Get Off (The Dandy Warhols song)

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"Get Off"
File:Get Off.jpg
CD1 and reissue cover
Single by The Dandy Warhols
from the album Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia
Released May 2000, 2002 (2002) (re-release)
Format CD, 7" vinyl
Genre Alternative rock
Label Capitol
The Dandy Warhols singles chronology
"Not If You Were the Last Junkie on Earth"
(1997)
"Get Off"
(2000)
"Bohemian Like You"
(2000)

"Get Off" is a song by American alternative rock band The Dandy Warhols. It was released in 2000 as the first single from their third studio album, Thirteen Tales from Urban Bohemia. It peaked at No. 38 on the UK Singles Chart in 2000[1] and No. 34 when it was re-released in 2002.[2]

Release

The "Get Off (C11H15NO2 Mix)" remix on the Australian Tour EP includes a reference to MDMA in the title, which has the molecular formula C11H15NO2.

Track listing

All tracks written and composed by Courtney Taylor-Taylor; except where indicated.

Brown 7" Vinyl
No. Title Length
1. "Get Off"   3:10
2. "White Gold"   4:09
CD one
No. Title Length
1. "Get Off"   3:10
2. "White Gold"   4:09
3. "Phone Call"   4:02
CD two
No. Title Length
1. "Get Off"   3:10
2. "Not If You Were the Last Junkie on Earth (Live)" (recorded live at the 1999 Reading Festival) 3:14
3. "I Love You (Live)" (recorded live at the 1999 Reading Festival) 4:20
7" Vinyl 2002 re-release
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Get Off"     3:12
2. "Eight Days a Week (Acoustic Version)" (recorded at Virgin Radio Studios on 7th November 2001, The Beatles cover) John Lennon, Paul McCartney 3:31
CD 2002 re-release
No. Title Writer(s) Length
1. "Get Off"     3:12
2. "Stars (Acoustic Version)" (recorded at Virgin Radio Studios on 7th November 2001, The Brian Jonestown Massacre cover) Anton Newcombe 4:27
3. "Eight Days a Week (Acoustic Version)" (recorded at Virgin Radio Studios on 7th November 2001, The Beatles cover) John Lennon, Paul McCartney 3:31
4. "Get Off" (CD-ROM video)    

Reception

NME wrote that the song sounds like "a thousand Sioux Indians invading the whorehouse at the High Chaparal for a bongs'n'blow jobs toga keg party", commenting "does it really take a major bastard ad campaign for the radio big knobs to spot a decent tune when it chews their fucking faces off?",[3] in reference to The Dandy Warhols' relative obscurity prior to having their song "Bohemian Like You" featured in a Vodafone advert.

References

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External links