", taken from their anthology Rise and Shine (1994).[51] "You're No Good" peaked at number 35 on the UK Singles Nautical chart on ii February 1995.[52]

Female rapper Eve released a embrace version with brothers Damian Marley and Stephen Marley on her 2001 album Scorpion. Maurice Bottomley for PopMatters reviewed the song, writing "Stephen Marley leads Eve through a note-for-annotation re-creation of the Dawn Penn ('90s version) rocksteady classic 'No, No, No'. She sings information technology well enough, but it adds nothing to the original (literally)."[53]

British music DJ's Hexstatic included a mix of the vocal on "Mr. Scruff's Ninja Melody Megamix" (Hexstatic Edit) past DJ Food on their 2002 DJ mix album Heed & Acquire.[54]

Bajan recording artist Rihanna recorded a cover version of the song as a duet with dancehall recording artist Vybz Kartel, for her debut studio album Music of the Sun (2005).[ix] Information technology was produced by Evan Rogers, Carl Sturken and D. "Supa Dups" Chin-quee.[9] Jason Birchmeier, writing for AllMusic, described Rihanna's encompass as "tricky",[55] while Chantal Jenoure, writing for The Jamaica Observer, labelled it equally "hilarious".[56]

English recording artist Lily Allen sampled the song for her "Shame for Yous", included on her debut studio album, Alright, Still (2006). Lucy Davies for the BBC reviewed the song, writing "Many of her reggae-fused songs stick in your head whilst you desperately suss out why they're familiar, just she rips off her influences with a comic acknowledgement, like 'Shame for You', which blatantly lifts the chorus hook from 'You Don't Dearest Me (No No No)' by Dawn Penn".[57]

In 2007, American rapper Ghostface Killah covered the song on his compilation album, Hidden Darts: Special Edition, which consists of his rare album B-sides, unreleased songs and mixtape tracks.[58]

American recording creative person Beyoncé performed the song as part of a medley with her own hit "Baby Boy" on her I Am... World Tour concert bout (2009–10). Later being lifted out of a 20-foot railroad train by a harness and over the audience, she was lowered to the B-phase, where she finished "Baby Boy" and continued with Penn'southward "You Don't Love Me (No, No, No)".[59] [60] Information technology was afterward included on the CD/DVD release of the tour.[61] She performed a similar medley when she headlined at the 2018 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Music Festival.

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • "You Don't Dearest Me (No, No, No)" (official extended mix) on YouTube

Ive Been on Since 2005 and You Know This Been So Loud Lyrics

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Don%27t_Love_Me_(No,_No,_No)

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