You are not logged in.   login to customize your own personal play list     

“Try” by Colbie Caillat

United States Federal Trade Commission forbids anyone under 13 from viewing these music videos!
random song
You need Flash player 8+ and JavaScript enabled to view this video.


rewind     play     pause     next song

play     pause     rewind     next song     TIME: starting

“Try” by Colbie Caillat


play music video

“Try” by Colbie Caillat


     
 

song info

    “Try” by Colbie Caillat (official video) is a pop song.

    Song Title: Try (official video)
    Artist: Colbie Caillat
    Album: Gypsy Heart
    Genre: adult contemporary, adult pop, pop
    Composer: Copyright © 2014 Colbie Caillat, Antonio Dixon, Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, Jason Reeves
    Musical key: D♭ Major
    Producer: Babyface
    Recorded: 2014
    Released: 9 June 2014
    Format: digital download
    Label: Republic
    Number of listens: 14584
    Current rank: 1602 (updated weekly)
    Highest rank: 1522 (play the video all the way through to register a vote for this song)

Translations courtesy of Apple and Google.

 
     

    Summary quotation from Wikipedia:

    “Try” is a song recorded by American singer-songwriter Colbie Caillat from her fifth studio album, Gypsy Heart. It was released as the lead single on June 9, 2014 by Republic Records. The song was written by Caillat, Babyface and Jason Reeves and was produced by Babyface. Lyrically, the midtempo ballad is about not trying to be someone else in order to make others happy and it was written after a session where Caillat was feeling pressure to be someone she was not, both musically and image-wise. It received acclaim from music critics, who noted it was a simple, but beautiful empowering ballad.

    The song has charted moderately on the US Billboard Hot 100, while becoming her highest-charting single in five years in Australia and Canada. To promote the song, a lyric video including female fans and artists, such as Sheryl Crow, Sara Bareilles, Christina Perri, Jessie J and others, without any makeup on, to give emphasis to the song message, was released on June 10, 2014. Later, an official music video was released on July 8, 2014. It features the singer alongside a diverse set of women with makeup and wigs, while removing them throughout the video, ending it natural. It went viral over the internet, accumulating over 27 million views in almost two months.

Background

    After releasing her first christmas album, Christmas in the Sand (2012), and contributing to the soundtrack of the 2013 film Safe Haven, with the song “We Both Know”, a duet with Gavin DeGraw, Caillat recorded during the summer of 2013 a new album with a “’70s vibe” with producer John Shanks. It was set to be released in November 2013, however, after meeting up with Ryan Tedder, Caillat decided to record a more “pop, up-tempo dancey” album. Caillat also worked with record producer and songwriter Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds on the album, explaining, “We did four or five songs. I love him as a producer and writer. I just tell him any style that I’m in the mood for and we write it. It’s not like he’s pigeonholed in being an R&B producer. The first song we wrote together is a complete folk song that’s going to be on this record. It has a banjo on it! The next song is R&B-pop, and then the next one we did is completely a piano ballad, no harmonies — it’s really honest and vulnerable.”

    The synthpop-infused track “Hold On”, produced by Tedder, was released as the album’s lead-single. However, the song failed to make an impact on the charts, and the album was postponed. Caillat and her label thought they should keep working and see if they got anything better. The response disappointed the singer, who was told to return to the studio to find a “new sound” for the album. “To be told that your work isn’t good enough — to do better, to be more like those pop artists out there that dress sexy and use Auto-tune on their voices — to be compared to someone so different, it hurt,” she claimed. Later, Caillat decided to release an EP, claiming that “12 songs is too much to listen to all at once. When I buy a record, I get to the fifth song, and then I don’t get to really hear the rest of the record. People can listen to the first five songs, fall in love with them, get to know them, and then a few months later, have the rest of the record available for download.” To promote the EP, “Gypsy Heart: Side A”, “Try” was chosen to be its lead-single, being the iTunes Store single of the week of from June 9 to June 16, 2014, and it would be officially released to Mainstream radio stations in early September. On October 21, 2014, the song was serviced to contemporary hit radio by Republic Records; a new “Uptempo Mix” will officially impact the format on January 13, 2015. This version was released to digital retailers on November 24, 2014 under the official name “Alex Ghenea Remix”.

Composition and inspiration

    “Try” was written by Colbie Caillat, Antonio Dixon, Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds and Jason Reeves, while production was done by Babyface. It is written in the time signature of common time and is composed in the key of D♭, with moderately slow tempo of 70 beats per minute. Caillat’s vocal range span from the low-note of A♭3 to the high-note of F5. As noted by Holly Williams of Contact Music, the song is “full of gently plucked acoustic guitar, twinkling synths and minimal piano that adds a pleasantly uplifting touch, while Colbie’s vocals are soft, yet understated - almost as if she’s inviting you to sing along with her.” According to Billboard, “the song resulted from a ‘venting experience’ for Caillat, who translated her disappointment about her scrapped album into a message of self-love aimed at women.” “Put your makeup on/ Get your nails done/ Curl your hair/ Run the extra mile/ Keep it slim so they like you, do they like you?,” she sings in the beginning. “You don’t have to try so hard/ You don’t have to give it all away/ You just have to get up, get up, get up, get up/ You don’t have to change a single thing,” she sings in the chorus.

    In an interview for Elle, Caillat confessed that the idea for the song came after going into the recording studio with “Babyface”, explaining that she told him that she was getting a lot of pressure to be someone she was not, both musically and image-wise. She claimed, “Although I don’t want to do it, I’m just going to make these people happy. He started laughing, and said, we’re not going to do that. That’s not you, and that’s ridiculous of them to ask. That right there gave me the creative freedom.” He said, “Let’s write about exactly what they’re asking you to do — to change yourself.” We started checking off all these things that all of us girls do everyday to get ready to go out. […] So Babyface inspired me to write this and it’s all from a personal experience.” Caillat explained that, “This song is not to say that we should never wear makeup, but to say that, sometimes, it’s okay not to.” She further told People that, “[Edmonds and songwriters told me] you don’t have to try to be someone else, because people like who you are.”

Critical reception

    “Try” earned critical acclaim from music critics. Jason Lipshut of Billboard called it an “empowering track […] to bestow young girls with a stronger sense of self-worth.” Emileen Lindner of MTV News agreed, calling it “a super-empowering ballad.” Holly Williams of Contact Music called it “a bright pop song with an admittedly overly simple melody, but the lyrics, though hackneyed and a little patronising, still have the desired effect. You can tell it’s simply sung from the heart and, let’s face it, Colbie doesn’t even have to try.” Marcus Floyd of Renowned for Sound wrote that Caillat “lyrically inspires once again with ‘Try’, a softer side to the release where you hear the rawness in her voice as she pleads you not to try to impress others and to just be yourself.” Matt Collar of Allmusic chose the song as one of the highlights of the EP, while Markos Papadatos of Digital Journal wrote that the song “is inspirational, and it showcases her vulnerability as an artist, becom[ing] an anthem of female empowerment due to its optimistic lyrics.”

Commercial performance

    “Try” entered the US Billboard Hot 100 chart on the issue date of July 26, 2014, at number 69. It climbed to number 55 the following week, becoming its peak position, so far. It also debuted inside of the Top 30 at the Adult Top 40 chart, peaking at number 15, so far. It debuted at number 22 on the Adult Contemporary chart and has peaked at number 10, so far. The song also debuted at number 67 on the ARIA Singles Chart. In Denmark, it debuted and peaked at number 13, her second song to chart after “Bubbly” (2007), while in both Australia and Canada, the song became her highest-charting single in five years, peaking at numbers 67 and 56, respectively.

Music video

Lyric video

    On June 10, 2014, Colbie uploaded a lyric video for the song on her YouTube page. It features Caillat, her fans and famous artists like Sheryl Crow, Miranda Lambert, Kelly Osbourne, Sara Bareilles, Lady Antebellum’s Hillary Scott, Natasha Bedingfield, Christina Perri, and Jessie J without makeup, in an effort to spread the message that beauty truly is on the inside. “I have a couple celebrity friends that would be more impactful for everyday people to see what we look like normally,” she claimed during an appearance on NBC’s Today.

    Caillat commented for Elle Magazine that,

    When I did the lyric video for ‘Try,’ and I asked some of my celebrity friends if they would send a picture of themselves, you have no idea how difficult it was. Some of them said no, some of them said they’ll send me a picture in a couple of days because they have a pimple on their chin, and they didn’t want it showing in the picture. And I was like, no, no, no! That’s good! Let’s let all of our fans know that we get them too, because otherwise they’re just think that they’re the only ones who get acne. We all get it, so let’s just kind of laugh about it together. And then some of the girls still wore makeup in the pictures because they felt like they needed to at least look – I don’t know, in their eyes, decent or something when they still look beautiful. It was so hard for them to show any degree of realness.
Official video

    The official music video premiered on July 8, 2014 on VEVO. According to Caillat,
    We shot the video in reverse, we started bare, and by the end we finished with the full hair and makeup, and then reversed the film for the finished product. All of the women were amazing. My favorite was the woman who has no hair. I first saw her completely bald, no makeup, with a huge smile, she was just so happy and confident. She was so beautiful to me. And then we kept getting more hair and makeup on, and the next scene I saw where she’s in full make-up and wig, I was like, Who is this woman? She was not the same person. She still looked beautiful but it wasn’t the same beauty that I saw when she was liberated, showing who she really was. When I shot the first scene with no hair and makeup on in front of an HD camera in my face, flashed with bright lights, everyone was watching. I thought, “Oh my god, I bet they’re all looking at my blemishes, thinking that I should cover them up, or that I should put some volume in my hair.” But it also felt really cool to be on camera with zero on, like literally nothing on. And then when it got to the full hair and makeup, I actually felt gross. I was just so caked on.
Storyline and reception

    As explained by Zakiya Jamal of People, “it begins by showing women from all different ages and backgrounds, including Caillat herself, wearing makeup, wigs, and fake eyelashes. As the video progresses the women remove their makeup, take off their wigs or shake out their hair, and let their natural beauty shine.” As noted by Emilee Lindner of MTV News, at the end, “Caillat is looking smiley and seriously at the camera, singing the last lines, ‘Don’t you like you?’ ‘Cause I like you’.” The video went viral during its first week, accumulating over nine million views, surpassing the 20-million mark on YouTube/VEVO as of August 19, 2014. Robbie Daw of Idolator praised Colbie and the other women in the clip for “giv[ing] us one of the most quietly powerful visuals of the year so far.” Bruna Nessif of E! Online claimed that the video “embraces natural beauty and embodies a massive amount of girl power in just four minutes.” Lauren Valenti of Marie Claire wrote that “Caillat’s bold experiment is a reminder that emancipating yourself from your beauty routine every once and a while can set you free — yes, even in a world filled with unrealistic beauty ideals.”

Live performances

    Caillat had given an exclusive performance of “Try” to blogger Perez Hilton. Then she performed the track officially on Today, while also discussing the song and its music video. Later, she also performed the track on Live with Kelly and Michael (on June 9, 2014), The View (on August 12, 2014), and at the Young Hollywood Awards in addition to appearing on HLN, CBS This Morning and Extra. Later she performed at the Billboard Women Music Awards.

—from Wikipedia (the Wikipedia:Text of Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License applies to Wikipedia’s block of text and possible accompanying picture, along with any alterations, transformations, and/or building upon Wikipedia’s original text that ThisSideofSanity.com applied to this block of text)

The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and U.S. Government Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 require that web sites provide transcripts of audio for the deaf.
We will be adding lyrics to all songs as fast as we can. Please be patient.

most recent comment

    Sakura: Eu amo esta canção.

    To submit a comment, use the form below:

    Please use the form (with the delay for a human to inspect it) because this website is attacked by more than 20 spam attempts per minute. The only way to keep you safe from the spam is by having human review.


song number is 3106


Contact
your name:
email address:
phone number:
(optional)
suggestions, corrections, additional information:
There is a delay before comments are posted because they must all be reviewed by a human to prevent spam.

    If you spot an error in fact, grammar, syntax, or spelling, or a broken link, or have additional information, commentary, or constructive criticism, please contact us.

    Copyright © 2014 Milo. All rights reserved. Todos Derechos Reservados. The copyrights on all source code and the data base belong to Milo and are used on this web site by permission.

    The source code is at OSdata.com, released under Apache License 2.0.

    Copyright 2012, 2013, 2014 Milo

    Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the “License”); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at:

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

    Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an “AS IS” BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

list of songs
ThisSideofSanity.com


Twitter

Enjoy the This Side of Sanity website Twitter feed.

Enjoy the This Side of Sanity Twitter feed.


Google

player artwork by michaelm