![]() On 24 August 2007, Collins discussed the song in a phone interview as an example for break-up songs. A number 1 MTV video for several weeks, MTV ranked it as number 4 in its 1984 year-end top 20 video countdown. The concept for the video was created by Keith Williams, a Welsh-born writer who had already worked with Abelson on the video for "Dancin' With Myself" (Billy Idol), and who would go on to also create concepts for "Holding Out for a Hero" (Bonnie Tyler) and "Ghostbusters" (Ray Parker, Jr.) for the same producer as well as "Say You Say Me" (Lionel Richie) from White Nights, which Taylor Hackford also directed. The final scene pulls back from Collins to reveal him standing in the middle of a water-filled triangle formed from neon tubes in the same three colours-completing the visual concept as the three main characters are superimposed around the neon triangle's three sides. It is this colour schematic that is used as an organic segue to and from character-specific scenes in the movie. Echoing the love triangle theme of the film, Collins is seen performing in front of a wall of rainwater that is alternately lit red, blue, and green-each colour representing one of the three main characters in the film. Old and New (2008).The song's music video, directed by Taylor Hackford, and produced by Jeffrey Abelson, was an early example of a highly conceptual approach to creating hybrid movie/music-videos that producer Abelson pioneered. The song was first included on a Collins album on the 1998 compilation Hits, and it also appeared on his compilation Love Songs: A Compilation. Collins lost to the Stevie Wonder song "I Just Called to Say I Love You". When another song Collins performed for a movie, "Separate Lives", was being nominated for an Academy Award, in interviews about the original snub by the Academy for "Against All Odds", Collins would jokingly say "the hell with him - I'm going up too", referring to if the Stephen Bishop written song were to win the award. His perceived negative reaction shown on the telecast is considered to be one of the most awkward moments in the history of the ceremony, and has been a favourite reference for Dennis Miller to relate someone reacting in a horrified fashion. Collins was the only nominee in the category not invited to sing his song on stage, and sat in the audience as Ann Reinking performed it. "Against All Odds" won the Grammy Award for Best Male Pop Vocal Performance in 1985, and it was also nominated for the Academy Award for Best Original Song. It also became Collins' only number 1 single on the Hot Mainstream Rock Tracks chart as a solo artist, although he would achieve two other number ones on this chart with his band, Genesis. It is the first of six songs by Collins written specifically for a film soundtrack to appear on the Hot 100. It replaced "Footloose" by Kenny Loggins, and was replaced by Lionel Richie's "Hello". ![]() Billboard Hot 100 for three weeks, from 15 April to. I couldn't believe it." It peaked at number 2 in the UK upon its release as a single in 1984 and became Collins' third top ten single there, and it peaked at number 1 on the U.S. The mixes were done by phone and the song went to Number 1. According to Collins in a 1985 interview with Dan Neer: "We recorded the song in two days: One day in New York, the other in Los Angeles. ![]() Rob Mounsey played piano and keyboard bass, Collins sang and played the drums with his (and Hugh Padgham's) trademark gated reverb sound, and a string arrangement by Mardin completed the production. ![]() It has been covered by several artists.Originally titled "How Can You Just Sit There?", the song was initially from the sessions for Collins' debut solo album Face Value (1981), and it was one of about a dozen written for his first wife, who had left him.Phil Collins released the song on the soundtrack to the film Against All Odds, and it was produced by Arif Mardin. ![]() It is a ballad in which its protagonist implores his/her ex-lover to "take a look at me now", knowing that reconciliation is "against all odds", but also knowing that he or she must try. The song was the main theme for the 1984 film of the same name, and first appeared on its soundtrack. "Against All Odds" by Phil Collins "Against All Odds (Take a Look at Me Now)" (also simply titled "Against All Odds") is a song originally written and recorded by British singer Phil Collins. ![]()
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