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Ghetto Day/What I Need

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Wikipedia article




"'Ghetto Day'"/"'What I Need'" is the second single from American singer-songwriter Crystal Waters' second studio album, 'Storyteller' (1994). It was produced by The Basement Boys and released in June 1994 by Mercury Records, A&M Records and A&M's division AM PM. Waters and Sean Spencer wrote "Ghetto Day", which is a funk song that contains samples from The 5th Dimension's song "Stoned Soul Picnic" and Flavor Unit's "Flavor Unit Assassination Squad". According to 'Spin', the track's lyrics talk about "those balmy, front-stoop, 40-swinging summer afternoons." The single's second A-side, "What I Need", is a house track written by Waters, Doug Smith and Richard Payton.

Contemporary critics complimented both songs and noted them as the album's highlights. Commercially, the joint release entered the top forty in the United Kingdom. "What I Need" was released separately in October 1994, and later became Waters' fourth single to top the 'Billboard' Dance Club Songs Chart. It also reached the top spot of the Bubbling Under Hot 100 and  82 of the 'Billboard' Hot 100. In other media, "What I Need" was featured in the film 'Double Dragon' (1994) and an episode of television series 'So You Think You Can Dance Canada'.

Compositions



Like the majority of songs on 'Storyteller' (1994), both "Ghetto Day" and "What I Need" were produced, arranged and mixed by The Basement Boys, with Waters credited as their main writer. Additionally, Sean Spencer co-wrote the former track, and Doug Smith and Richard Payton co-wrote the latter.

Musically, "Ghetto Day" is a mid-tempo funk, hip hop and doo-wop track that has an "easy flow" and a "gently funky conversation" where Waters "opens up." Larry Flick of 'Billboard' described the song as a "splash of cool retro-funk that is laced with licks" from its sampling of The 5th Dimension's "Stoned Soul Picnic". It also contains portions of Flavor Unit's 1996 track "Flavor Unit Assassination Squad". According to Jonathan Bernstein from 'Spin', the lyrical content of "Ghetto Day" "rhapsodizes about those balmy, front-stoop, 40-swinging summer afternoons." Charles Aaron from the same publication wrote of the lyrics: "Going home, she listens to Grandma talk to the Lord, babies scream, old men go tra-la-la, and her brother sing the praises of a 40-ounce on a sunny day."

On the other hand, "What I Need" was described as a house piece and one of the album's "jovial, upbeat" moments, where Waters performed her vocal in a "sick, tired, and simmering" manner.

Reception



Critical reviews

Peter Galvin of 'The Advocate' stated that "Ghetto Day" was "more listener-friendly" than the other songs on the album, with lyrics that offered "a paradisaical view of life and love in the slums, made convincing by the use of a sample from Fifth Dimension's summery 'Stoned Soul Picnic'." 'Billboard' called it "a languid, liquid sketch of a lazy city afternoon", and noted that "it gets the nod as [the album's] likeliest knockout contender." M.R. Martinez from 'Cash Box' noted that she "goes for the "La Dee Da" with the optimistic Ghetto Day, with its tra-la-la-la refrain." Also Fred DeUar of 'High Fidelity News and Record Review' praised the sampling of 'Stoned Soul Picnic', stating that it was done "in the cause of better-class '90s pop." Ernest Hardy from the 'Los Angeles Times' called "Ghetto Day" a "sugary, hip hop, doo-wop inner-city fantasy". Andy Beevers from 'Music Week' gave it four out of five, calling it "a breezy and funky mid-tempo song, purpose-made for radio play on a Summer afternoon." James Hamilton from the magazine's 'RM' Dance Update deemed it a "radio aimed gorgeous gentle 90bpm summery hip hop soul" track. 'Spin' Charles Aaron thought it was "a more sublime sound than any arm-twisting remix", while Jonathan Bernstein described it as "languid" and one of the "noteworthy" 'Storyteller' tracks.

Ron Wynn from AllMusic declared "What I Need" one of the album's best. 'Billboard' Larry Flick labelled it a "floor-filler" and an "upbeat rouser." Another reviewer from the same publication thought "What I Need" was one of the hits to be had from 'Storyteller'. 'Vibe' magazine stated "What I Need" and "100% Pure Love", the album's first single, "ooze with giddy abandonnot to mention juicy grooves that seep deeper into the brain and body upon repeated spins." "What I Need" was claimed by 'Spin' Bernstein to have "xeroxed" Clivills and Cole's 1991 single "A Deeper Love". However, he predicted that it could have been a potential successor to her previous signature hits, "Gypsy Woman" and "Makin' Happy".

Commercial performance

"Ghetto Day" and "What I Need" were released as a double A-side single in June 1994. The joint release peaked at  40 on the UK Singles Chart and at No. 94 on the ARIA Top 100 Singles Chart. In October 1994, Mercury Records released "What I Need" separately, and later sent the track to contemporary hit radios in January 1995. It eventually gained Waters her fourth No. 1 single on the 'Billboard' Dance Club Songs Chart of November 5, 1994. On the chart's year-end edition of 1994, it peaked at No. 42. The song also topped the Bubbling Under Hot 100 before reaching No. 82 of the 'Billboard' Hot 100. However, the latter entry was the singer's lowest peak on the chart. "What I Need" also climbed to No. 7 on the Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales and No. 32 on the Top 40 Airplay Rhythm-Crossover.

Promotion and other usages



The music video for "Ghetto Day" marked Waters' second work with German director Marcus Nispel, following "100% Pure Love". It shows the singer performing around an African-American neighborhood, with scenes tinted in a yellow-orange tone. Pam Thomas directed the video for "What I Need", which consists of scenes of Waters shot primarily in a bathroom. BET added the clips to the channel's playlist in late August 1994 and early March 1995, respectively.

Waters performed "Ghetto Day" on the June 30, 1994 episode of British music-chart television programme 'Top of the Pops'. "100% Pure Love" and "What I Need" were subsequently featured in the 1994 action film 'Double Dragon', but only the latter was included on its soundtrack album. During the fourth season of 'So You Think You Can Dance Canada', two contestantsJP Dub and Geisha Chinperformed "What I Need" on its twelfth episode which aired on August 1, 2011.

Formats and track listings



"Ghetto Day"/"What I Need"

* 'Australia, Europe and UK maxi single / International 12-inch single'

# "Ghetto Day" 3:20

# "What I Need" 10:35

# "What I Need" 8:45

* 'UK 7-inch and cassette single'

# "Ghetto Day" 3:20

# "What I Need" 10:35

"What I Need"

* 'Canada maxi single'

# "What I Need" 3:14

# "What I Need" 8:16

# "What I Need" 4:18

# "What I Need" 10:35

# "What I Need" 6:55

# "100% Pure Love" 9:29

* 'France CD single'

# "What I Need" 3:14

# "What I Need" 3:29

* 'Germany remix maxi single'

# "What I Need" 6:55

# "100% Pure Love" 9:29

# "Gypsy Woman (La Da Dee)" 7:32

* 'Italy and US 12-inch single'

# "What I Need" 6:55

# "What I Need" 5:11

# "What I Need" 8:16

# "100% Pure Love" 9:29

* 'UK and US maxi single'

# "What I Need" 3:14

# "What I Need" 3:29

# "What I Need" 3:47

# "What I Need" 3:53

* 'US 12-inch single'

# "What I Need" 8:16

# "What I Need" 4:18

# "What I Need" 10:35

# "Ghetto Day" 3:32

* 'US cassette single'

# "What I Need" 4:12

# "Ghetto Day" 3:32

Credits



Credits adapted from the liner notes of 'Storyteller'.

'Recording and management'

* Recorded at Basement Boys Studios (Baltimore)

* Mastered by Herb "The Pump" Powers at The Hit Factory (New York City)

* "Ghetto Day" contains portions of "Stoned Soul Picnic", written by Laura Nyro and performed by The 5th Dimension, published by EMI Music (BMI), and "Flavor Unit Assassination Squad" by the Flavor Unit, published by Tuff City Music

* Managed by Vito Bruno for AM/PM Entertainment

'Personnel for "Ghetto Day"'

* Teddy Douglas  production, vocal production, arrangement, engineering, mixing

* Jay Steinhour  production, arrangement, mixing, engineering

* Crystal Waters  vocal, writing, background vocal

* Sean Spencer  writing, drums

* Eric "Moe" Rosenberg  editing

* Gerry Brown  engineering, mixing

* Brian "G"  engineering (tracking)

* Gerry E. Brown  mixing

* Gary Hudgins  keyboards

* Hoza Clowney  keyboards

* Kenny Hicks  background vocal, vocal production, vocal arrangement

* Audrey Wheeler  background vocal

* DJ Noodles  scratching

* Wayne Cooper  guitar

* P Funk Horn Section  live horns

'Personnel for "What I Need"'

* Teddy Douglas  production, arrangement, mixing, drums, engineering (tracking)

* Jay Steinhour  production, arrangement, mixing, drums

* Crystal Waters  vocal, writing

* Doug Smith  writing, keyboards, drums

* Richard Payton  writing, drums, keyboards

* Eric "Moe" Rosenberg  editing

* 95 North  mixing

* David Sussman  engineering

* Greg Thomas  background vocal

* Novelair Thomas  background vocal

* Greg Boyer  trombone

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



See also



*List of number-one dance singles of 1994 (U.S.)

References



Category:1994 singles

Category:1994 songs

Category:Crystal Waters songs

Category:Mercury Records singles

Category:A&M Records singles

Category:AM PM Records singles

Category:Music videos directed by Marcus Nispel

Category:Funk songs

Category:American hip hop songs

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