Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 2007


Break the Ice (song)

Buy Break the Ice (song) now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Break the Ice

| cover = Britney Spears_-_Break the Ice.png

| alt = Upper bust of a brunette woman. She is looking into the camera with a serious face. She is wearing a sparkly transparent dress, a jeweled bracelet in her right hand and a white hat in her head. Her right hand is holding her hat. Her head is slightly tilted to the right. Her hair is falling over her left shoulder. The picture is colored in a washed-up flavescent yellow, with the background mixed with maroon stripes. In the left of the picture in vertical style, the words "Britney Spears" are written in a mix of flavescent yellow capital and small letters. In the lower center of the picture, the words "break the ice" are written in a similar style.

| border = yes

| type = single

| artist = Britney Spears

| album = Blackout

| B-side = Everybody

| released =

| recorded = AugustOctober 2006

| studio =

| venue =

| genre =

* Electro-R&B

| length =

| label = Jive

| writer =

| producer =

| prev_title = Piece of Me

| prev_year = 2007

| next_title = Womanizer

| next_year = 2008

| misc =

}}

"'Break the Ice'" is a song by American singer Britney Spears from her fifth studio album, 'Blackout' (2007). It was released as the third and final single from the album on March 3, 2008, by Jive Records. The song was written by Nate "Danja" Hills, Jim Beanz, Keri Hilson and Marcella Araica, while production was handled by Danja and vocal production was handled by Beanz. "Radar" was originally planned to be released as the third single, but "Break the Ice" was released after it was chosen by a poll on Spears's official website. Musically, "Break the Ice" is an electro-R&B song with influences of crunk. The song opens with a choir and features synthesizers. Its lyrics deal with an attraction between two people. "Break the Ice" received critical acclaim, with reviewers praising its lyrics, production, Spears' vocal performance and deemed it a strong electronic song from the record.

"Break the Ice" was a moderate success, reaching the top ten in Canada and Finland, and charting within the top 40 in Australia, New Zealand and many other European countries. In the United States, the single reached number 43 on the 'Billboard' Hot 100, while peaking at number one on the Dance Club Songs chart. An accompanying music video, directed by Robert Hales, was released on March 12, 2008. The anime-influenced animation video was based on the superheroine character of Spears's "Toxic" video, and portrays her destroying a highly secured laboratory with several clones, including one of herself. A remix of "Break the Ice" was used as a video interlude during The Circus Starring Britney Spears (2009) and was performed for the first time during her residency show at Planet Hollywood Las Vegas, Britney: Piece of Me (201317).

Background



"Break the Ice" was written by Nate "Danja" Hills, Marcella "Ms. Lago" Araica, Keri Hilson, James Washington and produced by Danja.'Blackout' liner notes. Jive Records (2007) Spears started working with Danja in July 2006. He explained that the creative process was not difficult at first since he was "left to do pretty much whatever I wanted to", and "if she felt it, she was gonna ride with it. If she didn't, youd see it in her face." Spears began recording the track in Las Vegas in August 2006, while she was seven months pregnant with her second child, Jayden James. Recording continued at Spears' house in Los Angeles, California, three weeks after she gave birth. Hilson commented that "She gave 150 percent. [...] I dont know any other mother that would do that." "Radar" was originally planned to be released as the third single from 'Blackout', according to Ezekiel Lewis of The Clutch. "Break the Ice" was chosen as a single by a poll on Spears' official Jive Records website. On February 11, 2008, it was announced that the song had won, receiving 39% of the total votes.

Composition



"Break the Ice" is an electro-R&B song with influences of crunk. It is performed in a moderate pop groove. The song is composed in the key of F minor and is set in time signature of common time. According to Leah Greenblatt of 'Entertainment Weekly', "Break the Ice" sounds similar to "Say It Right" by Nelly Furtado. It opens with Spears singing the lines "It's been a while / I know I shouldn't have kept you waiting / But I'm here now", which serve as an apology for being gone so long from the music industry as well as away from her love interest in the song. After the first line, Spears sings over a choir. According to Chuck Arnold of 'People', Spears delivers her "trademark breathy vocals". In the first verse, synthesizers kick in and run until the end of the second chorus. After it, Spears stops the song and sings "I like this part / It feels kind of good", mimicking Janet Jackson in "Nasty" (1986). The music changes, as described by Tom Ewing of Pitchfork Media, to "[something that] sounds like spacehoppers [are] bouncing in slow motion round a padded cell". The song is constructed in the common verse-chorus form. Lyrically, the song is about two people, in which one of them asks the other to get to know each other and break the ice.

Critical reception



Eric R. Danton of 'The Hartford Courant' deemed it as a "crunk-style thumper", while calling it one of the "killer tracks" off the album along with "Radar" and "Hot as Ice". Nick Levine of Digital Spy called it "a booming slice of multi-layered electro R&B" and said that along with "Radar", "are as avant-garde as pop gets in 2007". A reviewer from Popjustice said "[it] is a really brilliant track", Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic said some of the songs of 'Blackout', "really show off the skills of the producers", exemplifying "Gimme More", "Radar", "Break the Ice", "Heaven on Earth" and "Hot as Ice". He also referred to the song as a "stuttering electro-clip".

Jennifer Vineyard of MTV said the song "might have been a stronger album leadoff track than 'Gimme More', [...] since [Spears] re-introduces herself at the top and apologizes for being gone for so long." Kelefe Sanneh of 'The New York Times' said the song was "nearly as good" as previous singles "Gimme More" and "Piece of Me", and described it as a "rave-inspired flirtation". A reviewer from the 'Ottawa Citizen' said that "[t]here's also a lot to like about Break The Ice, Why Should I Be Sad and Perfect Love[r]". Jim Abbott of the 'Orlando Sentinel' said that "Musically, songs such as 'Piece of Me,' 'Radar' and 'Break the Ice' are one-dimensional, robotic exercises." Joan Anderman of 'The Boston Globe' called it "numbing club filler."

Chart performance



In the United States, "Break the Ice" entered the 'Billboard' Hot 100 at number one hundred on the issue dated March 15, 2008. It peaked at number forty-three on May 24, 2008. Two weeks later, it peaked at number one on the 'Billboard' Hot Dance Club Songs, becoming the third consecutive single from the album to reach the top position of the chart. As of July 2010, "Break the Ice" has sold 688,000 paid digital downloads in the United States. In Canada, the song entered the Canadian Hot 100 at number ninety-seven on March 1, 2008. On April 26, 2008, it reached its peak position of number nine. On May 5, 2008, the track debuted at number forty-one on the Australian ARIA Singles Chart. It peaked at number twenty-three on the issue dated May 19, 2008. In New Zealand, the single debuted at number thirty-seven on April 7, 2008. It peaked at number twenty-four three weeks later. "Break the Ice" entered the UK Singles Chart at number thirty-six on March 31, 2008. On April 20, 2008, it peaked at number fifteen. The song also had moderate success through Europe, reaching the top ten in Belgium (Flanders and Wallonia) and Finland, and the top twenty in Denmark and Sweden. In Denmark, it was certified gold by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI) for sales over 7,500 copies.

Music video



Originally, the remix with Fabolous was initially to be released as the album's third single and have a music video with a chair dancing sequence similar to the video for Spears' 2000 single "Stronger". However, due to her personal life struggles at the time, this idea was cancelled and Spears came up with the idea for creating an animated video instead.

The music video for "Break the Ice" was made in an anime-influenced animation style in South Korea and was directed by Robert Hales. It premiered on March 12, 2008 at BlackoutBall.com, a website created exclusively for the premiere, in which fans could access a chat room.

The video begins with Spears wearing a short black bodysuit and knee-high black boots, standing on the roofs of a futuristic city. As the first verse begins, she breaks into a research facility and battles with suited henchmen. Spears ends up gaining access to a highly secured laboratory and walks through aisles of clones held in liquid cocoons. She sees that one is a clone of her, kisses her and plants a bomb on the tank. After this, Spears infiltrates the base of the apparent villain, kissing him, and then destroying him, revealing him to be a robot also. From there, she dodges a bullet and sets off a panic among the newly arrived henchmen, meanwhile the bomb's timer runs lower and lower. Next, there is a wide shot of the building exploding, while Spears is jumping and "Victory" is depicted on the side of the structure. The video ends with the phrase "To be continued...".

Live performances



A remix of "Break the Ice" was used as a video interlude during The Circus Starring Britney Spears (2009). The song was performed for the first time in 2013 during Spears' Las Vegas Residency at PH Live, Britney: Piece of Me. Halfway through the performance of "Gimme More" Spears and her dancers, wearing cowboy-inspired plaid and denim outfits, performed a fragment of "Break the Ice", which was then followed by a dance routine which pays tribute to Michael Jackson and then "Piece of Me". In the revamp of the concert in 2016, the song was moved to the first act of the show and received different choreography. A similar performance was done by Spears during her concert on the 2016 Apple Music Festival on September 27, 2016.

According to rehearsal videos published at Spears's social media accounts in late 2018, "Break the Ice" was set to be performed at her planned residency Britney: Domination prior to its cancellation.

Track listings and formats



* 'CD single'

# "Break the Ice"  3:16

# "Everybody"  3:16

* 'CD maxi single'

# "Break the Ice"  3:16

# "Break the Ice" (Kaskade Remix)  5:28

# "Break the Ice" (Tracy Young Mix)  6:32

# "Break the Ice" (Tonal Remix)  4:52

# "Break the Ice" (Video Enhancement)  3:22

* '12-inch vinyl  The Remixes'

# "Break the Ice" (Kaskade Remix)  5:31

# "Break the Ice" (Jason Nevins Rock Remix)  3:24

# "Break the Ice" (Tonal Remix)  4:52

# "Break the Ice" (Mike Rizzo Funk Generation Dub)  7:18

# "Break the Ice" (Tracy Young Club Mix)  8:51

# "Break the Ice" (Doug Grayson Remix)  4:43

* 'Digital download  EP'

# "Break the Ice"  3:16

# "Break the Ice" (Jason Nevins Rock Remix)  3:16

# "Break the Ice" (Kaskade Remix)  5:28

* 'Digital download  Remixes'

# "Break the Ice" (Jason Nevins Extended)  6:18

# "Break the Ice" (Jason Nevins Dub)  6:57

# "Break the Ice" (Mike Rizzo Generation Club Mix)  6:41

# "Break the Ice" (Mike Rizzo Generation Dub)  7:14

# "Break the Ice" (Tracy Young Club Mix)  8:50

# "Break the Ice" (Tracy Young Dub)  8:28

Credits and personnel



Credits for "Break the Ice" are taken from 'Blackout's liner notes.

* Britney Spears lead vocals

* Nate "Danja" Hills songwriting, production

* Marcella Araica songwriting, instruments, programming, mixing

* Keri Hilson recording, songwriting, background vocals

* James Washington songwriting

* Jim Beanz background vocals

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Certifications



Release history



{| class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders"

|+ Release dates and formats for "Break the Ice"

! scope="col"| Region

! scope="col"| Date

! scope="col"| Format(s)

! scope="col"| Label(s)

! scope="col"|

|-

! scope="row"| United States

| March 3, 2008

|

| Jive

|

|-

! scope="row"| Italy

| rowspan="3"| March 21, 2008

| rowspan="3"| Digital download

| rowspan="2"| Sony BMG

|

|-

! scope="row"| Spain

|

|-

! scope="row"| United Kingdom

| RCA

|

|-

! scope="row"| Ireland

| rowspan="2"| April 4, 2008

| rowspan="6"| Digital download

| rowspan="5"| Sony BMG

|

|-

! scope="row"| Netherlands

|

|-

! scope="row"| Finland

| rowspan="4"| April 7, 2008

|

|-

! scope="row"| Norway

|

|-

! scope="row"| Spain

|

|-

! scope="row" rowspan="2"| United Kingdom

| rowspan="2"| RCA

|

|-

| April 14, 2008

|rowspan="2"| CD

|

|-

! scope="row" rowspan="2"| Germany

| rowspan="2"| May 2, 2008

| rowspan="4"| Sony BMG

|

|-

| Maxi CD

|

|-

! scope="row"| New Zealand

| May 10, 2008

| rowspan="2"| Digital download

|

|-

! scope="row"| Luxembourg

| May 30, 2008

|

|-

! scope="row"| Various

| July 29, 2008

| Digital download

| Jive

|

|}

References




Buy Break the Ice (song) now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 2007



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1110979736.