Wherever You Are (Military Wives song)

"Wherever You Are" is a song written by Paul Mealor and performed by the Military Wives Choir, sung by ladies from Chivenor and Plymouth under the direction of Gareth Malone. It is a spin-off of the BBC Two television series The Choir: Military Wives. It was released on 19 December 2011 following a campaign to make it the 2011 UK Christmas number one. The song entered the UK Singles Chart at number 1, claiming the Christmas number 1 – selling more than 556,000 copies in the week, more than the rest of the Top 12 combined. The song also claimed the status of the biggest first week sales since "A Moment Like This" by Leona Lewis sold over 571,000 copies in its first week in 2006.[1] The song was included on their debut studio album In My Dreams.[2]

"Wherever You Are"
Single by Military Wives featuring Gareth Malone
from the album In My Dreams
B-side"Now Sleeps The Crimson Petal (Four Madrigals On Rose Texts): A Spotless Rose"
Released15 December 2011
Recorded2011
GenreChoral
Length2:51
LabelDecca
Songwriter(s)Text of assorted letters set to music by Paul Mealor
Producer(s)Jon Cohen.
Mixed by Phil Da Costa and Jon Cohen
Military Wives singles chronology
"Wherever You Are"
(2011)
"In My Dreams"
(2012)
Spin-off product of the 2011 BBC TV series The Choir: Military Wives

"Wherever You Are" was nominated for Best British Single in the 2012 BRIT Awards, but the award was won by One Direction for their single "What Makes You Beautiful".[3]

Background

The Military Wives was formed in 2011 by Gareth Malone for the BBC Two television series The Choir: Military Wives. The programme documented Malone's visits to Chivenor Barracks first and then a few months later to Royal Citadel, Plymouth – both in Devon, in which he formed two choirs of wives and partners of British military personnel deployed on active service in the Afghanistan War. In forming the choirs, Malone aimed to raise the women's morale and raise their profile in the public perception.[4]

The cover art features the emblem of a Remembrance poppy on a green background and the logos of the charities benefiting from the sales. It was released in the UK as a single by Decca Records on 19 December 2011, with proceeds going to the Royal British Legion and SSAFA Forces Help[5]

2011 UK Christmas number one campaign

The song competed against rival Christmas campaigns to re-release Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit", unsigned YouTube blogger Alex Day, who released multiple remixes of a song called "Forever Yours" and The X Factor winners Little Mix, who released a cover version of Damien Rice's "Cannonball". There was also a campaign supported by Chris Moyles of BBC Radio 1 to get Lou Monte's 1960 recording of "Dominick the Donkey" to Christmas number 1 and this song was number 2 in the iTunes and Amazon charts throughout the majority of the Christmas week behind the Military Wives. Chris Moyles' support of this rival song for Christmas number 1 was controversial because the BBC appeared to be supporting "Wherever You Are" to be Christmas number 1 as BBC Radio 2 added the song to their A-list and Chris Evans was a major supporter of the record and the choir.

Campaign for US number one

On 29 December 2011 Piers Morgan campaigned on Twitter for the Military Wives Choir to reach number one in the US. He urged his 1.6 million followers to invest in the collective's charity track 'Wherever You Are' following its stateside release on Boxing Day. He tweeted "Just heard the Military Wives single gets released in the US today,", posting a link to the official video. "Watch this my American friends, then go buy it...Good luck ladies, hope you get a No1 in America." The Sun reported that the former Britain's Got Talent judge invited the choir to perform on his US show Piers Morgan Tonight.[6][7]

The song was also promoted on the front page of The Blaze, the news site run by American commentator Glenn Beck.[8]

Writing and recording

The text of "Wherever You Are" is a love poem compiled from letters written between the women and their absent husbands and partners. It was set to music by composer Paul Mealor, who is noted for his composition of a choral work sung at the Royal Wedding in 2011.[9]

Live performances

The first public performance of the piece was at The Royal British Legion's Festival of Remembrance held at the Royal Albert Hall on 12 November 2011 attended by The Queen. The event was broadcast in the final episode of The Choir television programme to an estimated television audience of 2.65 million viewers.

The Military Wives made a guest appearance on the BBC's Strictly Come Dancing on 10 December 2011, when Vincent Simone and Flavia Cacace danced to their performance of "Wherever You Are".[10][11]

Commercial performance

A campaign was launched to promote sales of the CD single, with the aim of it becoming the 2011 Christmas number one in the UK Singles Chart. Support for this campaign was received from BBC Radio 2 DJ Chris Evans.[12] In the traditional, competitive speculation in the run-up to Christmas, the Military Wives single was said to be in competition for the title with the X Factor winners Little Mix, who released a cover version of Damien Rice's "Cannonball", a campaign to promote the 2011 re-release of Nirvana's "Smells Like Teen Spirit" to number one, a campaign to highjack the Christmas Number 1 spot by British YouTube vlogger Alex Day named Forever Yours and a campaign fronted by Chris Moyles from BBC Radio 1 to hijack the Christmas #1 with Dominick the Donkey.[13] The race was further heated by the introduction of a trophy for the number one record by the Official Charts Company to celebrate sixty years of the UK Charts. It is to be awarded to every artist who makes it to number one in the UK Charts, with the first trophy being given out to the 2011 Christmas number one single.[14]

In mid-December 2011 it was reported that "Wherever You Are" had broken sales records in becoming the most pre-ordered music item ever on the UK Amazon website. According to Amazon, the pre-order sales were three times as many as those of Take That’s 2010 album Progress.[15]

Following the second day of release, some 242,000 copies of the single had been sold, making it the fastest selling single since X Factor winner Shayne Ward's 2005 single That's My Goal.[16] At that point it was leading the race for Christmas number one, having sold six times the number of singles as second place Little Mix.[16]

On the chart dated 24 December 2011, the song debuted at number 144 on the UK Singles Chart. The following week the song climbed to the number-one spot, becoming the Christmas number one of 2011. It sold 555,622 copies, more than the rest of the top 12 combined. It is also the biggest first-week sales since "A Moment Like This" by Leona Lewis sold over 571,000 copies in its first week in 2006.[17][1] Despite impressive first week sales, "Wherever You Are" only spent one week atop the chart, with Coldplay's "Paradise" replacing it at the summit on January 1; causing it to fall three places to number four.

B side

The B side of the single is a choral setting by Paul Mealor of the Christmas song "A Spotless Rose". The song is part of Mealor's "Rose Cycle " of songs entitled "Now Sleeps the Crimson Petal".[18]

Charts

Weekly charts

Release history

Region Date Label Format
Ireland 15 December 2011[23] Decca Records Digital download
United Kingdom 18 December 2011[24]
19 December 2011[25] CD single
gollark: > `x = _(int(0, e), int(e, е))`You may note that this would produce slices of 0 size. However, one of the `e`s is a homoglyph; it contains `2 * e`.`return Result[0][0], x, m@set({int(e, 0), int(е, e)}), w`From this, it's fairly obvious what `strassen` *really* does - partition `m1` into 4 block matrices of half (rounded up to the nearest power of 2) size.> `E = typing(lookup[2])`I forgot what this is meant to contain. It probably isn't important.> `def exponentiate(m1, m2):`This is the actual multiplication bit.> `if m1.n == 1: return Mаtrix([[m1.bigData[0] * m2.bigData[0]]])`Recursion base case. 1-sized matrices are merely multiplied scalarly.> `aa, ab, ac, ad = strassen(m1)`> `аa, аb, аc, аd = strassen(m2)`More use of homoglyph confusion here. The matrices are quartered.> `m = m1.subtract(exponentiate(aa, аa) ** exponentiate(ab, аc), exponentiate(aa, аb) ** exponentiate(ab, аd), exponentiate(ac, аa) ** exponentiate(ad, аc), exponentiate(ac, аb) ** exponentiate(ad, аd)) @ [-0j, int.abs(m2.n * 3, m1.n)]`This does matrix multiplication in an inefficient *recursive* way; the Strassen algorithm could save one of eight multiplications here, which is more efficient (on big matrices). It also removes the zero padding.> `m = exponentiate(Mаtrix(m1), Mаtrix(m2)) @ (0j * math.sin(math.asin(math.sin(math.asin(math.sin(math.e))))), int(len(m1), len(m1)))`This multiples them and I think also removes the zero padding again, as we want it to be really very removed.> `i += 1`This was added as a counter used to ensure that it was usably performant during development.> `math.factorial = math.sinh`Unfortunately, Python's factorial function has really rather restrictive size limits.> `for row in range(m.n):`This converts back into the 2D array format.> `for performance in sorted(dir(gc)): getattr(gc, performance)()`Do random fun things to the GC.
gollark: > `globals()[Row + Row] = random.randint(*sys.version_info[:2])`Never actually got used anywhere.> `ε = sys.float_info.epsilon`Also not used. I just like epsilons.> `def __exit__(self, _, _________, _______):`This is also empty, because cleaning up the `_` global would be silly. It'll be overwritten anyway. This does serve a purpose, however, and not just in making it usable as a context manager. This actually swallows all errors, which is used in some places.> `def __pow__(self, m2):`As ever, this is not actual exponentiation. `for i, (ι, 𐌉) in enumerate(zip(self.bigData, m2.bigData)): e.bigData[i] = ι + 𐌉` is in fact just plain and simple addition of two matrices.> `def subtract(forth, 𝕒, polynomial, c, vector_space):`This just merges 4 submatrices back into one matrix.> `with out as out, out, forth:`Apart from capturing the exceptions, this doesn't really do much either. The `_` provided by the context manager is not used.> `_(0j, int(0, 𝕒.n))`Yes, it's used in this line. However, this doesn't actually have any effect whatsoever on the execution of this. So I ignore it. It was merely a distraction.> `with Mаtrix(ℤ(ℤ(4))):`It is used again to swallow exceptions. After this is just some fluff again.> `def strassen(m, x= 3.1415935258989):`This is an interesting part. Despite being called `strassen`, it does not actually implement the Strassen algorithm, which is a somewhat more efficient way to multiply matrices than the naive way used in - as far as I can tell - every entry.> `e = 2 ** (math.ceil(math.log2(m.n)) - 1)`This gets the next power of two in a fairly obvious way. It is used to pad out the matrix to the next power of 2 size.> `with m:`The context manager is used again for nicer lookups.> `Result[0] += [_(0j, int(e, e))]`Weird pythonoquirkiness again. You can append to lists in tuples with `+=`, but it throws an exception as they're sort of immutable.> `typing(lookup[4])(input())`It's entirely possible that this does things.
gollark: > `def __eq__(self, xy): return self.bigData[math.floor(xy.real * self.n + xy.imag)]`This actually gets indices into the matrix. I named it badly for accursedness. It uses complex number coordinates.> `def __matmul__(self, ǫ):`*This* function gets a 2D "slice" of the matrix between the specified coordinates. > `for (fοr, k), (b, р), (whіle, namedtuple) in itertools.product(I(*int.ℝ(start, end)), enumerate(range(ℤ(start.imag), math.floor(end.imag))), (ǫ, ǫ)):`This is really just bizarre obfuscation for the basic "go through every X/Y in the slice" thing.> `out[b * 1j + fοr] = 0`In case the matrix is too big, just pad it with zeros.> `except ZeroDivisionError:`In case of zero divisions, which cannot actually *happen*, we replace 0 with 1 except this doesn't actually work.> `import hashlib`As ever, we need hashlib.> `memmove(id(0), id(1), 27)`It *particularly* doesn't work because we never imported this name.> `def __setitem__(octonion, self, v):`This sets either slices or single items of the matrix. I would have made it use a cool™️ operator, but this has three parameters, unlike the other ones. It's possible that I could have created a temporary "thing setting handle" or something like that and used two operators, but I didn't.> `octonion[sedenion(malloc, entry, 20290, 15356, 44155, 30815, 37242, 61770, 64291, 20834, 47111, 326, 11094, 37556, 28513, 11322)] = v == int(bool, b)`Set each element in the slice. The sharp-eyed may wonder where `sedenion` comes from.> `"""`> `for testing`> `def __repr__(m):`This was genuinely for testing, although the implementation here was more advanced.> `def __enter__(The_Matrix: 2):`This allows use of `Matrix` objects as context managers.> `globals()[f"""_"""] = lambda h, Ĥ: The_Matrix@(h,Ĥ)`This puts the matrix slicing thing into a convenient function accessible globally (as long as the context manager is running). This is used a bit below.
gollark: * desired
gollark: I can write some code for this if desisred.

References

  1. "Military Wives claim Official Christmas Number 1 2011". The Official Charts Company. Retrieved 25 December 2011.
  2. In My Dreams: The Military Wives: Amazon.co.uk: Music
  3. "The BRIT Awards 2012 winners". BRIT Awards website. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  4. "The Choir III: Military Wives". Gareth Malone official website. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  5. "Military wives choir tipped to top chart". BFBS News. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  6. "Military Wives in bid to score number one in US with Piers Morgan campaign". Metro.
  7. "Piers Morgan campaigns for Military Wives US number one". Digital Spy.
  8. Seidl, Jonathan M. (December 26, 2011). Hear the tear-jerking, fastest-selling single in Britain in 3 years by a group of military wives. The Blaze. Retrieved February 1, 2012.
  9. "Military Wives: Wherever You Are". Gareth Malone official website. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  10. "Strictly Come Dancing Week 11". Series 9. 11 December 2011. 25 minutes in. BBC. BBC One. Missing or empty |series= (help)
  11. "Military Wives on Strictly Come Dancing". GarethMalone.com. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  12. "Chris Evans backs military wives' choir in push for Christmas number one". The Daily Telegraph. 2 December 2011. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  13. Kitchener, Shaun (5 December 2011). "Military Wives Topple X Factor As Christmas No. 1 Favourites". EntertainmentWise. Retrieved 8 December 2011.
  14. "New trophy to be handed out for number one singles". BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat. 19 December 2011. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  15. Cole, Tom (12 December 2011). "Military Wives Christmas single breaks online pre-order records". Radio Times. Immediate Media. Retrieved 14 December 2011.
  16. "The Military Wives on course to be Christmas number one". BBC News. 20 December 2011. Retrieved 20 December 2011.
  17. Jones, Alan (25 December 2011). "Christmas Singles Chart analysis: Military Wives run away with it". Music Week. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  18. "Compositions". Paul Mealor official website. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
  19. "Official Scottish Singles Sales Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company.
  20. "Official Singles Chart Top 100". Official Charts Company.
  21. "The Top 20 biggest selling singles of 2011 revealed!". The Official Charts. 2012-01-02.
  22. "British single certifications – Military Wives – Wherever You Are". British Phonographic Industry. Select singles in the Format field. Select Platinum in the Certification field. Type Wherever You Are in the "Search BPI Awards" field and then press Enter.
  23. "iTunes – Music – Wherever You Are – Single by Military Wives, Gareth Malone & Paul Mealor". Itunes.apple.com. 2011-12-15. Retrieved 2012-01-07.
  24. "Wherever You Are: Military Wives: Amazon.co.uk: MP3 Downloads". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-07.
  25. "Wherever You Are: Military Wives with Gareth Malone: Amazon.co.uk: Music". Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-07.
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