"Tubthumping" | ||||||||||||||
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File:Tubthumping.jpg | ||||||||||||||
Single by Chumbawamba | ||||||||||||||
from the album Tubthumper | ||||||||||||||
Released | 11 August 1997 (UK) | |||||||||||||
Recorded | 1996 | |||||||||||||
Genre | Alternative rock | |||||||||||||
Length | 4:38 (album version) 3:34 (single edit) |
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Label | ![]() ![]() |
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Chumbawamba singles chronology | ||||||||||||||
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"Tubthumping", informally known by its prominent lyric "I Get Knocked Down", is a song released by the anarcho-punk band Chumbawamba on 11 August 1997 through Universal Records and EMI Electrola. It was their most successful single, peaking at number 2 on the UK Singles Chart. It was also their best performance in the U.S., peaking at number 6 in November of 1997[1] on the Billboard Hot 100. The song also claimed the top spot in Australia, Italy and on the U.S. Billboard Modern Rock Tracks chart.
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The liner notes on the album Tubthumper, from which "Tubthumping" was the first single, put the song in a radical context, quoting a UK anti-road protester, Paris 1968 graffiti, details about the famous McLibel case and the short story "The Loneliness of the Long Distance Runner". "Tubthumping" was placed at number 12 on Rolling Stone's list of the 20 Most Annoying Songs.[2] Most recently, Matthew Wilkening of AOL Radio ranked the song at number 35 on the list of the 100 Worst Songs Ever, exclaiming as if in command, "Please, let's all keep knocking [Chumbawamba] down. I don't care what they say, eventually they'll stay down for good."[3]
In the UK, a tubthumper is a politician.[4] The U.S. equivalent of tubthumping is "going on the stump" (campaigning).
The band have performed the song with alternative lyrics on numerous occasions, notably when performing on the Late Show with David Letterman, a chant of "Free Mumia Abu-Jamal" accompanied only by a drumbeat preceded the final chorus. At the 1998 BRIT Awards, they performed the song with the added line "New Labour sold out the dockers, just like they'll sell out the rest of us" in protest at the New Labour government's refusal to support the Liverpool dockers' strike.
The album version of the song opens with a sample of a monologue performed by Pete Postlethwaite in the 1996 film Brassed Off: "Truth is, I thought it mattered; I thought that music mattered. But does it? Bollocks! Not compared to how people matter." The cover art for the single is based on the logo for the manufacturing company of Arm & Hammer.
The band received an offer of $1.5 million from Nike to use the song in a World Cup advertisement.[5] According to the band it took about "thirty seconds to say no."[5] They did, however, license the song to American video game company Electronic Arts for use as the opening theme of the game World Cup '98.
A French version of the song was produced for the French Canadian market.
The trumpet soloist, Jude Abbott plays in a jazz/pop style during her solos; however, she references the Baroque period piece Prince of Denmark's March at the end of the song.[citation needed]
The song was played as the Flight Day 4 'wake up call' during the final Space Shuttle STS-135 mission and flight of Atlantis in July 2011 for astronaut Sandy Magnus.
"Tubthumping (Remix)" was released in 2003 as a promotional CD by Chumbawamba on their MUTT Records label. The remixed version of their 1997 smash-hit Tubthumping was done by The Flaming Lips and Dave Fridmann. It's a slower version of the song, with a more minor key feeling to the music.
The other two songs on the CD were taken from the album Readymades and Then Some.
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The song was used in the series premiere of the 1990s American teen drama Dawson's Creek.
A fast Eurodance version of the song was created in 1998 as the beginning track for Dancemania SPEED.
The song was used in Scrubs in the episode "My Bed Banter & Beyond" in 2002 where J.D. sings the song in his head with a British accent.
"Weird Al" Yankovic covered portions of this song in his song "Polka Power!".
Rock band Phish played a cover of this song as their encore, which made an appearance on their live album Hampton Comes Alive. The song was used in the Children in Need charity single by Peter Kay and it was sung by members of the Animated All Star Band.
Alvin and the Chipmunks covered this song for their 2007 video game Alvin and the Chipmunks.
The film Fired Up! features this song, and references to the band and song are made throughout the film.
The song was formerly used by Leeds United as their entrance music.
The song was also used in a season 2 episode of Chuck ("Chuck vs the Cougars") in a flashback of young Sarah Walker in San Diego, 1998.
The song was featured in the final episode of the British comedy-drama series Auf Wiedersehen, Pet.
Peak positions [link]
Year-end charts [link]
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WD Encore Software, LLC ("Encore") is a Minneapolis-based software publisher focused on retail software sales, distribution and software development.
Encore is a wholly owned subsidiary of WYNIT Distribution, LLC which acquired the majority of Encore's assets from Speed Commerce, Inc. on approximately July 9, 2014. Speed Commerce, had initially acquired Encore's assets from the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Central District of California in August 2002.
In November 2008 Encore announced an expanded license with Riverdeep. Under the terms of the agreement Encore now manages the Broderbund family of products as well as Broderbund’s direct to consumer business. In May 2010 Encore acquired the assets of Punch! Software
Among the brands published by Encore for the retail market:
Encore is the second studio album by American singer-songwriter Sam Cooke. The music is by the Bumps Blackwell Orchestra.
Encore, is a live DVD, of the concert of Il Divo in the roman Theatre of Mérida, (Extremadura-Spain) on 7 October 2005, that contains a documentary with interviews to the artists and unpublished images of the quartet of crossover classical Il Divo.
The DVD of ‘Encore´ includes the following songs:
Unpublished material: