Can't Change Me
"Can't Change Me" is the first single released from Chris Cornell's debut solo album, Euphoria Morning (1999).[2] The song peaked at No. 5 on Billboard's Mainstream Rock Tracks chart,[3] and at No. 7 on the Modern Rock Tracks chart.[4] A music video was produced for the song.[5] "Can't Change Me" was nominated for Best Male Rock Vocal Performance at the 2000 Grammy Awards.[6] OriginChris Cornell told MTV News that students of Soundgarden's music can find the genesis of "Can't Change Me" in some of the band's hits, such as "Blow Up the Outside World" and "Fell on Black Days".[2] About the meaning of the lyrics, Cornell told MTV's Making the Video:
Release and reception"Can't Change Me" was released in early 1999 and turned out to be the biggest hit from the album, achieving strong chart positions. "Can't Change Me" was the first Cornell single to chart, peaking on the Mainstream Rock Tracks chart at No. 5 and on the Modern Rock Tracks chart at No. 7. In the UK, it peaked at No. 62. Greg Tate of Rolling Stone said "'Can't Change Me' is as rhapsodically gorgeous as pop gets, putting a spin on true love that any reprobate slacker can relate to: 'She's going to change the world/But she can't change me/Suddenly I can see everything that's wrong with me/But what can I do?/I'm the only thing I really have at all.' Cornell unveils a desire to be reckoned with as an openly wounded and unabashedly portentous rock balladeer."[8] Music videoA music video directed by Johan Renck was produced for the song and premiered on MTV on September 6, 1999.[5][9] The video's concept was Cornell's idea.[10] It also stars Portuguese model and actress Ana Cristina de Oliveira.[11] The video was shot in Hollywood in four days, between July 31 and August 2, 1999, in locations such as at the Raji's, the Townhouse Motel, and in the tiny mountain town of Cornell, located in the Santa Monica Mountains.[10] The fire shots were filmed in Stockholm, Sweden on August 19, 1999.[10] Its filming was showcased in an episode of MTV's Making the Video followed by the world premiere of the music video.[10] French versionCornell recorded a version of the song in French.[12] This version is a bonus track on Euphoria Morning's deluxe version,[13] and on the Japanese[14] and European editions of the album released in November 1999.[15] The song was translated to French by Alexis Lemoine.[15] Track listingCD1
CD2
Chart positions
References
External links |
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