It Don't Move Me | |
Cover: | Peter Bjorn and John It Don't Move Me.jpg |
Type: | single |
Artist: | Peter Bjorn and John |
Album: | Living Thing |
B-Side: | "Nothing to Worry About" (Jocko For Teddybears remix) |
Released: | 2009 |
Genre: | Indie pop, synthpop |
Length: | 3:21 (Album version) |
Label: | Wichita |
Producer: | Björn Yttling |
Prev Title: | Lay It Down |
Prev Year: | 2009 |
Next Title: | Second Chance |
Next Year: | 2011 |
"It Don't Move Me" is a song by Swedish rock band Peter Bjorn and John, released as the third single from their fifth studio album Living Thing. It was written and composed by group members Peter Morén, Björn Yttling, and John Eriksson, and produced by the latter of the three. The song, like much of the album, is influenced by synthpop, featuring common synthpop elements such as electronically tweaked drums and synthesizers.[1]
The song, described by music review site Pitchfork Media as "a diatribe against sentimentalism ostensibly directed at an ex-lover," failed to gain significant chart success, and received mixed reviews from critics, with Pitchfork also noting that it "plays like a virtual rewrite of "Young Folks"...but with the bongos and whistles relinquished in favor of a hand-clapped electro-funk backing track and deep piano tones."[2]
The song's music video was directed by Filip Nilsson. Its main plot revolves around a man, reminiscent of American entertainer Michael Jackson, dancing for an older man in various locations such as the latter man's home, a dance studio, and a golf course. The former man's dance moves are also reminiscent of Jackson's own moves from his music video Thriller.
The video was the center of a segment of the fourth season finale of Canadian television series Video on Trial, which critiques videos using a courtroom-like format. Peter Bjorn and John were ultimately given a fictitious sentence of "[letting] MJ rest in peace" and instead "start stealing Britney Spears' moves for their next video."