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Pinch Me

"Pinch Me"
PinchMe Single.jpg
Single by Barenaked Ladies
from the album Maroon
Released August 29, 2000
Format CD, 7", 12"
Recorded 2000
Genre Alternative rock
Length 4:45 (Album Version)
4:37 (Radio Edit w/o Fade)
3:49 (Radio Edit w. Fade)
Label Reprise
Writer(s) Steven Page
Ed Robertson
Producer(s) Don Was
Barenaked Ladies singles chronology
"Alcohol"
(1999)
"Pinch Me"
(2000)
"Too Little Too Late"
(2001)
Music video
"Pinch Me" on YouTube

"Pinch Me" is a song by the Canadian rock band Barenaked Ladies. It was released in August 2000 as the first single from their 2000 album, Maroon, which was a follow-up to their hit album, Stunt. As such, "Pinch Me" is often regarded as an attempted follow-up to the hit single "One Week". This song became the band's second Top 20 hit, peaking at number 15 on the Billboard Hot 100 on November 14, 2000. The song first reached the Top 40 on October 3, 2000.

The song was co-written by frontmen Steven Page and Ed Robertson, but the concept and base for the song came from Robertson. He wrote the song following the "roller-coaster" success of Stunt, and returning to Canada to find people less interested or aware of the success. "I was trying to get to the root of what I was feeling... 'this is all great, but not right here it's not - not where I live, and not in my heart'... It's this notion that you know things are good - they're just not quite good for you."

The fundamental guitar riff of the song (through the verses) was based on the song "Leaving Las Vegas" by Sheryl Crow. The recording (and most live performances) is based on a drum loop (along which drummer Tyler Stewart plays). The loop was created by taking the best two bars of Stewart himself playing drums, and then looping them. The song was originally written with the chorus rap as the less prominent "underpinning" half of the vocal, with the melody being more prominent, but as the writing process went along, the rap became the foreground. Noting that the melody line was now the background, they took the lyric and also used it for the bridge of the song.

Chuck Taylor, of Billboard magazine reviewed the song favorably, saying that "the production is tight, and the melody alternates between minimalist verses and Ed Robertson's trademark hyperkinetic delivery." He goes on to say that the "quirky lyric doesn't go for the wit as past hits have, but it still captures the band's friendly side, which had earned it a strong cult following long before it tore up the charts."


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Wikipedia

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