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"It's Not Me, It's You" is the sixth single of the 2009 album Awake by the Christian rock band Skillet, and is the sixth track on the album. [1] [2] Background and ...
It's Not Me, It's You is the second studio album by English singer Lily Allen, released on 4 February 2009 by Regal Recordings and Parlophone. It was produced and co-written by Greg Kurstin , with whom Allen had previously worked on her debut studio album, Alright, Still (2006).
It's Not Me, It's You is a 2009 album by Lily Allen. It's Not Me, It's You may also refer to: "It's Not Me, It's You" (song), 2011 song by Skillet;
It's Not Me, It's You! is a book written by English comedian Jon Richardson based on his 2011 comedy show of the same name. It was published in the UK by HarperCollins on 23 June 2011. Richardson has said "it is not an autobiography" but rather it is a "relationship guide from the point of view of someone who hasn't been in one for eight years ...
Lyrically, the song is an apology to Allen's older half-sister Sarah Owen, who she didn't get along with when they were teenagers. During a track by track interview for It's Not Me, It's You, Allen stated "We had a rocky relationship for years and years and years and it was just getting to the point where we just couldn't argue like teenagers anymore, so I played it to her a long time ago and ...
In Ireland "Not Fair" was not performed in its normal position, it was the last song. While performing " Womanizer " at the Los Angeles show, Lindsay Lohan joined Allen onstage for a brief moment. Calvin Harris and Dizzee Rascal both performed at the Brisbane show on 19 January 2010.
The official music video for the song was released on April 11, 2019. The video shows Miller and 6lack "explor[ing] self-love" in a "pastel future" world. The video shows Miller in her home reading an advertisement in a magazine that says "Learn how to find yourself in the Dream World".
It's not you, it's me is a popular phrase used in the context of breaking up, and is intended to ease the dumpee's feeling in the knowledge that it was not their fault, but rather the fault of the dumper. The phrase was used by John Belushi to Candice Bergen in the S2 E10 December 11, 1976 skit of Saturday Night Live.