"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Christina Aguilera | ||||
from the album Christina Aguilera | ||||
B-side | "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" | |||
Released | July 11, 2000 | |||
Recorded |
| |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 3:09 | |||
Label | RCA | |||
Songwriter(s) |
| |||
Producer(s) |
| |||
Christina Aguilera singles chronology | ||||
| ||||
Music video | ||||
"Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" on YouTube |
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" is a song recorded by American singer Christina Aguilera for her 1999 self-titled debut studio album. Released as the album's fourth and final single on July 11, 2000, by RCA Records, it was the first song over which Aguilera was given significant creative control. "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" was written by Johan Åberg and Paul Rein, with Aguilera, Ron Fair, Chaka Blackmon, Raymond Cham, Eric Dawkins, Shelly Peiken and Guy Roche contributing to a re-recorded version. The album version of the song [a] was produced by Aaron Zigman, Åberg and Rein, while the re-recorded version was produced by Fair and Celebrity Status.
Upon its release, "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" achieved international commercial success and critical acclaim. It was praised for its melody and "danceable" sound. In the United States, it became Aguilera's third number-one hit on the Billboard Hot 100. The single also reached top-ten positions in several countries, including Australia, Canada, Ireland, Singapore and the United Kingdom, and reached number one in Venezuela and Guatemala. The accompanying music video for "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" saw Aguilera experiment with her image, beginning an evolution of reinventions seen in the ensuing years of her career.
A Spanish-language version of the song was adapted by Rudy Pérez titled "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" which was recorded for Aguilera's Spanish-language follow up album, Mi Reflejo (2000). "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" was released to Latin radio stations in the United States on August 8, 2000. [5] It became a top ten hit in Spain, and a top five hit in El Salvador, Paraguay and Honduras.
Like "What a Girl Wants" (the second single from the Christina Aguilera album), a new remixed and re-recorded version of "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" was released as a single rather than the original album version. The album version, which had been known simply as "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)", was seen as unsuitable for a single release. Aguilera is credited as a co-writer of the song. [6]
The single version of "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)" was transformed into "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" with new and more sexual lyrics, a chord progression for the song's B-section, a bridge, a rap from Aguilera, a new mid-song dance breakdown, and more powerful vocals by Aguilera were also added. [7] The song also features limited new elements from Shelly Peiken and Guy Roche. The original album version has no bridge, so it had previously been performed live with an interlude that sampled the disco classic "Got to Be Real" by Cheryl Lynn. [7] However, when the original songwriters of "Got to Be Real" were contacted for permission to sample their song, they denied clearance. Instead, Aguilera's team substituted a reference to "What a Girl Wants". [8]
Aguilera helped write the song's controversial and slightly sexual rap section from the re-recorded version. [2] [9] This rap (and also a section in the second verse in which Aguilera discusses sexuality and a man's hands on her body) caused Radio Disney to ban the song initially, as it had done with "Genie in a Bottle". [10] [11] The original album version of the song was allowed to be played, and an edited version of "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)", which removed the second verse and rap, was also given some airplay. Reportedly, the re-recorded version received more airplay on the station than the album version of the song.
"Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" is written in the key of E♭ major with a tempo of 119 beats per minute in common time. [12] The song follows a chord progression of E♭ – E♭/G – A♭ – B♭, and Aguilera's vocals span from E♭3 to G5. It is a dance-pop and bubblegum pop track. [3] [2] The radio mix of the song is hip hop-influenced, featuring a rap verse written by Aguilera herself, and was deemed the most "sexual" track on the singer's debut album. [13] In the song Aguilera raps: “Don’t you wanna be the one tonight, we could do exactly what you like; don’t you wanna be just you and me, we could do what comes so naturally”. [2] [9] A music-related website, Can't Stop the Pop, noted that "thematically it sits close" to the singer's fourth studio album Stripped (2002). [2] A mid-song dance breakdown was also added to the re-recorded version. [13] It was Aguilera's first single that she'd had a hand in composing, [2] although previously she adjusted some lyrics for "Genie in a Bottle", too. [14]
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" was well received by most critics. Billboard's Mia Nazareno called the song a "Radio Disney-approved bop" and complimented its "addictive", "danceable" sound. [15] Chris Malone, also from the Billboard magazine, noted that it was the singer's "first song where she was given significant creative control", and compared it to Whitney Houston's early recordings. He added: "It's pure, unadulterated, feel-good pop, and stands as a shining example of why Aguilera has been able to achieve so much success." [6] Music critic Kenneth Partridge praised the re-recorded version of the single as "slightly rougher and randier" [than the original]. [16] UKMix named it "an upbeat, funky extravaganza, showing her [Aguilera's] voice off to the max". [8] In December 2000, Kai R. Lofthus of Music & Media ranked it as one of the five best songs of the year. [17] In 2005, "Come on Over Baby" was listed in the book titled The 7,500 Most Important Songs of the Rock and Roll Era: 1944–2000 by Bruce Pollock, where the author called Aguilera "the voice of a new generation". [18]
CDNow senior editor Eliseo Cardona wrote about Spanish version: "Indeed, the overly literal Spanish lyrics make for both a good laugh and a better yawn. This point is unwittingly made on 'Ven conmigo (Solamente tú),' the translation of 'Come on Over (All I Want Is You)'. If Spanish pop seems to make no sense at times, then this takes nonsense to the next level." [19] A complete opposite opinion came from Wall of Sound editor Kurt B. Reighley; to him it sounds "especially sassy en Español." [20] Parry Gettelman of Orlando Sentinel praised the vocals calling them "out-of-my-way." [21] Sun-Sentinel music writer Sean Piccoli wrote: "Ven Conmigo (Come with Me) borrows its bounce from the better Whitney–Mariah numbers." [22] In August 2020, Billboard named the song one of the "best 2000's Latin hits". [23] It has been called "one of Aguilera's greatest hits" by Rolling Stone en Español . [24] Jamie Tabberer from the Attitude magazine ranked "Come on Over Baby" at number ten on the list of Aguilera's seventeen best songs ever, [25] Nicole Hogsett of Yahoo! placed it at number six on a similar list, [9] and Mike Wass, writing for Idolator , called it a "bubblegum pop of the absolute highest caliber". [26] Similarly, PopMatters editor Kimberley Hill praised the song as a "glittering bubblegum number". [27]
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" became Aguilera's third number-one hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, [28] and was certified Platinum by RIAA, as well selling over 500,000 physical units in the country. [29] It spent twenty-one weeks on the Hot 100, four of which were atop the chart, and ranked thirty-eighth on the Hot 100's 2000 year-end charts. After receiving a strong push from the record label and Aguilera herself, the single became a big hit. It had a stronger airplay than "What a Girl Wants", and its video became Aguilera's most popular to date, receiving strong airplay on MTV, VH1, Disney and Nickelodeon.
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" reached the top ten in the UK, Japan and Australia and the top twenty in Canada, but was less successful in Continental Europe, reaching the top forty in most markets. It placed at number three in Iceland, number four in Hungary, number six in the Netherlands, number seven in Croatia, as well as number nine in Ireland, Poland and Scotland. On the UK Singles Chart the song peaked at number eight. The single became yet another international success for Aguilera, reaching #2 in New Zealand, where it stayed on the charts for thirteen weeks. The single was also certified Platinum in Australia. [30] "Come on Over" stayed at #1 on Billboard for four weeks, and stayed on the Australian charts for twenty weeks.
The Spanish-language version of the single, "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)", sticking to the original arrangement, was also a huge Latin music success, becoming Aguilera's first number-one single on Billboard's Hot Latin Tracks chart. [31] It peaked at number two in El Salvador and Honduras, [32] [33] as well as number nine in Uruguay, as reported by El Siglo de Torreón . [34] In Spain, it spent ten weeks at the PROMUSICAE's singles chart, debuting at number fourteen [35] and eventually peaking at number eight on December 9, 2000. [36] The original version of "Come on Over Baby" also achieved commercial success in Latin America, reaching the top spot in Guatemala and Venezuela. [33] [37]
The music video for the song was directed by Paul Hunter and choreographed by Tina Landon. [38] The video was shot from June 12–15, 2000 and premiered in late July on MTV's Making the Video . It featured a racier image from Aguilera. [39] Unlike her previous singles, she had red streaks in her hair and wore tighter clothing. The image Aguilera used in "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" was also used for Mi Reflejo and her first headlining tour in 2000. The music video for "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" premiered on MTV and VH1 the week ending on July 24, 2000, and was an instant hit, shooting to #1 on TRL in August 2000. [40] [41] When the music video aired on Disney Channel, some scenes were edited out and some of the sexual lyrics were censored. A second version of the video was released for the Spanish version of the song, "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)". [42] In this version, most scenes and choreography are parallel to the original, but Aguilera also appears singing next to a red chair.
The music video begins with Aguilera talking on the phone with her boyfriend, telling him to come over to her house. After she hangs up the phone, the scene breaks out into Aguilera wearing a white crop top and white pants, with red streaks in her hair. In the next scene, Aguilera has loose braided pigtails, a blue crop top, and blue and white checkered pants. She is in her bedroom, when suddenly she and her backup dancers begin dancing in front of a white background. The male dancers come out, and begin dancing with the female dancers. After that, Aguilera and her then-real life boyfriend Jorge Santos dance together with her backup dancers in the scene where everyone is wearing yellow and green outfits, first in a yellow-green background followed by a yellow-orange background. The next scene is where her dancers dance on chairs in white open-faced cubes, intercut with Aguilera singing in a blue-walled background and a white drapery background. Aguilera and her backup dancers then dance in front of a white background. It cuts into a scene where Aguilera walks down a flight of steps in a red room, with her backup dancers on each step. She is wearing a white outfit (long pants and a tank top), and crystal jewellery on her stomach, around her bellybutton. [43] They begin dancing again, and Aguilera's backup dancers hold up pieces of puzzle paper that shows Aguilera's face.
Aguilera performed "Come on Over Baby" in her tour Christina Aguilera: Live in Concert, an acoustic version on the Stripped World Tour, and a jazz version on the Back to Basics Tour. In the second leg of her "Christina Aguilera: In Concert", where she visited Puerto Rico, México, Venezuela, Panama and Japan, she replaced the song for the Spanish version of it "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)". She also performed this version and "Pero Me Acuerdo de Ti" in Mexican comedy and variety show Otro Rollo . [44] Aguilera performed "Come on Over Baby (All I Want is You)" at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards on September 7, 2000. [45] She wore a striking red tight outfit, with black streaks in her hair previous to how she wore them in her music video, red high heels, and a tight ruby red crop top. At the end of Aguilera's performance, Fred Durst walked onstage and performed part of his band's song "Livin' It Up" with Aguilera. [46] [45] During the ceremony, Aguilera wore a revealing black outfit with black heels. After eliciting charged reactions from his fans, Durst stated: "I already told you guys before, I did it all for the nookie, man". [47] The feud died weeks later. Aguilera denied Durst's statement, saying Durst "got no nookie". [48]
In November 2000, Aguilera performed "Come on Over Baby" at the Radio Music Awards in Aladdin Casino & Resort, Las Vegas, [45] and during the My VH1 Music Awards ceremony in Shrine Auditorium, Los Angeles. [45] On October 7, 2002, Aguilera presented an acoustic version of the song during a concert in New York City. The performance was later broadcast by MTV as a special titled Stripped Live in New York City. [49] In December 2013, Fuse recognized the show as one of the ten best performances in the singer's career. [49]
In 2000, Aguilera performed the Spanish version of the song "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" in the Telecinco's teen series Al salir de clase , where she also portrayed herself. [50] The song was used in the 2022 Netflix comedy film Senior Year , starring Rebel Wilson. [51] [52]
Mexican singer and actress Lucero performed "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" in her 32nd anniversary concert along with her team on La Voz... México ; the performance was viewed by around ten thousand spectators. [53] In the Peruvian show Yo Soy contestant Katherine Vega covered the song personifying Aguilera. [54] This version was also used for a Coca-Cola commercial airing all over Latin America. [55] The Spanish version of the song was also played in the film Spanglish while Cristina Moreno (Shelbie Bruce) is in the living room with the radio on and is featured in the soundtrack of the film. [56] In 2023, "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" was featured in the sixth season of La Más Draga , performed by Cattriona Biñé. [57]
US CD and cassette single [58]
UK maxi-CD
Australian CD single [59]
UK 12" vinyl
US double A-side single (2001) [60]
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA) [104] | Platinum | 70,000^ |
Canada (Music Canada) [105] | Gold | 40,000‡ |
New Zealand (RMNZ) [106] | Gold | 5,000* |
United Kingdom (BPI) [107] | Silver | 200,000^ |
United States (RIAA) [108] | Platinum | 1,000,000‡ |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Region | Date | Version | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref(s). |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
United States | July 11, 2000 | "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" | RCA | [109] [110] | |
August 8, 2000 | "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" | Latin pop radio | |||
Australia | September 11, 2000 | "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" | Maxi CD | BMG | |
Germany | |||||
Spain | "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)" | CD | |||
Sweden | "Come On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" | Maxi CD | RCA | ||
France | September 22, 2000 | BMG | |||
United States | September 26, 2000 |
| RCA | [113] [114] | |
United Kingdom | October 30, 2000 |
| [115] | ||
France | November 21, 2000 | CD | BMG |
Christina María Aguilera is an American singer, songwriter, actress, and television personality. Recognized as an influential figure in music and having received widespread public interest, she is noted for her four-octave vocal range extending into the whistle register, artistic reinventions, and incorporating controversial themes into her music. Referred to as the "Voice of a Generation", she was also named a Disney Legend, in recognition for her contributions to The Walt Disney Company.
Christina Aguilera is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Christina Aguilera. It was released on August 24, 1999, by RCA Records. After recording "Reflection", the theme song for the 1998 Disney film Mulan, RCA laid the foundation for the album immediately and started presenting Aguilera with tracks for her debut album, which they originally decided would have a January 1999 release. Primarily a dance-pop and teen pop album, its music incorporates bubblegum pop, R&B, soul, hip hop, as well as ballads. Contributions to the album's production came from a wide range of producers, including Johan Åberg, David Frank, Ron Fair, Guy Roche, Robin Thicke, Matthew Wilder and Aaron Zigman.
Mi Reflejo is the second studio album and first Spanish-language album by American singer Christina Aguilera. It was released on September 12, 2000, as a joint effort between RCA Records and BMG U.S. Latin. After the commercial success of her first album, Christina Aguilera (1999), Aguilera recorded her follow-up project during 2000. It includes five Spanish-language versions of tracks from her previous album, in addition to four original compositions and two cover songs. The tracks were adapted and composed by Rudy Pérez who also produced the album.
"Lady Marmalade" is a song written by Bob Crewe and Kenny Nolan that is famous for the French refrain of "Voulez-vous coucher avec moi, ce soir?", which is a sexual proposition that translates into English as: "Do you want to sleep with me, tonight?" The song first became a popular hit when it was recorded in 1974 by the American funk rock group Labelle and held the number-one spot on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for one week, and also topped the Canadian RPM national singles chart. In 2021, the Library of Congress selected Labelle's version for preservation in the National Recording Registry for being "culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant".
"Genie in a Bottle" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera from her self-titled debut studio album (1999). It was written by Pam Sheyne, Steve Kipner and David Frank, and produced by Kipner and Frank. The song was released on 22 June 1999, by RCA Records as the album's lead single. It is a soul-pop, teen pop and dance-pop song with elements of R&B. "Genie in a Bottle" uses sexual references to address the themes of self-respect and abstinence.
"What a Girl Wants" is a song recorded by American singer Christina Aguilera for her self-titled debut album (1999). Written by Shelly Peiken and Guy Roche as "What a Girl Needs", the song was originally released by French singer Ophélie Winter in 1998. On her album Privacy the song appeared in English and French. The French version was released as a single two years later. In the meantime, the song was pitched by Peiken and Roche to RCA Records. Following a change of the song title to "What a Girl Wants", it was recorded by Aguilera for her eponymous debut album.
"I Turn to You" is a song written by American songwriter Diane Warren and first recorded by R&B quartet All-4-One from the soundtrack album to the film Space Jam (1996). The ballad, produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, received little recognition until American pop singer-songwriter Christina Aguilera recorded it for her self-titled debut album. Aguilera, who worked with Warren in another song for her debut album, felt connected to the song after relating its lyrics to her relationship with her mother, and was encouraged by Warren to record the track.
"Nobody Wants to Be Lonely" is a song by Puerto Rican singer Ricky Martin from his sixth studio album, Sound Loaded (2000). Martin re-recorded the song along with American singer Christina Aguilera in December 2000. The album version was written by Desmond Child, Victoria Shaw, and Gary Burr and produced by Child; the duet received additional production from Walter Afanasieff. The duet was released by Columbia Records on January 16, 2001, as the second single from the album. A mid-tempo pop song and power ballad with elements of flamenco and Latin music, it is about heartbreak and longing.
"Reflection" is a song written and produced by Matthew Wilder and David Zippel for the soundtrack of Disney's 1998 animated film Mulan. In the film, the song is performed by Tony Award winner, Filipina singer and actress Lea Salonga as Fa Mulan. An accompanying music video for "Reflection" was included as a bonus to the Disney Gold Classic Collection DVD release of the film in February 2000. Reflection has received highly positive reviews, with critics highlighting its emotional writing and Salonga's vocals.
American singer Christina Aguilera has released nine studio albums, four extended plays (EPs), four compilation albums, one soundtrack album, 54 singles, and 17 promotional singles. After releasing the duet "All I Wanna Do" with Keizo Nakanishi in 1997 and later gaining recognition for her solo musical debut with "Reflection", the theme song for the Disney animated film Mulan (1998), Aguilera signed a multi-album contract with RCA Records in 1998.
"Ain't No Other Man" is a song recorded by the American singer and songwriter Christina Aguilera from her fifth studio album Back to Basics (2006). Aguilera co-wrote the song with Kara DioGuardi, Charles Martin Roane, Harold Beatty and its producer DJ Premier. "Ain't No Other Man" is a pop, funk and R&B song that incorporates elements of soul, blues and jazz music. Lyrically, the song was inspired by her marriage to Jordan Bratman in 2005.
"Tell Me" is a hip hop song by American rapper and producer P. Diddy from his fourth studio album, Press Play (2006), featuring guest vocals from American singer Christina Aguilera. The song was written by Combs himself, Stephen "Static Major" Garrett, Ryan "Royce" Montgomery, Elizabeth Bingham, Shannon Jones, Jack Knight, Shannon Lawrence and Leroy Watson, with production held by Just Blaze. The song was originally meant to be on Danity Kane’s debut album. It is the second single from the above-mentioned album. According to All Access, the single hit radio stations on November 7, 2006.
"Hurt" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera from her fifth studio album, Back to Basics (2006). It was serviced to US contemporary hit radio stations on September 17, 2006, as the album's second single, and was released for purchase in November. Written by Aguilera, Linda Perry, and Mark Ronson, and produced by Perry, the song is a pop ballad with lyrics describing how the protagonist deals with the loss of a loved one and was inspired by the death of Perry's father.
Keeps Gettin' Better: A Decade of Hits is the first greatest hits album by American singer-songwriter Christina Aguilera. It was released on November 6, 2008 by RCA Records. The album contains Aguilera's singles from all of her studio albums released up to 2008. It also featured four new additions: two remakes of her previous singles — "Genie in a Bottle" (1999) and "Beautiful" (2002) — and two original songs "Keeps Gettin' Better" and "Dynamite". In the United States, the album was released on November 11, 2008, exclusively via Target.
Solamente Tú may refer to:
American singer Christina Aguilera has released five video albums and been featured in fifty-eight music videos, five films, thirteen television programs, and seven commercials. Aguilera achieved early fame in 1993 and 1994 when she appeared in the Disney Channel television series The New Mickey Mouse Club, which co-starred her contemporaries Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, and Ryan Gosling. In 1999, she rose to prominence with her eponymous debut album, whose singles "Genie in a Bottle", "What a Girl Wants", "I Turn to You" and "Come On Over Baby " all received their music videos. The videos for the Spanish versions of the four singles were subsequently released in conjunction with the promotion of Aguilera's 2000 Spanish album Mi Reflejo. In 2001, Aguilera appeared in the music video for "Lady Marmalade", a collaboration with Mýa, Lil' Kim, and Pink, which earned two MTV Video Music Awards for Video of the Year and Best Video from a Film at the 2001 ceremony.
Ven Conmigo may refer to:
"Say Something" is a song by American pop duo A Great Big World from their debut album, Is There Anybody Out There? (2013). Written by the duo members—Ian Axel and Chad King—alongside Mike Campbell, the song was originally recorded by Axel for his solo album This Is the New Year (2011). It was later released as a single by the duo on September 3, 2013, by Epic Records. Following its usage on American reality TV show So You Think You Can Dance, the track gained attention from singer Christina Aguilera, who wanted to collaborate with A Great Big World on the song. Soon afterwards, a re-recorded version of "Say Something" with Aguilera was released on November 4, 2013.
"Fall in Line" is a song by American singer Christina Aguilera for her eighth studio album Liberation (2018), featuring guest vocals from American singer Demi Lovato. It was released as the album's second single on May 16, 2018 by RCA Records, impacting hot adult contemporary radio and contemporary hit radio on June 19 and May 28, respectively. Aguilera co-wrote the song with Johnny Simpson, Mark Williams, Audra Mae, Raul Cubina and Jon Bellion, while the production was handled by the latter.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)(As compiled by SPVA from sales figures from record companies, retailers and radio station charts) Week ending September 29