"Don't Give It Up" is a song by New Zealand band Six60, released as the lead single from their 2017 extended play Six60.
Background and composition
The song was the first that Six60 recorded for the Six60 EP sessions.[1] The song was created by Six60 as a way to play with space, and to use silence as an instrument. The song was sonically inspired by the "sophisticated simplicity" of musicians such as Bob Marley, Queen and the Beatles,[2] and began as a piano demo performed by Marlon Gerbes, that the band stripped back to the most basic aspects.[1] Lyrically, the band wanted to create an ambiguous song where listeners could put their own voice and experiences into the track, such as social media-related anxiety and other "unique challenges" faced at the time.[2]
Release and promotion
"Don't Give It Up" was the first of six tracks released weekly in the build-up to their Six60 EP,[3] on 13 October 2017.[4] The band performed "Don't Give It Up" at the 2018 New Zealand Music Awards.[5] "Don't Give It Up" spent six months from November 2017 to May 2018 as the most performed song on New Zealand radio.[6]
New Zealand musician Miller Yule released an acoustic cover of the song in 2018, on his live EP Miller Yule Live.[7]
Critical reception
Chris Schulz of The New Zealand Herald praised "Don't Give It Up" as an "earworm sugar rush".[8] Hussein Moses of Radio New Zealand described the song as "basically one big unimaginative feel-good singalong about nothing in particular, which is bound to annoy critics and please just about everyone else."[9]
Mark Beynes of MAINZ analysed "Don't Give It Up", describing the song as a diatonic track borrowing the rhythm of 1960s pop songs, such as "Oh, Pretty Woman" by Roy Orbison, noting the track's "tasteful vocal harmonies".[10]