Spoken Word (song)

"Spoken Word" is a song by British record production duo Chase & Status, featuring vocals from British rapper George the Poet. The song was released as a digital download on 17 June 2016 through MTA Records and Mercury Records.[1] The song peaked to number 78 on the UK Singles Chart. The song was written by Nigel Swanston, Tim Cox, Saul Milton, William Kennard, Nathaniel Ledwidge, George Mpanga and produced by Chase & Status.

"Spoken Word"
Single by Chase & Status featuring George the Poet
Released17 June 2016
Recorded2014
Length3:23
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Chase & Status
Chase & Status singles chronology
"NRG"
(2016)
"Spoken Word"
(2016)
"All Goes Wrong"
(2016)

Music video

A music video to accompany the release of "Spoken Word" was first released onto YouTube on 12 July 2016 at a total length of three minutes and twenty-four seconds.[2]

Track listing

Digital download[1]
No.TitleLength
1."Spoken Word" (featuring George the Poet)3:23

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Chart (2016) Peak
position
UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[3] 78

Release history

Region Date Format Label
United Kingdom 27 November 2015[1] Digital download
gollark: Quite a lot.
gollark: > The Planck time is the unique combination of the gravitational constant G, the special-relativistic constant c, and the quantum constant ħ, to produce a constant with dimension of time. Because the Planck time comes from dimensional analysis, which ignores constant factors, there is no reason to believe that exactly one unit of Planck time has any special physical significance. Rather, the Planck time represents a rough time scale at which quantum gravitational effects are likely to become important. This essentially means that while smaller units of time can exist, they are so small their effect on our existence is negligible. The nature of those effects, and the exact time scale at which they would occur, would need to be derived from an actual theory of quantum gravity.
gollark: Oh, no, never mind, that's not it.
gollark: ... you mean the Planck time or something?
gollark: Actually, picolightyears sounds better as light picoyears.

References

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