Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Just a Girl

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Format
  
CD

Genre
  
pop punk new wave

Label
  
Interscope

Recorded
  
1994

Length
  
3:28

Released
  
September 21, 1995 (United States)

"Just a Girl" is a song by the American rock band No Doubt. The song was released in 1995 and helped the band break into mainstream music, peaking at number 23 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100.

Contents

Upon release in the UK in 1996 the song only reached number 38. However, after the massive success of "Don't Speak" the song was re-released and managed a peak of number 3.

"Just a Girl" was first aired on the Californian radio show Ska Parade. It was also featured in the movie Clueless and the opening credits of Romy and Michele's High School Reunion.

Background and writing

After primary songwriter Eric Stefani left No Doubt in 1994, the rest of the band took on the role of songwriters for the band, which dramatically changed the band's musical style. Tragic Kingdom was the first album on which the band had written most of the material and singer Gwen Stefani had written the lyrics, and there were claims that the band had "sold out" - dropped their own style to pick up a more popular one in order to make more money. Tom Dumont explained the change of style in an interview with Backstage Online:

The song itself is written about Gwen Stefani's exasperation over female stereotypes, portraying women as weak and in need of a man to look after them. It has distinct feminist undertones. This is evident from lyrics such as "Don't you think I know / Exactly where I stand? / This world is forcing me / To hold your hand." She explained her inspiration in an interview for BAM Magazine:

Music

"Just a Girl" is a moderately fast song at 108 beats per minute and is written in the key of D major. Like the majority of popular music, it is set in common time. The voice of the singer, Gwen Stefani, spans nearly an octave and a half, from B3 to E5 in scientific pitch notation. The opening riff that Dumont uses was taken from an earlier effort by keyboardist Eric Stefani. The song is heavily influenced by new wave music, using synth noise from a Roland Jupiter-8, '80s keyboards and effects, and retro sounds.

Music video

The music video was directed by Mark Kohr.

The video begins with the band members loading their silver car with recording equipment in front of the Stefani household. Gwen Stefani stands in front of a damaged red car and sings. They drive away, with Tom Dumont, Gwen Stefani and Tony Kanal sitting in the backseats. The band arrive at a building where Stefani enters the ladies' bathroom, carrying a boombox, and the rest of the band enters the gents', carrying speakers, instruments and electrical equipment. The ladies' bathroom is clean, brightly decorated and well furnished with flowers, fruit and two female assistants. The gents' bathroom is dark, dirty and bare-walled. The men set up and play their equipment in the gents' while Stefani sings in ladies'. Various men and women enter their respective bathrooms; the men use the urinals and the women check their make-up, before dancing with the band. Eventually, the men take to lifting each other through the ceiling to get into the other bathroom and the video ends with everyone dancing together in the ladies'.

Track listings

American CD single
  1. "Just a Girl" – 3:28
  2. "Different People" – 4:34
  3. "Just a Girl" (video)
European CD single
  1. "Just a Girl" – 3:28
  2. "Just a Girl" (live from London, UK) – 5:39
  3. "Don't Speak" (live from Hamburg, Germany) – 5:28
  4. "Hey You!" (live from Den Haag, the Netherlands) – 3:20
German CD single
  1. "Just a Girl" – 3:28
  2. "Different People" – 4:34
  3. "Open the Gate" – 3:38

Cover versions

  • JC Chasez's band Girl Radical released a cover version on iTunes in August 2013.
  • Country music duo Bomshel recorded a cover version on its 2009 debut album Fight Like a Girl.
  • Miranda Cosgrove sang a cover version on her 2011 Dancing Crazy Tour.
  • References

    Just a Girl Wikipedia