You Got The Love - Florence and The Machine Version

Florence and The Machine Version

"You've Got the Love"
Single by Florence + the Machine
from the album Lungs
Released 5 January 2009
16 November 2009
2011
Format Digital download, CD single, 7" single
Genre Indie pop, soul, art rock
Length 2:48
Label Island
Writer(s) Anthony B. Stephens
Producer Charlie Hugall
Florence + the Machine singles chronology
"Drumming Song"
(2009)
"You've Got the Love"
(2009)
"You Got the Dirtee Love"
(2010)
Lungs track listing
  1. "Dog Days Are Over"
  2. "Rabbit Heart (Raise It Up)"
  3. "I'm Not Calling You a Liar"
  4. "Howl"
  5. "Kiss with a Fist"
  6. "Girl with One Eye"
  7. "Drumming Song"
  8. "Between Two Lungs"
  9. "Cosmic Love"
  10. "My Boy Builds Coffins"
  11. "Hurricane Drunk"
  12. "Blinding"
  13. "You've Got the Love"

The song was covered by English indie rock band Florence and the Machine as "You've Got the Love" and released as the fifth single from their debut album, Lungs (2009). It was first released on 1 December 2008 as the B-side to their second single "Dog Days Are Over". It was then later released as a digital download only single on 5 January 2009 in the United Kingdom only, after the mass praise it received during the release of "Dog Days Are Over". After being released well before Lungs was finally recorded and released, it was later featured on the album as its bonus track.

The single was given a re-release on physical format on 16 November 2009 in the United Kingdom. For the reissue a music video was shot.

Read more about this topic:  You Got The Love

Famous quotes containing the words machine and/or version:

    I find it hard to believe that the machine would go into the creative artist’s hand even were that magic hand in true place. It has been too far exploited by industrialism and science at expense to art and true religion.
    Frank Lloyd Wright (1869–1959)

    I should think that an ordinary copy of the King James version would have been good enough for those Congressmen.
    Calvin Coolidge (1872–1933)