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I Love Your Smile

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = I Love Your Smile

| cover = File:Shaniceiloveyoursmile.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = Shanice

| album = Inner Child

| released = October 22, 1991

| recorded =

| studio =

| venue =

| genre =

| length =

| label = Motown

| writer =

| producer = Narada Michael Walden

| prev_title = This Time

| prev_year = 1988

| next_title = I'm Cryin'

| next_year = 1992

}}

"'I Love Your Smile'" is a song by American singer-songwriter Shanice, released in 1991 as the lead single from her second studio album, 'Inner Child' (1991). The song features a saxophone solo by Branford Marsalis as well as laughter from Janet Jackson and Ren Elizondo Jr. near the end of the song. The track was produced by Narada Michael Walden. The radio version of the song removes the rap bridge from the album version.

To date, "I Love Your Smile" is Shanice's best known and most successful hit. It peaked at number two on the US 'Billboard' Hot 100, and it topped the US 'Billboard' Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks chart for 4 weeks in December 1991 and January 1992. In Europe, "I Love Your Smile" peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart after being remixed by Driza Bone and reached the top of the Dutch Top 40 in the Netherlands. In 1992, it was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Shanice performed this song as the first musical guest on 'The Tonight Show with Jay Leno' on May 25, 1992. A music video was made for the song, featuring Shanice in a studio having pictures taken by a photographer.

Critical reception



AllMusic editor Tim Griggs picked "I Love Your Smile" as one of the "standout" tracks from 'Inner Child'. Larry Flick from 'Billboard' described it as a "slinky R&B tune", noting that Shanice's "matured voice sounds like a cross between Chaka Khan and Janet Jackson, sprawling out comfortably over a subtle and percussive groove that is framed with warm sax lines." Bryan DeVaney and Randy Clark from 'Cashbox' stated, "Compared to her previous projects, you can clearly tell that Wilson has matured both musically and vocally to take this project to its limits." A reviewer from 'Ealing Leader' commented that "this little bundle of dynamite shows great promise with a warm debut single.""Shanice - I Love Your Smile". 'Ealing Leader'. December 13, 1991. page 16. Retrieved April 5, 2020. Swedish newspaper 'Expressen' noted its "whispering happy jingle".'Expressen'. February 14, 1992. Dave Sholin from the 'Gavin Report' wrote, "Only in her teens, Shanice Wilson is anything but a newcomer, having arrived on the scene in the late eighties and scoring instant airplay. But this should be the effort that really sparks her career." 'Lakeland Ledger' said her voice is "playful and spunky".

Alan Jones from 'Music Week's 'RM' Dance Update deemed it "a likeable and highly commercial pop/dance workout, it will doubtless be a hit on both sides of the Atlantic." Another editor, James Hamilton noted the former child star's "delightful breathily gurgling, humming, whistling, tinkling and (Branford Marsalis's jazz sax) tooting jiggly jogging cheerful swayer". A reviewer from 'People Magazine' stated that it "has risen to the top of the R&B charts on its jaunty, literally bells-and-whistles riff, its jazzy a cappella refrain and a walloping beat." 'Porcys' listed it at number 46 in their ranking of "100 Singles 1990-1999" in 2012, adding, "The career of the singer did not flourish somehow stunning, but this one song, this one "turutututururu" is immortal. This sweet chorus has probably one of the most naturally catchy melodies of all time." Mark Frith from 'Smash Hits' complimented it as an "infectious swingbeat tune".

Track listings



* '7-inch single'

# "I Love Your Smile" (radio version) 3:46

# "I Love Your Smile" (instrumental) 4:14

* '7-inch singleDriza Bone remix'

# "I Love Your Smile" (Driza Bone single remix) 3:50

# "I Love Your Smile" (original version) 3:46

* 'CD single 1'

# "I Love Your Smile" (radio version) 3:46

# "I Love Your Smile" (extended version) 4:14

# "I Love Your Smile" (instrumental) 4:14

* 'CD single 2'

# "I Love Your Smile" (Driza Bone single remix)

# "I Love Your Smile" (Driza Bone club mix)

# "I Love Your Smile" (Driza Bone dub mix)

# "I Love Your Smile" (original single version)

Personnel



* All vocals and rap by Shanice Wilson

* Drums and programming by Narada Michael Walden

* Keyboards, drum programming, programming and synthesized bass by Louis Biancaniello

* Saxophone solo by Branford Marsalis

* Background vocals by Alyssa Lala, Crystal Wilson, David A. Miguel, Jack McAdoo, David Lee, Diamond D, Eric Daniels, Jarvis La Rue Baker, Kathy Horton, Label Atkinson, Lisa Walden, Mike Mani

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Release history



Cover versions



* Shirley Kwan covered the song in Cantonese in 1992 for her album "".

* Dutch R&B group duo R'n'G covered the song in 1998 for a tribute album "Hands on Motown".

* Tiffany Evans covered the song in 2004 for her self-titled first EP.

* Kaori Kobayashi covered the song in 2005 for her debut album 'Solar, Kaori's Collection'.

* Talib Kweli referenced the song in his song "Hot Thing" from his 2007 album, 'Eardrum'.

* Jakob Elvstrm covered the song in 2009 for his album "SaxClub vol.1".

* The song was sampled by Zimbabwean artist Rockford Josphat 'Roki' in his track "Zuva neZuva" which featured SK and Pauline.

* Goblin Cock covered the song in 2018 for the album "Roses on the Piano"

* Sections of the song were interpolated in Chris Brown's 2019 single "Undecided".

* The song was sampled by UK artist HRVY for his 2021 single "Runaway with it".

* The song was sampled by British pop group Jamiroquai in the 1993 song "Too Young to Die", with interpolated chorus.

* The song was sampled by Serbian pop-dance group Moby Dick in the 1995 song "Ne reci mi", with interpolated intro.

See also



* List of number-one R&B singles of 1991 (U.S.)

* List of number-one R&B singles of 1992 (U.S.)

* Dutch Top 40 number-one hits of 1992

References



Category:1991 singles

Category:1991 songs

Category:1992 singles

Category:Dutch Top 40 number-one singles

Category:Motown singles

Category:Number-one singles in Zimbabwe

Category:Shanice songs

Category:Song recordings produced by Narada Michael Walden

Category:Songs written by Narada Michael Walden

Category:Songs written by Shanice

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