"Baby Be Mine" | |
---|---|
Song by Michael Jackson | |
from the album Thriller | |
Released | November 30, 1982 |
Genre | |
Songwriter(s) | Rod Temperton |
Producer(s) | Quincy Jones |
"Baby Be Mine" is a song written by Rod Temperton, produced by Quincy Jones and performed by American singer-songwriter Michael Jackson. [1] [2] It is included on the Thriller album by Jackson and along with "The Lady in My Life" is one of only two songs on the project to not be released as a single. [3] However, the song was twice the B-side: for the 1983 release of Thriller single "Human Nature", as well as the for Bad lead single "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" in 1987.
In a conversation with publication Vulture that was later adapted into a Time retrospective on Thriller, producer Jones mentioned the record paid homage to jazz saxophonist John Coltrane. [4] “Getting the young kids to hear bebop is what I’m talking about,” he said. “Jazz is at the top of the hierarchy of music because the musicians learned everything they could about music.” [4] [5] [6] Billboard described the song as "...upbeat, danceable and punctuated by twittering keyboards and punchy horn fills." [7]
In a 2016 retrospective for Billboard, writer Andrew Unterberger lauded the song [and other non-single "Baby Be Mine"] as "earn[ing] every bit of the real estate they command on the biggest nine-track album in history." [3] In a retrospective on the late Jones from British publication Far Out titled ‘Baby Be Mine’: The song that defines the outlook of Quincy Jones, writer Tim Coffman describes the song as "the perfect example of his two loves [jazz and pop] coming together harmoniously." [8] In a five-star retrospective review of Thriller, Slant Magazine lauded the song for being a "lush disco paradise." [9] On a Billboard 2022 ranked list of the entire album, the song placed eighth, with writer Chuck Arnold noting the record "shimmers with a soul-disco swag" before highlighting the "smooth, roller-skating groove that the late Heatwave honcho [also] brought to “Rock with You” on Off the Wall ." [10]
In a more negative review, Pitchfork thought the song caused the momentum built from opening track “Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'” to fade. "['Wanna Be Startin' Somethin’'] holds up for six minutes and two seconds, during which Jackson and Quincy Jones mix the tension of rock'n'roll with the rapture of disco and hit perfection. But then you get "Baby Be Mine"—one of the original tracks that wasn't a single—and the momentum fades: On the heels of "Wanna Be Startin' Somethin'", it should maintain the temperature; instead, it goes nowhere, starts nothing." [11]
Personnel as listed in the album's liner notes are: [12]