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Honey (Mariah Carey song)

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Wikipedia article




"'Honey'" is a song by American singer and songwriter Mariah Carey from her sixth studio album, 'Butterfly' (1997). It was released as the lead single from 'Butterfly' on July 29, 1997, by Columbia Records. The song was written and produced by Carey, Sean Combs, Kamaal "Q-Tip" Fareed and Steven "Stevie J" Jordan. The song samples "Hey DJ" by World-Famous Supreme Team and "The Body Rock" by the Treacherous Three. "Honey" was a redefining song in Carey's career, pushing her further into the hip hop scene.

"Honey" was acclaimed by music critics, who called Carey's musical transition "genuine". "Honey" was successful in the United States, becoming Carey's third single to debut atop the 'Billboard' Hot 100, setting the record for most singles to debut at number one, a record she held for 23 years, until it was broken by Ariana Grande. It stayed at number one for three consecutive weeks. "Honey" also topped the charts in Canada and reached the top-ten in Australia, New Zealand, Hungary, Poland, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom. The song was nominated in two categories at the 40th Annual Grammy Awards, for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song. Carey included the song in the setlist of various live shows and future tours, where she would sing both the original and remix versions.

"Honey" is well known for its accompanying music video, which presented a more suggestive and less conservative image of Carey than had been previously seen. The video features Carey being held hostage in a mansion, which she escapes in a James Bondthemed plot. Subsequent scenes see Carey escaping her assailants on a watercraft, dancing aboard a ship with sailors and frolicking on a beautiful island with her lover. The video garnered much coverage, as many comparisons were made between the video and the rumors of Carey's failing marriage. While Carey denied the comparisons were anything more than coincidence, many close friends including Walter Afanasieff, Carey's long-time writing partner, felt they were more than obvious.

Background and recording



After the success of her urban crossover album 'Daydream,' Carey began exerting more control over the creative aspects of her career. In doing so, she began pursuing a more hip-hop oriented sound, something very different from anything she had recorded previously. However, she was still writing ballads with Afanasieff, but began looking for more hip-hop/R&B producers to helm part of her new project. Carey began working on the song, recorded in February 1997, with Q-Tip. They brought the lyrics, samples and melody over to Puff Daddy who, as a producer, had just earned his second number one single on the Hot 100 with "Mo Money Mo Problems." Due to rumors of Puffy's overbearing nature, Carey recorded her vocals separately, until she gave him a few demos to choose from. Puffy explained why Carey recorded her vocals separately, and his feelings regarding having worked with her:



A lot of people feel I'm overbearing, so I wasn't allowed in the studio when she did her vocals. I'm trying to work on that, I'm such a perfectionist, sometimes I don't give people the chance to breathe. So I've been banned from a lot of studios. Mariah [recorded "Honey"] until she thought it was perfect, like a hundred times. She gave me like a hundred tracks to choose from.



Puffy expressed his respect for Mariah and her craft, mentioning that she re-did her vocals many times until she felt they were perfect. After they had the vocals, Carey and Puffy began working on the song's hook and incorporating the music samples and blending them into the bridge and chorus. After the song was completed, Combs was very confident with the song, calling it "slammin'," but because of its heavy hip-hop influence, he felt only cautiously optimistic about the song's commercial success. On a more personal note, "Honey" served as Carey's first single after her separation from estranged husband, Tommy Mottola, who also lead her current record label, Columbia Records.

Composition



"Honey" is an up-tempo song, that blends hip hop and R&B genres. The song is set in the signature common time, and is written in the key of E major. It features a basic chord progression of A-F-1. Carey's vocal range in the song spans from the note of C3 to the high note of B5; with the piano and guitar pieces ranging from G3 to G5. The song's remix featured rap leads from The Lox and Mase, with some vocals rapped by Combs himself. The track was very different from anything Carey had ever recorded, and was described as "street Hip-Hop music, with a booming bass." The song's melody was driven by Q-Tip's drum programming and Stevie J's keyboard notes. Combs's production gave the song a "light and airy" effect, further distancing it from Carey's contemporary sound. "Honey" is built around a bassline sample from Treacherous Three's "The Body Rock" and a piano motif reprised from "Hey DJ" by The World's Famous Supreme Team. The track united hip-hop and R&B with traces of pop music and was described as a "[song with a] catchy chorus, combining hip-hop and R&B into something that simply wasn't going to be denied by anyone, and offering a powerful start to a record." According to author Chris Nickson, "Honey" revealed a more confident and independent side to Carey that had never been presented in her previous work. The song truly embodied a more mature and confident woman, with sultrier lyrics and a thumping hip-hop beat to accompany it.

Critical reception



"Honey" garnered acclaimed response from contemporary music critics. David Browne from 'Entertainment Weekly' described the importance the song held for Carey's musical transition. He wrote "You're prepared for a song on which Carey finally breaks free of her adult-contemporary chains and gets down." He felt "Honey" sounded as "anyone striking out on his or her own caught between old and new habits and taking cautious baby steps into the future." Browne also commented that Carey showed a commendable vocal restraint in the song, "showing some admirable restraint, she nestles herself into the downy-soft beats of "Honey." Author Chris Nickson felt the single's importance was "well beyond its chart placing" and that the single was one of the most important songs in Carey's career, enabling her to transition into R&B and hip-hop. Nickson commented that before, Carey was seen as a pop singer with R&B tendencies, but "Honey" changed that idea, giving the singer "hip-hop credibility", and forced naysayers to "take another look." Rich Juzwiak from 'Slant' complimented the song, calling it "awakening, both sensually and musically." Juzwiak concluded the review writing ""Honey" exemplifies the abrupt gear shifting that appreciating Mariah the artist requires. Its new pop brilliance doesn't always come easy, where detecting it depends on the audience's newfound ability to apply Carey's pop life to her pop music." "Honey" was nominated for two Grammy Awards at the 1998 ceremony, for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance and Best R&B Song. Additionally, the song won the BMI Pop Award for "Songwriter."

Chart performance



"Honey" was Carey's third single to debut atop the 'Billboard' Hot 100. Additionally, the song became her 12th chart-topper, breaking the fifth place record she had shared with Madonna and Whitney Houston. It replaced "Mo Money Mo Problems" by The Notorious B.I.G. featuring Puff Daddy and Mase, and it was replaced by Boyz II Men's "4 Seasons of Loneliness". At this point, Carey was tied with The Supremes for fourth most US number ones, behind Michael Jackson with thirteen, and Elvis Presley and The Beatles with 17 and 20, respectively. "Honey" was certified double-platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), denoting shipments of over two million units. The song stalled at number two on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs (behind "You Make Me Wanna..." by Usher), spending 22 weeks in the chart. "Honey" finished number 32 on the 'Billboard' end of year chart for 1997. In Canada, the song debuted on the 'RPM' Singles Chart at forty-eight on the 'RPM' issue dated August 18, 1997, and reached the top of the chart on September 22, 1997. It was present on the chart for a total of 20 weeks, and ranked 18 on the 'RPM' Year-end chart for 1997.

The song debuted on the UK Singles Chart on September 6, 1997, at its peak of number three, becoming Careys 13th top ten single, and spent a total of eight weeks in the chart. "Honey" is Carey's 15th best-selling single in the United Kingdom as of 2010, with estimated sales of over 200,000. In Australia, "Honey" peaked at number eight on the charts, spending a total of 19 weeks in the chart. It was certified gold by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA), denoting shipments of over 35,000 units. In New Zealand, the song peaked at number three, and stayed in the chart for 14 weeks. The song's success in most other worldwide markets was moderate, with it not reaching the same peaks as Carey's previous singles. While "Honey" peaked at number 12 in Finland, it fell dropped out of the chart the next week, spending a total of only one week in the chart. In Sweden, the song performed well, peaking at number eight and staying within the chart for ten weeks. In Austria and France, "Honey" peaked at number 39, spending one and four weeks on the charts, respectively. The song peaked at number 29 and 30 in Belgium Flanders and Wallonia.

Music video



Aside from the attention surrounding the song, the music video garnered much speculation. For the first time in her career, Carey was featured provocatively dressed, giving viewers a "taste of the freer Mariah." The video's concept was created by Carey with Paul Hunter filling in as the director. Serving a James Bond theme, Carey was cast as "the very sexy agent M", a woman who escapes a large mansion in which she has been held captive. Carey said of the video that "I don't really think the video is overtly sexual, but for me... I mean people used to think I was the nineties version of Mary Poppins!"

The video premiered on MTV and BET in August 1997 and was shot in Puerto Rico on July 26, 1997 with a $2 million budget, making it one of the most expensive music videos of all time. The video begins with Carey, playing as "Agent M," being held hostage in a large mansion. The captors are played by Eddie Griffin, Frank Sivero, and Johnny Brennan of The Jerky Boys, who continue to taunt Carey over her capture and eventual death. "Agent M" speaks in Spanish to the captors, saying she can not understand them. After a series of dialogue, Carey escapes her Griffin's character and dives into a swimming pool from the mansion's roof. After an ensemble change, Carey dons a swimsuit and escapes the island via a watercraft. The video's antagonists continue their pursuit of Carey throughout a large body of water, until she arrives aboard a large ship. It is unclear if both scenes are happening separately or side by side. Throughout most of the video, Carey is seen posing on a large sailboat, while wearing a white bikini. After boarding the ship, Carey begins dancing and is soon joined by a group of male sailors. After a sequence of dance light dance routines, Carey is seen on an island with her lover, male model David Fumero, and her real life dog, Jack. They frolic together on the island, while Carey happily enjoys her romance.

During the time of the video's release, Carey and Mottola were in the midst of their divorce and this led to many speculation on the video's message. Tabloids and critics were linking the video's theme to Carey's marriage, writing how Mottola would lock Carey in their mansion. While Carey denied the allegations, many found it to be very obvious. Carey's writing partner of six years, Afanasieff, felt the video was undeniably about Mottola. While speculation about the video grew, Carey continued to deny any intention of portraying her marriage in the video. In an interview, Carey said that "Tommy loves the video, he says it's my best video yet."

The song's Bad Boy remix featured a different music video as well. It features the same concept, however not emphasizing on the kidnapping and escape. The video begins with Carey diving into the pool, and driving a watercraft. As she reaches a point far into the body of water, she is offered a rope lift from a helicopter. After she accepts and ascends the line, Carey boards the aircraft alongside its pilots, Puffy and the members of Bad Boy Entertainment. Other scenes sequence Carey dancing with Puffy in a golden indoor tunnel. As the video concludes, more staff from the helicopter join Carey in the golden entryway, as they dance and enjoy themselves.

Live performances



Las Vegas residency

"Honey" was performed on various live television appearances as well as most of Carey's tours. Carey first performed a mash-up of the song and the Bad Boy remix live on the British music chart program 'Top of the Pops' in 1997. The performance incorporated themes from both videos, in which Carey was dressed in the same white bikini from the music video. Additionally, the stage was set up to resemble the deck of a ship. Dancers similar to the video joined Carey on stage as she performed the song. Carey performed "Honey" at the 1998 World Music Awards. The performance garnered her a standing ovation, and featured many male dancers, all donning sailor costumes. After the second verse, a large projection of the Bad Boy remix video played while pre-recorded rap verses from Puffy played. A live performance of the song was taped via satellite and aired live in Japan, featuring similar costumes and themes as the others. Carey performed the song throughout her Butterfly World Tour (1998), which served as the accompanying tour for 'Butterfly.' During her live routine of the song, various male dancers donned in similar sailor outfits joined Carey on stage. Serving as an intro to the song, Carey re-enacts the hostage from the video, and formulates her escape. The song's performance in Honolulu, Hawaii was used as the official act of the song on Carey's 1998 concert DVD, 'Around the World', which featured live tapings from Japan, Taiwan, Australia and the US.

For her Rainbow World Tour (2000), the beginning of the original video served as the acts intro. As the music began playing, Carey emerged wearing a mini sailor suit and a matching headpiece. During the set, many male dancers joined Carey on stage, and re-enacted a similar performance than that of her previous tour. "Honey" was performed during Carey's following tour, the Charmbracelet World Tour (20032004). The performances of the song throughout the tour were altered from those in 199798. The act began with the video intro like before, however the dancers featured no longer bore any resemblance to the video. Male and female dancers joined, performing traditional and exotic dance routines. Carey donned a blue one piece mini skirt, and joins with some light dance moves. Carey continued performing the song throughout her 2006 tour, The Adventures of Mimi. The performance did not include any video intro, but did introduce a four-piece of male dancers dressed in sailor outfits. Carey wore a pair of black leggings, accompanied by a sparkling mini-bra. During the performance in Madison Square Garden, Carey was joined with Sean "Diddy" Combs (previously known as Puffy) on stage after the second verse. During her Angels Advocate Tour (2010) performance of the song, Carey donned a sparkling mini-Herve Leger gown, with a faux-fur snug jacket. During the song, male and female dancers joined her on stage, and performed up-tempo dance routines. She performed the song regularly during The Elusive Chanteuse Show (2014), singing the So So Def Mix. She also included the song in her 2015 Las Vegas residency, Mariah Carey Number 1's, where she would enter the stage in a black leotard, riding a yellow jet ski, in homage to the video. Carey started performing "Honey" for the first time since July 2017 on her second concert residency, The Butterfly Returns (2018).

Track listing and formats



'US CD single'

# "Honey" (LP version) 4:59

# "Honey" (Bad Boy Remix) 5:32

'UK CD single (Part 1)'

# "Honey" (LP version) 4:59

# "Honey" (Bad Boy Remix) 5:32

# "Honey" (Smooth Version with Intro) 5:07

# "Honey" (So So Def Mix) 5:13

'UK CD single (Part 2)'

# "Honey" (LP version) 4:59

# "Honey" (Classic Mix) 8:06

# "Honey" (Morales Club Dub) 11:02

# "Honey" (Mo' Honey Dub) 7:24

# "Honey" (Classic Instrumental) 7:32

'Honey EP'

# "Honey" (Bad Boy Remix) 5:34

# "Honey" (So So Def Mix) 5:13

# "Honey" (So So Def Radio Mix) 4:00

# "Honey" (Smooth Version with Intro) 5:07

# "Honey" (Classic Mix) 8:06

# "Honey" (Def Club Mix) 6:19

# "Honey" (Morales Club Dub) 11:02

# "Honey" (Mo' Honey Dub) 7:24

# "Honey" (Morales Dub) 7:36

# "Honey" (Def Rascal Anthem) 10:46

# "Honey" (Def Rascal Dub) 5:18

# "Honey" (Classic Instrumental) 7:32

Credits and personnel



Credits are adapted from the 'Butterfly' liner notes.

* Mariah Carey vocals, songwriting, co-producing

* Sean Combs songwriting, co-producing

* Kamaal Fareed songwriting, co-producing

* Steven Jordan songwriting, co-producing

* Stephen Hague songwriting

* Bobby Robinson songwriting

* Ronald Larkins songwriting

* Larry Price songwriting

* Malcolm McLaren songwriting

Charts



Weekly charts

{|class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+Weekly chart performance for "Honey"

!Chart (1997)

!Peak
position

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Canada Singles (Nielsen SoundScan)

|align="center"|2

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Canada Contemporary Hit Radio ('The Record')

|align="center"|2

|-

! scope="row"|Canada Dance ('RPM')

|align="center"|1

|-

! scope="row"|Denmark (IFPI)"Danish Singles Chart". International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. September 5, 1997.

|align="center"|17

|-

! scope="row"|European Hot 100 Singles ('Music & Media')

|align="center"|16

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Hungary (MAHASZ)

|align="center"|5

|-

! scope="row"|Iceland (slenski Listinn Topp 40)

|align="center"|26

|-

|-

! scope="row"| Italy (FIMI)

| style="text-align:center;"| 2

|-

! scope="row"|Japan (Oricon)

|align="center"|39

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Poland Airplay ('Music & Media')

|align="center"|7

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Spain (AFYVE)

|align="center"|4

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"|Taiwan (IFPI)

|align="center"|2

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"| US CHR/Pop ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|10

|-

! scope="row"| US CHR/Rhythmic ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|1

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

|-

! scope="row"| US Urban ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|1

|-

! scope="row"| US Urban AC ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|2

|}

Year-end charts

{|class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+Year-end chart performance for "Honey"

!Chart (1997)

!Position

|-

! scope="row"| Australia (ARIA)

|align="center"|50

|-

! scope="row"| Canada Top Singles ('RPM')

|align="center"|18

|-

! scope="row"| Canada Adult Contemporary ('RPM')

|align="center"|44

|-

! scope="row"| Canada Dance/Urban ('RPM')

|align="center"|9

|-

!scope="row"|Europe Airplay ('Music & Media')

|align="center"|24

|-

! scope="row"| Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)

|align="center"|105

|-

! scope="row"| Netherlands (Single Top 100)

|align="center"|79

|-

! scope="row"| New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)

|align="center"|18

|-

! scope="row"| Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)

|align="center"|91

|-

! scope="row"| UK Singles (OCC)

|align="center"|93

|-

! scope="row"| US 'Billboard' Hot 100

|align="center"|32

|-

! scope="row"|US CHR/Pop ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|60

|-

! scope="row"|US CHR/Rhythmic ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|19

|-

! scope="row"| US Dance Singles Sales ('Billboard')

|align="center"|12

|-

! scope="row"| US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs ('Billboard')

|align="center"|37

|-

! scope="row"| US Mainstream Top 40 ('Billboard')

|align="center"|45

|-

! scope="row"| US Rhythmic ('Billboard')

|align="center"|19

|-

! scope="row"|US Urban ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|40

|-

! scope="row"|US Urban AC ('Radio & Records')

|align="center"|35

|}

Certifications and sales



Release history



{|class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+Release dates and formats for "Honey"

!scope="col"|Region

!scope="col"|Date

!scope="col"|Format(s)

!scope="col"|Label(s)

!scope="col"|

|-

! scope="row"| United States

|

|

| Columbia

|

|-

! scope="row"| France

| rowspan="2"| August 25, 1997

|

| Sony Music

|

|-

! scope="row"| United Kingdom

|

| rowspan="2"| Columbia

|

|-

! scope="row"| United States

| August 26, 1997

|

|

|-

! scope="row"| Japan

| August 27, 1997

| CD

| Sony Music

|

|-

! scope="row"| Various

| August 28, 2020

|

| Legacy

|

|}

See also



* List of 'Billboard' Hot 100 number ones of 1997

* List of number-one dance singles of 1997 (U.S.)

References



Further reading



*

*

*

Category:1997 singles

Category:Mariah Carey songs

Category:Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles

Category:Music videos directed by Paul Hunter (director)

Category:Song recordings produced by Q-Tip (musician)

Category:Song recordings produced by Stevie J

Category:Songs written by Mariah Carey

Category:Songs written by Stephen Hague

Category:RPM Top Singles number-one singles

Category:Songs written by Sean Combs

Category:1997 songs

Category:Epic Records singles

Category:Sony Music singles

Category:Songs written by Malcolm McLaren

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