Goodnight and Go
"Goodnight and Go" is a song by English singer-songwriter Imogen Heap, the second single from her 2005 album Speak for Yourself. The lyrics of the song describe the "devastation of having a crush." The single received a little more push and promotion in the US than "Hide and Seek", and the music video received airplay on VH1. Jeff Beck plays guitar on the track.
Release
"Goodnight and Go" was remixed by Heap for radio to include elements from her live performances of the track and labelled as "Immi's Radio Mix", which is accompanied on the release by a brand new track "Speeding Cars".The video, which is featured on the CD release, hit MTV and VH1 UK in early April, before being added to other television channels later in the month, and the single charted at number 56 in the official UK top 75 singles chart. A special edit of the video for the US market was released in late April.
New Mac OS X Leopard Demos introduced on 11 June 2007 feature "Goodnight and Go".
The song was featured on the second series of Made in Chelsea which aired on 14 November 2011.
As of 2009 the song had sold 159,000 copies in United States.
Track listings
CD single and 7" vinyl- "Goodnight and Go" – 3:26
- "Speeding Cars" – 3:31
- "Goodnight and Go" – 3:26
- "Goodnight and Go" – 3:52
Charts
Ariana Grande version
American singer Ariana Grande covered/remixed the song for her fourth studio album Sweetener, released in August 2018. Grande's version, titled "Goodnight n Go" uses a sample of the original as part of an original arrangement but with extra harmonies and different song structures, with a new verse penned by Grande. It was written by Grande and Victoria Monét along with its producers Tommy Brown, Charles Anderson and Michael Foster. In terms of music "Goodnight n Go" is an EDM, future bass, and trap music|trap] song that contains tropical and deep house elements.Background and release
Prior to recording the song, Grande had expressed admiration for Imogen Heap's music, citing her as a musical inspiration. Heap told Billboard, in 2018, "I think for her 21st birthday — her mom emailed me somehow and asked, 'Can Ariana come over for dinner?' So she came to my house in the middle of the countryside in the outskirts of London." The two made a vegan dinner and experimented with Heap's musical technology and devices.When the song was finally recorded, Tommy Brown, Charles Anderson and Michael Foster handled production. It was recorded at Glenwood Place in Burbank, California, with Jeremy Lertola providing recording engineer assistance. Serban Ghenea mixed the track, and John Hanes as the assistant mixer. Grande's version uses a sample of the original as part of an original arrangement, reharmonizing and rearranging the song's structure. The chorus and bridge lyrics of the original are retained, with a new verse penned by Grande.