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My Life Would Suck Without You

"My Life Would Suck Without You" is a song by American singer Kelly Clarkson from her fourth studio album, All I Ever Wanted (2009). The song features songwriting credits from Max Martin, Lukasz Gottwald, and Claude Kelly and production credits from Martin and Gottwald under his production moniker, Dr. Luke. Clarkson co-wrote the track but refused to include her name in the credits, citing a refusal to be associated with Gottwald.[2][1] "My Life Would Suck Without You" was released as the lead single from the album and premiered on January 13, 2009, in the United States on New York City's Z100 radio station and was made available to download three days later. The song has met with positive reviews from music critics, who praised the song's pop composition, which incorporates rock and dance elements.

"My Life Would Suck Without You"

January 13, 2009 (2009-01-13)

2008

3:31

"My Life Would Suck Without You" peaked at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 when it moved up the chart 96 places from number 97 in its second week on the chart. The song's chart climbing gave Clarkson the record for a single with the furthest jump to number one on the Billboard Hot 100 after achieving the feat with her 2002 single "A Moment Like This". Outside of the United States, "My Life Would Suck Without You" topped the charts in Canada, Hungary, and the United Kingdom, and peaked within the top ten of the charts in Australia, Belgium, the Netherlands, the Republic of Ireland, Sweden, and Switzerland. In the United Kingdom, where the Idols franchise that spawned American Idol originated, Clarkson became the only alumnus of an international version of Pop Idol to top the UK Singles Chart until Canadian Idol alumnus Carly Rae Jepsen achieved the feat with "Call Me Maybe" in April 2012.


The accompanying music video was directed by Wayne Isham and presents Clarkson's relationship with her fictional boyfriend as being fluctuating and tumultuous as the two are depicted arguing and throwing out each other's belongings whilst mirroring the sentiments of the song and the positive influence each has on the other. The video was nominated for an MTV Video Music Award in the Best Female Video category in 2009.[3]

Composition[edit]

"My Life Would Suck Without You" is a pop,[8][12][13] power pop and pop rock[14] which is somewhat closer to dance-pop than her earlier hit "Since U Been Gone".[15] The song is set in the time signature of common time and has a moderate fast tempo of 145 beats per minute. It was written in a key of A major and Clarkson's vocal range within the song spans from A3 to E5.[16] The instruments utilized in the song include synthesizers, guitars, drums, and bass.[7] The song begins with mellow guitar plucking and transcends into a melody of synthesizers, guitars, and synthesized pop drums.[8] The melody then cascades into a chorus of crashing cymbals, bass, synthesizers, and loud guitars.[8] The lyrics for "My Life Would Suck Without You" are centered around a tumultuous relationship.[15]

Chart performance[edit]

"My Life Would Suck Without You" debuted at number 97 on the Billboard Hot 100 the week of January 31, 2009, and went to number one in its second week, setting the record for the furthest jump to number one in history.[24] This is the second time Clarkson has set this record, after her debut single "A Moment Like This" went from number 52 to number one in 2002.[25] "My Life Would Suck Without You" and Clarkson's own "Stronger (What Doesn't Kill You)" are also the only songs by an American Idol alum to top the Hot 100 chart that were not associated with the show.[26] The song also advanced to number three on Billboard's Mainstream Top 40 chart, giving her her first top ten airplay hit since "Because of You".[27] The song was dethroned from the top of the Hot 100 chart by Eminem's "Crack a Bottle" after two weeks.[28] As of September 10, 2017, the song has sold over 2,855,000 copies in the United States.[29]


In Australia, "My Life Would Suck Without You" debuted at number 16 on the ARIA Singles Chart and later peaked at number five on the chart.


In the United Kingdom, "My Life Would Such Without You" debuted at the top of the UK Singles Chart on March 1, 2009 – for the week ending date March 7, 2009 – becoming Clarkson's first number one song in Britain, selling 51,114 copies in its first week as a digital release. As the Idols franchise originated in the United Kingdom, Clarkson became the only alumnus of an international version of Pop Idol to top the UK Singles Chart until Canadian Idol alumnus Carly Rae Jepsen topped the chart with "Call Me Maybe" in April 2012. Clarkson remains the only winner of an international version of Pop Idol to top the UK Singles Chart.[30][31] Despite "My Life Would Suck Without You" being Clarkson's highest-charting song in Britain, its stay on the chart is considerably less than some of her other singles. With 17 weeks inside the UK Singles Chart, it ranks behind her number five hit "Since U Been Gone" at 37 weeks and her number seven hit "Because of You" at 25 weeks.[32] According to the Official Charts Company, as of April 2016, "My Life Would Suck Without You" has sold 423,000 copies in the United Kingdom.[33]

Music video[edit]

The music video for the song was directed by Wayne Isham and was shot in Los Angeles in December 2008. It is available for digital download on iTunes and is featured on the DVD of the Deluxe Edition of All I Ever Wanted. A preview of the video was shown during a commercial break for American Idol on January 28, 2009. The full video then premiered via AT&T's website directly after the broadcast.[34] The video was subsequently nominated for a 2009 MTV Video Music Award in the category for Best Female Video.


The video begins with Clarkson sitting on a swing set at night before seguing into her earlier memories as a small girl playing on a playground together with her young male best friend, teasingly pushing each other around. The boy hands her a beaded necklace, which she puts on admiringly. The shot closes in on the necklace, then pulls back to reveal it's still worn as a bracelet on the wrist of now-adult Clarkson, her boyfriend (played by Houston Rhines) shows up at her apartment door, presumably after an argument. Clarkson teases him with a set of keys, which she then throws down the toilet. The two are then shown sitting on a couch, reading magazines, when Clarkson grabs her boyfriend's magazine. The two are shown throwing various possessions of one another out of the apartment window, though in a playful manner. Such items include numerous articles of clothing, magazines, a guitar (which Clarkson tries to stop him throwing out), and a fishbowl (with the fish being taken out and put in a glass first, after which they look out the window). After throwing these items out the window, the two are seen sitting affectionately on the couch. Clarkson and her boyfriend are shown still fighting and bickering as they did as children, over the remote control. The latter portion of the video shows the two driving in a first generation Ford Bronco (with the necklace/bracelet hanging from the rear view mirror), eventually getting into an argument. Distracted by the tiff over directions, the Bronco nearly ends up in a head-on collision with an approaching car. After spinning out to avoid the crash, Clarkson simply grabs her boyfriend and pulls him into a kiss, where the video ends.

Engineered at in Los Angeles, California and at Dr. Luke's Studio

Conway Recording Studios

Credits are adapted from the liner notes of All I Ever Wanted, RCA Records, 19 Recordings.


Recording


Personnel

"My Life Would Suck Without You" was covered in the episode "" of the TV series Glee in 2009.

Sectionals

"My Life Would Suck Without You" was covered in the of The X Factor by the boyband One Direction in 2010.

seventh season

In popular culture[edit]

Michael Scott plays the song in "Ultimatum," a seventh-season episode of The Office, to celebrate Holly Flax not being engaged to AJ.[100]

List of Hot 100 number-one singles of 2009 (U.S.)

List of Hot 100 number-one singles of 2009 (Canada)

List of number-one singles from the 2000s (UK)