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Leave Right Now

"Leave Right Now"
WYLRN2.jpg
Single by Will Young
from the album Friday's Child
Released 24 November 2003 (UK)
27 May 2010 (United States)
Format CD
Recorded 2003
Genre Pop, soft rock
Length 3:31
Label BMG
Writer(s) Eg White
Producer(s) Stephen Lipson
Will Young singles chronology
"Don't Let Me Down" / "You and I"
(2002)
"Leave Right Now"
(2003)
"Your Game"
(2004)
Alternative covers
UK CD 2

"Leave Right Now" is a popular song written by Eg White and performed by Will Young. It appears on Young's second album, Friday's Child, and was released as the first single from the album, and Young's fifth overall. The song also appears on the international version of Young's third album, Keep On.

The song is reportedly about unrequited love. White was awarded the Ivor Novello Award for Best Song Musically and Lyrically for "Leave Right Now" in 2004. "Leave Right Now" was the exit song for the ninth season of American Idol. Young performed it on the penultimate episode (25 May 2010) to accompany a video montage recapping the season.

The video, which has no transitions, features Young at a party where a fight starts and he gets caught up in it. The video also features actress Kelly Wenham as one of the party guests.

Stylus Magazine, who were mostly mixed to negative for Young's previous number ones, rated "Leave Right Now" with 9/10, saying "Better. Much, much better. By this time Will was comfortable as a popstar, prepared to add a little WTF to his videos (here he has a fight with the viewer in an art gallery), and had his style down pat: jacket and jeans rocked to a level not seen since Lovejoy and Tinker were bossing things in the late 80s. He had songs to match as well: “Leave Right Now” is just one of the most English songs ever, which is understandable: what could be more English than a privately educated homosexual? The guy's a moderate genius—Dido with testicles and a heart."

In 2007, Freaky Trigger ranked the song at number 54 in their list of the "Top 100 Songs of All Time," with critic Pete Baran calling it "one of the ballsiest songs of the noughties."

The single went to number one in the UK Singles Chart for two weeks, selling 117,700 in its first week of release, and making it Young's fourth number one single overall. The song has sold 540,000 copies in the UK according to the Official UK Charts Company. In Ireland, it was the Christmas number one single; however, it peaked too soon in the UK to contend for the Christmas number-one there.


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