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Just (Mark Ronson song)

"Just"
JustCD1.jpg
Single by Radiohead
from the album The Bends
Released 7 August 1995 (1995-08-07)
Format
Recorded 1994
Genre Alternative rock
Length 3:55
Label Parlophone
Songwriter(s) Radiohead
Producer(s) John Leckie
Radiohead singles chronology
"Fake Plastic Trees"
(1995)
"Just"
(1995)
"Street Spirit (Fade Out)"
(1996)
"Fake Plastic Trees"
(1995)
"Just"
(1995)
"Street Spirit (Fade Out)"
(1996)
Music video
"Just" on YouTube
"Just"
Markronson just.JPG
Single by Mark Ronson featuring Alex Greenwald of Phantom Planet
from the album Exit Music and Version
Released

13 March 2006 (2006-03-13)

18 February 2008 (2008-02-18) (re-released)
Format
Recorded 2004-05, 2006
Genre Funk rock
Length 5:21
Label RCA
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Mark Ronson
Mark Ronson singles chronology
"Ooh Wee"
(2003)
"Just"
(2006)
"Stop Me"
(2007)
"Ooh Wee"
(2003)
"Just"
(2006)
"Stop Me"
(2007)
Alex Greenwald singles chronology
"Just"
(2006) Just2006
Mark Ronson singles chronology
"Valerie"
(2007) Valerie2007
"Just" (re-released)
(2008) String Module Error: Match not found2008
"Bang Bang Bang"
(2010) Bang Bang Bang2010
Phantom Planet singles chronology
"Big Brat"
(2003) Big Brat2003
"Just"
(2008) Just2008
"Do the Panic"
(2008) Do the Panic2008
Music video
"Just" on YouTube

"Just" is a single by English alternative rock band Radiohead, released in 1995. It is the seventh track on their 1995 album The Bends. Radiohead frontman Thom Yorke wrote the song about a narcissistic friend of his, which on closer inspection is showcased by the imagery in the lyrics - a parallel to earlier My Iron Lung EP track "Lewis [Mistreated]". He also says that it was something of a competition between him and Jonny Greenwood to see who could fit the most chords into a song. "Just" is especially notable for Greenwood's guitar solo. In the UK, this single was available as two CDs: the first one featured different tracks, and the colour of the album art on the second single was inverted.

In 2007, NME placed "Just" at number 34 in its list of the 50 Greatest Indie Anthems Ever. In 2008 it entered the Radiohead: The Best Of collection.

The single's video was directed by Jamie Thraves, who was hand-picked by the band after they saw several of his experimental short films. It was shot near Liverpool Street Station in London, and intersperses footage of Radiohead playing the song inside an apartment with scenes of a middle-aged man (played by Dorian Lough) who lies down in the middle of the pavement just outside the apartment building. People start to gather, thinking that something must be wrong with the man, and the band are shown looking out the window at the events below. A heated (subtitled) conversation between the man and the crowd develops, as the people start demanding to know what the man is doing and why he is lying there. In subtitles, the man finally gives in and says, "Yes I'll tell you, I'll tell why I'm lying here... but God forgive me... and God help us all... because you don't know what you ask of me." The camera zooms in on his mouth as the man finally gives the answer, but the subtitles have now stopped, leaving what he said open to the viewer's interpretation. As the camera zooms back out, it shows the pavement covered with the crowd of people, all lying down just like the man.


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Wikipedia

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