They Don't Know (Kirsty MacColl song) explained

They Don't Know
Cover:Kirsty_MacColl_They_Dont_Know.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Kirsty MacColl
B-Side:Motor On
Recorded:1979
Label:Stiff Records
Producer:Liam Sternberg
Next Title:Keep Your Hands off My Baby
Next Year:1981

"They Don't Know" is a song composed and first recorded in 1979 by Kirsty MacColl. Though unsuccessful, the song was later recorded by Tracey Ullman in 1983. Ullman's version reached No. 2 in the UK and No. 8 in the US.

Original version

Composition and release

Recorded in Stiff Records' mobile studio, The China Shop, in the spring of 1979, Kirsty MacColl's original recording of "They Don't Know" "emphasized layered harmonies in which MacColl turns her own voice into a chorus of over-dubbed parts"[1] - an evocation of a long-standing admiration for the Beach Boys engendered at age 7 by hearing her brother's copy of the "Good Vibrations" single: Besides the regular vinyl single release of 1 June 1979 a picture disc edition was issued 6 July 1979. The B-side to "They Don't Know" was MacColl's recording of her composition "Turn My Motor On" - some copies read "Motor On" -, a setlist staple of Drug Addix, the band MacColl had recently left (consideration had been given to making "Turn My Motor On" the A-side).

MacColl's "They Don't Know" reached number two on the Music Week airplay chart without generating sufficient sales to reach the UK Singles Chart - a shortfall blamed on a strike at the distributors for Stiff Records keeping the single out of stores, although its producer Liam Sternberg attributes the failure of "They Don't Know" to ill feeling which developed between MacColl and Stiff Records president Dave Robinson: Promo copies of a followup single: "You Caught Me Out", were pressed in October 1979 but Stiff opted to shelve the single, with MacColl's first release subsequent to "They Don't Know" being her remake of "Keep Your Hands Off My Baby" released in 1981 on Polydor.

MacColl's version of "They Don't Know" would not make its album debut until 1995 on the singer's retrospective album Galore.[2]

Track listing

  1. "They Don't Know" (MacColl)
  2. "[Turn My] Motor On" (MacColl)[3]

Charts

Tracey Ullman version

They Don't Know
Cover:They Don't Know single.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Tracey Ullman
Album:You Broke My Heart in 17 Places
Length:3:00
Producer:Peter Collins
Prev Title:Breakaway
Prev Year:1983
Next Title:Move Over Darling
Next Year:1983

In October 1983, Tracey Ullman reached number two on the UK Singles Chart with her recording of "They Don't Know" for Stiff Records; the track was included on Ullman's debut album You Broke My Heart in 17 Places. "They Don't Know" was ranked at number 23 on the year-end tally of UK chart singles and afforded Ullman a number-one hit in Ireland for two weeks, and it spent nine weeks at number one in Norway.

Well known in the UK as an actress/comedienne, Ullman had had a top-10 hit with her debut single "Breakaway". Pete Waterman, whose Loose End Productions had recently provided Stiff hit singles with the Belle Stars, suggested to his friend Kirsty MacColl that she pitch her composition "They Don't Know" for Ullman to record as her second single.[5]

The production of Ullman's "They Don't Know" was credited to Peter Collins, Waterman's Loose Ends partner. Waterman honed the track, including having MacColl and Rosemary Robinson (the wife of Stiff Records president Dave Robinson) "add Shangri-La-type backing vocals", in Waterman's words, and having MacColl reprise her original "bay-ay-be-ee” to intro the third verse (as Ullman had a limited high-end range).[6]

MTV cofounder Robert Pittman saw the video made to promote Ullman's "They Don't Know", and despite Ullman having nil exposure in the U.S., Pittman invited her to be a guest MTV VJ for the week of February 13–18, 1984. The resultant positive response caused MCA Records to rush-release "They Don't Know" as Ullman's debut US single,[7] which eventually reached number eight on the Billboard Hot 100 and number 11 on the Adult Contemporary.

"They Don't Know" was Ullman's only Top 40 hit in the U.S. Although she had three more entries in the UK Top 30 - including the top-10 hit "Move Over Darling" - Ullman, when asked in a 2017 The Guardian interview "If you could edit your past, what would you change?", said: "I would have stopped making records after 'They Don’t Know'."[8]

In 1997, "They Don't Know" became the theme song for the final three seasons of Ullman's HBO television series Tracey Takes On.... The Ullman version was used as the theme for the opening credits of Our Nixon, a 2013 documentary about U.S. President Richard Nixon.[9]

Ullman sang the song in 2002 at a memorial tribute concert for MacColl, who was killed in a boating accident in December 2000. It was her first public singing performance in nearly 20 years. [10]

Comparison with Kirsty MacColl's original version

In September 2021, Tracey Ullman confirmed on the BBC's Desert Island Discs radio program that her version of "They Don't Know" contains the high note on the word "Baby" from Kirsty MacColl's original version. Ullman also did not use a previously existing MacColl backing track when recording her own version of MacColl's "Terry" in 1984. (Both versions of "Terry" were co-produced by MacColl.)

Comparing the two versions, Ken Tucker of The Philadelphia Inquirer wrote "Ullman's rendition...makes [the song] palatable to American audiences by [replacing] McColl's fervent intensity with a bouncy cheerfulness & layers of...synthesizers...It's a cheerful throwback to the innocent hits of 1960s girl-group rock".[11]

Video

A video was filmed to promote Ullman's version of "They Don't Know" in which Paul McCartney made a cameo (McCartney had just completed filming Give My Regards to Broad Street in which Ullman had a cameo). Directed by Stiff Records president Dave Robinson, the video for "They Don't Know" had a storyline devised by Ullman herself in which she played a young woman in a blossoming romantic relationship with her working class, ne'er do well boyfriend in the 1960s. The video concludes with Ullman portraying the song's protagonist as a dowdy council estate type mother (not unlike her character Betty Tomlinson from the comedy sketch show Three of a Kind), unkempt, heavily pregnant and shopping for groceries in her slippers, her life of domestic drudgery sustained only by her fantasy of being in a relationship with her idol Paul McCartney.[7]

The comical video was voted the second best video of 1983 by readers of Smash Hits magazine (beaten only by Duran Duran's "Union of the Snake" video), Ullman was voted Best Female Singer, and the song was voted fourth Best Single of 1983.

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1983–1984)Peak
position
Australia (Kent Music Report)[12] 56
Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)[13] 19

Year-end charts

Chart (1983)Position
Belgium (Ultratop)[14] 97
Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[15] 75
UK Singles (OCC)[16] 23

Certifications

Other cover versions

...There's another song in there that Tracey Ullman and [even its writer] Kirsty MacColl...didn't touch. It could be really, really tender.' When the Waves split up, I thought: 'Good, now I can do it!'" [19] In 2008, a dance-pop remix of the Katrina's remake was released promotionally, produced by Sleaze Sisters using a newly re-recorded vocal session. [20]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kirsty MacColl on Her Own Terms. . 6 April 1995.
  2. Web site: Galore - Kirsty MacColl . 30 October 2014.
  3. Web site: They Don't Know 7" single - Kirsty MacColl . 30 October 2014.
  4. The Singles Chart 61-100 . . 23 July 1979 . 2 . 19 . 23 . 0144-0691.
  5. Web site: Interviews 1994 - Titanic Days - Kirsty MacColl.
  6. Book: Pete. Waterman. Paul. Mathur. I Wish I Was Me: the autobiography. 2000. Virgin Books. London. 9780753505731.
  7. Billboard vol 96 #9 (March 3, 1984) "Ullman Stages a One-Woman British Invasion" by Mary Anna Feczo p.38
  8. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2017/mar/25/tracey-ullman-q-and-a-interview Tracey Ullman: ‘My best kiss? Kevin Kline is technically brilliant’ | Tracey Ullman | The Guardian
  9. News: Our Nixon. Hachard. Thomas. 17 March 2013. Slant Magazine. 29 December 2013.
  10. News: Stars pay tribute to MacColl. 24 September 2002.
  11. Ken Tucker "An era of eccentric female rock singers arrives" The Philadelphia Inquirer 6 May 1984 p. 4-M
  12. Book: Kent, David. Australian Chart Book 1970–1992. David Kent (historian). Australian Chart Book. St Ives, NSW. 1993. 0-646-11917-6.
  13. Book: Nyman, Jake. 2005. Suomi soi 4: Suuri suomalainen listakirja. 1st. Tammi. Helsinki. 951-31-2503-3. fi.
  14. Web site: Jaaroverzichten 1983. Ultratop. nl. 11 March 2020.
  15. Web site: Top 100-Jaaroverzicht van 1983. Dutch Top 40. 7 September 2021.
  16. Book: Peter. Scaping. Top 100 singles: 1983. BPI Year Book 1984. British Phonographic Industry. 42–43. 1984. 0-906154-04-9.
  17. Talent Almanac 1985: Top Pop Singles. 22 December 1984. TA-19. Billboard. 96. 51.
  18. Web site: Leslie Carter: It's Her Party . https://web.archive.org/web/20170926235856/http://www.mtv.com/news/1438922/leslie-carter-its-her-party/ . dead . 26 September 2017 . Moss, Corey . 31 January 2001 . . Mtv.com . 4 October 2018 .
  19. Web site: FEATURE - Katrina Leskanich Catches a New Wave.
  20. https://www.discogs.com/release/7725180-Katrina-vs-Sleazesisters-They-Dont-Know