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Tag: Brandy Norwood

  • With “The Boy Is Mine” Remix, Ariana Grande Puts A Mostly Faux Feud to Rest

    With “The Boy Is Mine” Remix, Ariana Grande Puts A Mostly Faux Feud to Rest

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    In 1998, few songs had as much of a chokehold on the nation as Brandy and Monica’s “The Boy Is Mine.” In fact, it came in at number two on Billboard’s Year-End Hot 100 singles list, bested by, of all things, Next’s “Too Close” at number one for the year. Not only was “The Boy Is Mine” better as a song, but also as a video—even if the logistics presented in said video proved to be a highly unrealistic nightmare. With all of that in mind, to have the balls to release a song called “the boy is mine” in a similar style and pitch (regardless of “enough time” passing) was not only a huge risk on Ariana Grande’s part, but also a potentially huge affront. After all, who is she to take up the mantle for Brandy and Monica? 

    Fortunately, Grande found a double whammy kind of way to pay homage to the R&B duo’s masterwork by not only featuring them in her video for the song (with a Catwoman-inspired premise that continues to build on Grande’s movie tribute universe), but also having them jump on a remix version of the track. While some quipped that there was hardly any room for more vocal layering on this song, it manages to work much better as a remix than the “yes, and?” one that featured a surprisingly out of place Mariah Carey on it. Perhaps because two singers vying for dominance in such a similar pitch all the time simply ends up canceling the other one out.

    In any case, “yes, and?” now comes across as an especially inferior remix compared to “the boy is mine.” What’s more, Grande’s overarching theme on the track differentiates itself from Brandy and Monica’s in that, while it still focuses on the idea of “possession,” its larger focus is on a sense of “destiny,” “stars aligning,” etc. In short, that it’s through no fault of her own that the boy is hers, he simply is because “God” or whoever willed it so. 

    Accordingly, there’s less braggadocio involved on Ariana’s rendering than there is on the original, with Monica taking the lead on the mea culpa/“not my fault” verse that goes, “Please know this ain’t what I planned for/Probably wouldn’t bet a dime or my life on/There’s gotta be a reason why/My girls, they always come through in a sticky situation/Say, ‘It’s fine’ (it’s fine)/Happens all the time.” In truth, compared to 1998’s “The Boy Is Mine,” Monica is much more noticeable on this track, her vocals being more present than Brandy’s, who was the ostensible “star” of the original song. Indeed, part of the reason Monica was tapped for a feature on “The Boy Is Mine” in the first place was to capitalize on the presumed rivalry between the two similarly aged solo artists at that time. A rivalry that both women ended up playing into because they were teenagers (granted, at the end of their teenage years when the song was recorded and released) easily susceptible to suggestion and competition. 

    Buying into the hype around their rivalry was something that crested for both women in September of 1998. A moment highlighted, in an interview with Monica’s producer, Dallas Austin, for Vlad TV a few years back. One during which he brought up their supposed altercation. In yet another interview for Vlad TV with Brandy’s producer for the song, Rodney “Darkchild” Jerkins, it is, presciently enough, mentioned there was a rumor that Darkchild might remake the song with Ariana Grande. He balked, “That was a rumor,” adding, “To me it would never do justice for it to be done over with two females unless they don’t like each other.” This, of course, is a very male take on the matter. For it has always served men to have women pitted against one another in the media so as to make them look both frivolous and foolish (and, where a rival record label is concerned, to force women to have more “drive” when it comes to upping their game on sales). This is in part why it was rather groundbreaking for Grande to say nothing during the media furor surrounding her homewrecking romance with Ethan Slater, after which Slater’s fresh ex-wife, Lilly Jay, released a statement in which she said of Grande, “She’s not a girl’s girl.” A withering statement for a pop star with a largely female audience. 

    Nonetheless, Grande’s “fairy princess” vibe (further solidified by playing Gilda) managed to return as 2024 rolled around and the release of her seventh album, Eternal Sunshine, was upon the masses. For few could resist the “shake it off” (Mariah reference intended) attitude of “yes, and?”—which would turn out to be the only single Grande chose to put out before the record’s release. In between “yes, and?” and “the boy is mine,” there was the much more serious “we can’t be friends (wait for your love).” For it seems Grande wanted to unveil a more tongue-in-cheek side of the album yet again, even though it is filled with woeful ruminations inspired by her divorce from Dalton Gomez (e.g., “don’t wanna break up again,” “eternal sunshine” and “i wish i hated you”). And for “tongue-in-cheekness” assistance, there can be no better duo than Brandy and Monica (except maybe Patsy and Edina). 

    In many ways, certain lyrics of “the boy is mine” remix apply to the relationship between Brandy and Monica themselves. Namely, “And I know that this is meant to be and I/I’ll show you accountability and empathy and sympathy/How could you still be so disillusioned after all of this time time?” That “disillusionment” effortlessly applying to the on-again, off-again feud between the two singers. Crystallized even further by the aforementioned lore that Monica “punched” (though a slap, at best, seems more believable) Brandy before their only live performance together of “The Boy Is Mine” at the 1998 VMAs. The fact that the two weren’t seen together again for years afterward only fanned the flames of speculation. In addition to how neither one seemed game to reteam for another collab. That is, until 2012, with the single, “It All Belongs To Me.” As Brandy noted of what took so long to duet again, “[Monica] didn’t want us doing a new collaboration to affect the old collaboration.” Because no matter what new song they put out, or how excited the fans were about the prospect, it would always be pitted against “The Boy Is Mine”—much the same way that Brandy and Monica were perennially pitted against one another. 

    Hence, when their second song together did get the green light, it was unfortunate that a dark pall had to be cast over the single. This as a consequence of the release date coinciding with the death of their respective mentors, Whitney Houston, on February 11, 2012. The single came out just two days later. And although designed to be more empowering instead of kowtowing (to a man), many critics were quick to jump on its lackluster nature in comparison to “The Boy Is Mine.” Another comparison that came up was Beyoncé’s “Irreplaceable.” And yet, “It All Belongs To Me” is actually far more cutting than that, with Brandy and Monica savagely reminding their respective former objects of affection just who pays for all of his shit (though, in this regard, too, Beyoncé still comes to mind in the form of Destiny’s Child’s “Bills Bills Bills”). But perhaps the song was too chock-full of “references” in every way, with the video also pulling inspo from Waiting to Exhale (the car burning scene, duh) and, in its way, Thelma and Louise. In short, it didn’t capture the same “magic” or “lightning in a bottle” as “The Boy Is Mine” (even though that song, too, wasn’t entirely original in that its premise was extrapolated from Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney’s “The Girl Is Mine”—not to mention, as Brandy stated, watching The Jerry Springer Show…though she left out the part where she was, indeed, involved in her own very dramatic love triangle a few years earlier with Wanya Morris of Boyz II Men and Adina Howard). 

    The lyrics of the song also didn’t come across quite as timelessly, with Brandy and Monica choosing to rhyme MacBook with Facebook (almost on par with 50 Cent saying, “If you be a nympho/I be a nympho”). All of which is to say that Grande has achieved no small feat in reuniting the two for what is likely to be the closest they’ll ever come to “The Boy Is Mine” again (for obvious reasons). In a promo clip posted the day before the remix’s release, Brandy and Monica return in their newscaster guises from the video for “the boy is mine,” with Monica asking Brandy, “How did we decide this is the time?” Brandy shrugs, “Because we’re on it. Periodt.” Monica adds, “They called us, see that’s what I’m saying. When you call us, I barks with Ariana. She knew to call the girls.” Brandy then praises, “She can really really sing.” Another big compliment from an industry titan. Even so, Grande knows to step aside for large portions of the remix and let the iconic duo take their spotlight to help reimagine a concept they perfected. 

    One of the verses they add in for the remix is also particularly poignant, as it speaks to a shift in women’s attitudes since 1998. Presently unwilling to play the “mistress” role for the sake of getting only a small modicum of time with the man who claims to “love” them. Thus, they sing in harmony, “Yeah, said he wanna make plans with me/But I don’t fuck with affairs, you see, I know/But listen what they say to me/‘If it ain’t broke then it can’t be broken’/Well, he better sort out his business/‘Cause I’ll never be nobody’s mistress.” As for the “If it ain’t broke it can’t be broken” line, it feels like some clear shade at Lilly Jay, who still wants to put all the blame on Grande for the dissolution of her marriage. Resultantly, with this remix, Grande has put a few matters to rest for good…or at least for now.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • On the Arrogance of “The Boy” and the Logistical Nightmare of Boning Two Different Women Who Live Next Door to Each Other

    On the Arrogance of “The Boy” and the Logistical Nightmare of Boning Two Different Women Who Live Next Door to Each Other

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    There are many moments in “The Boy Is Mine” video that require more than just “a little” suspension of disbelief. But chief among them is “The Boy” in question, played by Mekhi Phifer, thinking he can actually get away with balling two women who live right next door to each other. This embodies either peak arrogance or peak stupidity. One tends to believe the latter. And it seems that the song it riffs off of, “The Girl Is Mine” by Michael Jackson and Paul McCartney, did well to eschew a video altogether. Even if Jackson and McCartney probably would have had an easier time sharing a woman as neither one shared the same taste in domiciles (Jackson having a very specific flavor indeed with regard to his residences). As such, “The Girl” of their tale likely never would have encountered them living next door to each other the way “The Boy” does in the Joseph Kahn-directed video from Brandy and Monica.

    Evincing the set design aesthetic of Britney Spears and Madonna’s “Me Against the Music” video long before it was released, “The Boy Is Mine” was shot in such a way so that we can see each “cube” a.k.a. apartment that Brandy and Monica inhabit at the same time, with the “strip” of a wall dividing their abodes as they hear different goings-on in the other’s apartment. Though, thankfully, never the familiar moaning sound of “The Boy” orgasming too soon. They don’t even seem to hear the sound of the other girl’s TV as they war for airwave frequencies the same way they do for “The Boy.” Brandy wants to watch The Jerry Springer Show (still endlessly relevant in 1998), while Monica wants to watch a generic black-and-white old movie or show (so generic it seems unidentifiable). As they go back and forth on switching each other’s channel without comprehending their next-door neighbor is responsible, it serves as the symbolic first “instance” of the women fighting over something—in this case, use of their TV. Because we’re evidently to assume that it must be an electrical wiring shitshow in that building.

    Not that it matters, so long as “The Boy” shows up to keep one of them company. When that doesn’t happen, Brandy is obliged to invite over three extremely disinterested friends to sit in her apartment and regale them with her spiel about how “The Boy” is hers, not yet suspecting, for whatever reason, that “The Other Woman” lives right next door. Meanwhile, Monica is also talking to her own trio of friends as she, too, ruminates on how “The Boy” is hers, playing the “McCartney” role in the permutation. And yes, “The Girl Is Mine” is a far milder, “sweeter” song, with Jackson lightly “asserting” in the opening verse, “Every night she walks right in my dreams/Since I met her from the start I’m so proud I am the only one/Who is special in her heart.” McCartney quickly debunks Jackson’s delusions of heterosexuality with, “I don’t understand the way you think/Saying that she’s yours not mine/Sending roses and your silly dreams/Really just a waste of time.”

    Eventually, Jackson is pushed to screaming, “But we both cannot have her/So it’s one or the other/And one day you’ll discover/That she’s my girl forever and ever.” So much for polite declarations like, “The doggone girl is mine.” A cheesy line, to be sure. Which is probably part of why Brandy and Monica wanted to update the concept with a far more believable lyrical display of jealousy as they go mano a mano with, “You need to give it up/Had about enough/It’s not hard to see/The boy is mine.” But when we’re actually first introduced to “The Boy,” it’s clear he belongs to no one as he flashes a winsome smile at each friend set leaving Brandy’s and Monica’s respective apartments. It is in this moment that we must ask ourselves: why wouldn’t one of the friends mention something about this sighting? Only further adding to the incongruity of the idea that Brandy and Monica wouldn’t catch on sooner to the fact that “The Boy” has been visiting each of their apartments regularly (granted, it’s not any more incongruous than Jackson and McCartney being similar enough in their “predilections” to like the same woman). As though the idea of being caught by one of them gets him off all the more. 

    If one was looking for signs of who he actually prefers, however, he seems far more interested in ogling Monica’s friend trio than Brandy’s. So maybe that means Monica is more his type? Who knows? It often feels like men are attracted to anything with a womanly shape, with no discernment regarding face. In that sense, “The Boy”—and all the boys he represents—has something tantamount to prosopagnosia. A convenient excuse for not caring who a person is so long as their vag feels slightly different when fucking.

    The addiction to “experiencing” different pussies for men like “The Boy” is part of what might come across as bravado, but is ultimately as simple as a total lack of concern for the emotions of the woman who’s bought into the yarn he’s spun for her. Believing him when he whispers sweet nothings like, “Without you, I couldn’t make it through the day.” Of course, there’s no mention of the night, when he has manifold punani options. A.k.a. what “The Boy” has in Brandy and Monica. For we soon see him with his arms around each woman in alternating crosscuts. That he’s wearing the same cornball shirt (rife for being worn by Will Ferrell or Chris Kattan in A Night at the Roxbury) in each scene indicates this is all one evening. He’s so out of control that he’s seeing both of them in a single night. Though, again, the logistics of this are highly implausible, for why would the first girl he visited “let him go” so quickly? What’s more, even if he pretended to leave by making a big show of walking down the hall and getting on the elevator, there’s no way Brandy or Monica wouldn’t hear him knocking on a different door when he came back. For they can certainly seem to hear one another during the back and forth that ensues later on that night when they’re both flexing their silk pajama set game.

    As Kahn pans rapidly between the rooms divided by a thin wall, they each appear to be having a conversation with one another through that wall as Monica announces, “What we have you can’t take… I can tell the real from the fake” and Brandy shouts back things like, “When will you get the picture?/You’re the past, I’m the future.” Brandy even makes the universally understood gesture for “crazy” when she says, “I’m sorry that you seem to be confused.”

    In the next scene, however, it’s Brandy who looks confused when she hears the phone ring and goes to answer it, only to realize it was coming from Monica’s apartment (once more, we have to ask: where was this ability to hear everything going on through the paper-thin walls when “The Boy” was yukking it up in the other’s apartment?). After Monica hangs up from her conversation with “The Boy,” he then has the audacity to call Brandy to confirm plans with her as well, with both women having put on their “going out” ensembles. This, too, presents a great risk to being caught. Moreover, wouldn’t the girl who was scheduled for the ultra-early or ultra-late date be suspicious about the timing of the get-together? How does he honestly think he can carry this off?

    The answer is that he clearly can’t as Brandy and Monica finally get wise (way too late in the game, if one considers realism) to his two-timing and decide to have a little fun of their own with the dirty bastard. But not before each woman gets rid of her framed photos and photo albums featuring pictures of them with “The Boy” (as well as any “trinkets” or “tokens of affection” he gave them)—this indicating that the relationships have been going on for at least months, prompting the viewer to continue scratching their head on how he wouldn’t have been caught coming or going from one of their apartments by the other far sooner. Tossing all of the romantic ephemera out at the same time at their front door, Brandy and Monica still want to blame the other one briefly for what is “The Boy’s” fuckery and betrayal—which neither woman is responsible for. And yet, perhaps because of the scarcity of hot straight men, they want to fight just a bit longer over who he really belonged to.

    In the final moments of the video, “The Boy” hints anew at who he might truly prefer (and not just because Phifer would also star with Brandy in I Still Know What You Did Last Summer that year) as he decides to knock on Brandy’s door (Apt. 6) first, only to be blindsided by Monica also answering the door with her. Was he really so deluded as to think this wouldn’t happen sooner or later? Signs point to yes as he appears genuinely surprised to not only see both of them, but then have the door slammed in his face.  

    Nonetheless, the video offers no truly satisfying resolution. One really wants to know, did “The Boy” end up smooth-talking his way into a threesome? Did he choose to home in on one girl and convince her to stay with him? If so, did that result in one of the girls having to move out of her apartment to avoid the awkwardness of such a situation? If not, did Brandy and Monica claim sweet revenge beyond just a slammed door by throwing him out one of their windows? Whatever one’s fan fiction chooses to lean toward, the fact remains that “The Boy” is emblematic of the level of arrogance many “single” straight men still possess because they believe themselves to be “at a premium” for their rarity. Not to mention that no one involved in the video’s concept thought about how daft it would make Brandy and Monica look to not instantly pick up on the romantic con.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Babyface doesn’t rest on his laurels with ‘Girls Night Out’

    Babyface doesn’t rest on his laurels with ‘Girls Night Out’

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    New York — Art can be inspired by even the most mundane experiences, and for iconic singer-songwriter Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds, the idea for his latest creation, “Girls Night Out,” was sparked while running an errand at the drugstore.

    “I went to Walgreens and as I was in there, this younger girl says, ‘Are you Babyface?” recalled the 11-time Grammy winner. She went on to tell him, “I didn’t listen to you before, but I watched Verzuz and I really liked a lot of the things. And so, I’m a fan now.’”

    That 2020 Verzuz event with New Jack Swing pioneer Teddy Riley — with much of the country in pandemic lockdown — introduced him to a younger generation of R&B lovers not familiar with his legendary catalog. The interest from younger fans spurred him to begin conceptualizing what would become “Girls Night Out,” released last week. It’s his first project since 2015’s “Return of the Tender Lover.”

    “I kind of had slowed down in … putting things out,” revealed the crooner. “I wasn’t feeling inspired.”

    The 13-track album features collaborations with some of R&B’s hottest female talent, including Ella Mai, Kehlani and Ari Lennox, as well as rising stars like Muni Long and Queen Naija. Face weaves his musical expertise into today’s sonic climate, far from his hit songs that now play on late-night Quiet Storm formats — and that’s not a bad thing.

    The structure of “Girls Night Out” is reminiscent of the “Waiting to Exhale” soundtrack, widely regarded as one of the most popular film compilations of all-time. That 1995 soundtrack was written and produced entirely by Babyface, as he crafted songs for superstars like Whitney Houston, Mary J. Blige, Brandy, Toni Braxton and Aretha Franklin. But this time around, “Girls Night Out” was intentionally collaborative.

    “On ‘Exhale,’ I just wrote all the music and said, ‘Here, you sing this,’” explained the 2017 Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee. “I love co-writing because there’s so much to learn from it. We get stuck in our ways as a writer or even just what you’re used to: the age difference, the words that I’m not used to saying…I didn’t want to do an album that sounded like yesterday. I wanted one to sound fresh and sound like today.”

    “Girls Night Out” began to take form after working with Ella Mai on “Keeps on Fallin’,” a flip of Tevin Campbell’s beloved “Can We Talk” record written by Face. “Keeps on Fallin’” hit No. 2 on Billboard’s adult R&B airplay chart.

    “Once we finished that, we felt like, ‘All right, I think we might have something special here,’” said Babyface, who has writing credits on every song and production credits on all but one.

    Standout tracks include “The Recipe” with “Muni Long which features a sample of Babyface’s 1989 classic, “Soon as I Get Home,” as well as “Whatever” with Tink which samples his hit “Whip Appeal.” There’s also “Liquor,” in which Ari Lennox sultrily sings of desiring her man in his authentic, raw form: “No rocks, no blend, straight up, just you/…I need one hundred from my man, he can’t be eighty proof.”

    “They’re far more invested in their voice in terms of what they say and how they say it, and even in the writing aspect of it…that wasn’t so much of the late ’80s and ‘90s. All the artists weren’t necessarily into that,” said Babyface of this new generation of female talent. “They got to make sure it’s an honest thing from them.”

    Possessing a credit list far too lengthy to print, Babyface began making his mark in music in the late ’80s before finding massive success in the ’90s through early 2000s writing and producing for megastars like Michael Jackson, Beyoncé, Madonna, Boyz II Men, Usher, Celine Dion and frequent musical collaborator Toni Braxton, who refers to herself as Babyface’s “muse.” He also built a very successful solo career with major hits like, “And Our Feelings,” “Never Keeping Secrets,” “When Can I See You” and “Every Time I Close My Eyes.”

    While his legendary status has long been solidified during his three-decade career, the “What If” artist hesitates to accept the acknowledgement. Fortunately, his music made the case long ago.

    “I’ve always looked at myself as a producer and songwriter first — not necessarily as a celebrity or a singer,” explained Babyface. “It’s not to downplay what I’ve done, but I just know that the things that I have done at this particular point, I’m very happy and I’m very blessed to have done it.…if I get labeled ‘G.O.A.T.’ or legend in the process, well, that’s wonderful but that’s not why I do it. I do it because I love doing this job.”

    ——

    Gary Gerard Hamilton is an entertainment journalist for The Associated Press. His favorite Babyface songs are “What If” and “Reason for Breathing.” He loves the Babyface-written “Sittin’ Up in My Room” by Brandy and prefers “I’m Ready” by Tevin Campbell over “Can We Talk.” Follow Gary at: @GaryGHamilton on all his social media platforms.

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