"Blame It on the Girls" is the third and final single released from singer-songwriter Mika's second studio album, The Boy Who Knew Too Much.[2] The single was released on 15 February 2010.[3] The song was produced and mixed by Greg Wells. It is also played in the credits of the film Monte Carlo.
The song was inspired by a well-dressed, good-looking man Mika and his sister saw walking down a street in London shouting down his phone. The song uses a musical technique called musique concrète in which the music is devised by using everyday objects to make sound. In this particular song, the beat is created by Mika hitting his desk, clapping his hands and stamping his feet.[5]
The music video for "Blame It on the Girls" was directed by Nez Khammal.[9] An unfinished version of the video premiered on 3 October 2009 in the United Kingdom on Channel 4.[10] The video starts in black and white with Mika sitting on a chair, wearing a bowler hat and holding a cane whilst speaking a prologue to the song. As the music starts the video bursts into colour, showing three screens behind Mika, each showing him in alternate colours of pink and blue. The screen to the left and right break away as female dancers dressed in half a tuxedo and half an orange dress dance into shot. As the chorus ends, the dancers disappear and Mika is seen sitting in a large sofa, he then gets up and moves over to a maze of mirrors, and then the girls join him again once the second chorus begins. The video is set in a film studio dressed in pastel colours with Mika playing a pastel pink piano. The video ends with him jumping into the air and the picture being frozen. The video features the appearance of the famous "one take video" seen in videos like OK Go's "Here it Goes Again," but actually contains cuts hidden with the use of portals. Portal transition is when the cut takes place within a movement into a different but similar image giving the appearance of one smooth camera movement but in reality has been cut. For example, at 1:50 minutes into the video we see this portal transition happen using the image in the mirror. Another example of the hidden editing in this music video is seen at 1:10 into the video where we get a cross dissolve cut from one moving shot to another giving the appearance of a swift moving camera. Other "hidden cuts" are at 2:21, 2:32 and 3:09.[citation needed]
Commercial performance
The single failed to make any impact on Billboard in the United States. It was a significant hit in Japan, where it reached number one on the Japan Hot 100 for a week. It is only the second international single to reach the top of the Japan Hot 100 after Leona Lewis's 2008 hit, "Bleeding Love".[citation needed] However, in its week of release it failed to crack the top 40 in the UK, charting at number 72, the same peak as his previous single "Rain", making "Blame It on the Girls" his second consecutive single to miss the UK top 40.[11]