"Begging You" | ||||
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Single by The Stone Roses | ||||
from the album Second Coming | ||||
Released | 30 October 1995 | |||
Format | 12" vinyl, Cassette, CD | |||
Recorded | 1993-1994 (Written 1993) |
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Genre | Alternative dance, madchester | |||
Length | 4:52 | |||
Label | Geffen | |||
Songwriter(s) | Ian Brown, John Squire | |||
Producer(s) | Simon Dawson, Paul Schroeder | |||
The Stone Roses singles chronology | ||||
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"Begging You" is a song by The Stone Roses, released as the final single before their break-up a year later, and was the third single from the album Second Coming. "Begging You" was released in the UK and Australia, peaking at #15 on the UK Singles Chart.
"Begging You" was a loud cacophonous track with heavy drum beats, soaring guitars, pulsing bass and apocalyptic lyrics. John Squire said that the song was loosely based on material from Public Enemy's Fear of a Black Planet. The song also contains many references to Aesop's Fables.
The song was used on the Boys (1996) film's soundtrack. In 2010, it was used by the BBC for its MotoGP coverage.
John Squire designed the "Begging You" cover with the insides of floppy disks. The disks were supposedly used to teach Squire how to use samplers and sequencers for the track. Squire found the process too complicated and decided to smash the disks to use them for a piece of art instead.
Squire took the insides of the disks and set them in plaster. He arranged them in a grid motif and painted the piece with colours "borrowed" from an Edgar Degas painting.
The music video for "Begging You" features strippers wearing masks of the band members. There are also scenes of the band playing live and traditional dances from various cultures.