The Promise (Girls Aloud song)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"The Promise"
Single by Girls Aloud
from the album Out of Control
Released15 October 2008
Length
  • 4:04 (album version)
  • 3:42 (radio edit)
LabelFascination
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Girls Aloud singles chronology
"Can't Speak French"
(2008)
"The Promise"
(2008)
"The Loving Kind"
(2009)
Music video
"The Promise" on
YouTube

"The Promise" is a single by British girl group Girls Aloud, taken from their fifth and final studio album Out of Control (2008). The song was written by Brian Higgins, Miranda Cooper, Jason Resch, Kieran Jones, and Carla Marie Williams and produced by frequent contributor Higgins along with production team Xenomania. Influenced by Phil Spector and music of the 1960s, "The Promise" is an upbeat love song about the struggle between making promises in a relationship and keeping them.

The song was praised and appreciated by most contemporary music critics, who lauded the song despite considering it unusual for Girls Aloud. It was honoured as

2009 BRIT Awards, becoming Girls Aloud's first win at the ceremony,[1] and was also nominated for PRS for Music's Most Performed Work at the 2010 Ivor Novello Awards as well as for Best Single at the 2008 Heat Awards.[2] "The Promise" was also awarded the Popjustice £20 Music Prize
, the band's fifth single to win the prize.

Upon its release in October 2008, the single became Girls Aloud's fourth number one on the

UK Singles Chart, continuing their six-year streak of top ten hits. It also peaked at number two on the Irish Singles Chart. A music video for the song, directed by Trudy Bellinger, is set at a drive-in movie theatre, where Girls Aloud watch themselves performing as a 1960s girl group on screen. "The Promise" was promoted through numerous live appearances, including a high-profile performance on The X Factor, and served as the opening number of 2009's Out of Control Tour
.

Background

The backing track for the song was composed by two Australian musicians, Jason Resch and Kieran Jones, who would later play the song for Brian Higgins.[3] Higgins and Miranda Cooper, afraid they would "ruin the moment", waited weeks to write the song's lyrics; they eventually wrote the song in seven minutes.[3] Higgins said, "We knew that was the piece of music Girls Aloud needed to announce them as a supergroup in this country, so we knew we couldn't drop the ball melodically or lyrically."[4] He elaborated, "Girls Aloud's records were more driving and pumping and innovative then than they are now because that's not what's required [...] "The Promise" was the sound of a big group, a group about to be huge. They needed the theme tune to the biggest girl group on the planet".[5]

As soon as Girls Aloud heard the song, they decided it should be the first single from Out of Control.[3] The group defied their record label's demands for another song to be released as the lead single, with the label claiming that the song would be "pop suicide," and Nadine Coyle, who had just flown out from Los Angeles to do the Out of Control album photo shoot, threatened to not participate in the photo shoot at all and to immediately fly back to Los Angeles until the label conceded to the group's demands.[6] The day before the song was due to be delivered to Fascination Records, the entire backing track was re-recorded to allow for a last-minute key change in the final choruses.[3]

Composition

"The Promise" was compared to Phil Spector's Wall of Sound technique.[7]

"The Promise" is an

key change takes place before the song's final chorus. Both the radio edit and the album version of the song were edited from the full-length version for release. The radio edit lasts 3:42 and has a cold ending. The album version of "The Promise" is around fifteen seconds longer, opting for a repeat and fade of Sarah Harding's first verse following the final chorus.[13]

Release

Described by the band's website as a "stormer of a track",

Girl Overboard (song)" as the b-side.[22] The song was digitally released in Germany on 16 January 2009 and physically on 27 March.[23][24]

Critical response

"The Promise" received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Although it was said to be "not what you'd necessarily expect from the gorgeous girl group," the song was praised for "its fantastic melody" and being "more interesting than the average retro-pop nugget."[25][7] Digital Spy referred to the single as "a cute, wistful pop song" with "some nice Spectorish touches in the production and a lovely, classic-sounding melody" that "grows more persuasive with every listen."[8][7] Rebecca Nicholson of The Guardian felt the song was "disappointing" because "Girls Aloud's producers have always been capable of making exciting and innovative pop music".[26] However, Caroline Sullivan of the same publication thought the song was an album highlight: "Nothing hits the spot like the Phil Spector-like single "The Promise," one of this year's better chart-toppers."[27] John Murphy of MusicOMH argued that although "it may lack the innovation and attitude of some of their previous work, but if you're looking for sparkling, fresh and sheer bloody fun pop music, then there's nobody better right now than Girls Aloud."[28] He praised the song for its "heavenly harmonies and a chorus that glides in and scoops you up in its arms."[29]

"The Promise" received criticism for "too many cooks spoiling the broth." Jaime Gill from Yahoo! Music found that the production" on the song was "so overegged and the vocals so treacly [...] you'll get a sugar rush, but you won't feel good about yourself afterwards."[30] MSN further criticised "The Promise" for being "a shameless attempt at trying to cash in on the Duffy and Winehouse favoured 60's femme pop."[31] On the other hand, Robin Carolan from Slant Magazine said that while it "suggests the girls have [...] shallowly jumped aboard the retro-soul bandwagon led by Duffy and Amy Winehouse, [...] the song's go-for-broke, very modern re-imagining of Spector's Wall of Sound proves to be more authentic and entertaining than most other recent attempts".[9] It has also received comparisons to Girls Aloud's previous single, "Can't Speak French,"[8] with Terry Wogan claiming that the tune features the melody from the theme song of his 1980s British TV quiz show Blankety Blank.[32]

Chart performance

"The Promise" entered the

Cheryl Cole, who was also on The X Factor, joked: "I don't mind being knocked off number one – for this cause only!"[38]

Additionally, the song entered the

UK Singles Chart listed "The Promise" as the number 17 best-selling single in their year-end countdown.[41] It was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in January 2009.[42] PRS for Music named "The Promise" as the sixth-most played song of 2009 in the UK, using data taken from the count of plays and performances online, live, and on TV and radio.[43] Following Sarah Harding's death in September 2021, the song had a resurgence in popularity with streams spiking at 340%.[44]

Music video

Girls Aloud in the music video for "The Promise" (2008)

Filming for a music video for "The Promise" took place on 15 September 2008.[45] The video premièred on AOL's website on 25 September 2008.[46][47] The music video was directed by Trudy Bellinger for Merge@Crossroads Films, and produced by Golden Square.[48] They had just over three days to produce an open-air drive-in movie theatre using Flame and studio footage of five cars.[48] Girls Aloud also reportedly auditioned the male actors/musicians in the music video, one of whom was guitarist Rene Woollard.[49]

In the music video, the group members are at a drive-in movie theatre which is playing a

Supremes.[50]
The film features flickering and flashes to emulate films of the time, in parallel to the cinema and attending group members. Harding gets out of her car and walks in front of the screen to sing her "Here I am... walking primrose..." verse.

Live performances

Girls Aloud first performed "The Promise" on

Cheryl Cole served as a member of the judging panel at the time.[53] The group wore their hair in big bouffant style with sparkling gold dresses, similar to those in the music video. Positioned in front of a lit-up frame, they sang live and performed simple, synchronized choreography. As the song's key change occurred, pyrotechnics exploded from the ceiling and a shower of sparks fell behind Girls Aloud. At the song's end, a second explosion of pyrotechnics occurred at the front of the stage. The group also performed the song on Friday Night with Jonathan Ross, GMTV, T4, and This Morning throughout promotion. Girls Aloud further performed "The Promise" at the annual Children in Need telethon, as well as year-end shows like Top of the Pops' Christmas and New Year's Eve specials and 4Music
's Top Tunes of 2008.

For their

"The Promise" served as the opening song for Girls Aloud's 2009

Julien MacDonald, along with the rest of the costumes.[58] A dance-beat reprise of the song ended the show. Girls Aloud performed "The Promise" at the 2012 Royal Variety Performance in London in November 2012 to celebrate their tenth anniversary and promote their greatest hits album Ten.[59] It was televised on 3 December 2012 to over 8 million viewers.[60] It was also performed at Capital FM's Jingle Bell Ball as part of a headlining set.[61]

Track listing

UK CD (Fascination / 1788035)
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."The Promise" (radio edit)
3:43
2."She"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Lisa Cowling
  • Tim "Rolf" Larcombe
  • Shawn Lee
  • Paul Woods
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:24
UK 7" picture disc (Fascination)
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."The Promise" (radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:43
2."Girl Overboard" (live at The O2)
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
4:31
iTunes exclusive digital download
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."The Promise" (radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:43
2."The Promise" (Jason Nevins remix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Powell
  • Coler
  • Lei
6:51
The Singles Boxset (CD19)
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."The Promise" (radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:43
2."She"
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Cowling
  • Larcombe
  • Lee
  • Woods
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
3:24
3."Girl Overboard" (live at The O2)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Powell
  • Coler
  • Lei
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
4:31
4."The Promise" (Jason Nevins extended remix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Nevins[a]
6:51
5."The Promise" (Jason Nevins radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Nevins[a]
3:57
6."The Promise" (Jason Nevins dub mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Nevins[a]
6:07
7."The Promise" (Dave Audé radio edit)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
3:50
8."The Promise" (Dave Audé club mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Audé[a]
7:08
9."The Promise" (Dave Audé dub mix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
  • Higgins
  • Xenomania
  • Audé[a]
7:12
10."The Promise" (Flip & Fill remix)
  • Cooper
  • Higgins
  • Resch
  • Jones
  • Williams
6:10

Notes

Credits and personnel

  • Drums: Florrie Arnold
  • Engineering: Toby Scott, Dan Aslet
  • Guitars: Nick Coler, Jason Resch, Kieran Jones, Owen Parker
  • Mixing: Jeremy Wheatley
  • Programming and keyboards: Tim Powell, Brian Higgins, Matt Gray, Toby Scott, Nick Coler, Miranda Cooper, Jason Resch, Owen Parker
  • Songwriting: Miranda Cooper, Brian Higgins, Jason Resch, Kieran Jones, Carla Marie Williams
  • Strings and woodwind: Mark C. Brown, Mike Kearsey, Jo Auckland, Nick Squires, Stefan Defiletm, Susan Early, Adrian Smith

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for "The Promise"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[69] Platinum 712,140[68]

Release history

Release dates and formats for "The Promise"
Region Date Label Format Ref
Ireland 15 October 2008 Polydor Records CD single [17]
19 October 2008 Digital download [18]
United Kingdom Fascination Records [19]
20 October 2008 CD single [70]
Germany 16 January 2009 Polydor Records Digital download [23][24]
27 March 2009 CD single

See also

References

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