- Heartbreaker (Mariah Carey song)
Infobox Single
Name = Heartbreaker
Artist =Mariah Carey featuringJay-Z /Da Brat &Missy Elliott
from Album = Rainbow
Released = flagicon|USASeptember 21 ,1999
flagicon|UKOctober 18 ,1999
Format =CD single , CDmaxi single ,cassette single , 7" single, 12" single
[ Recorded = ]
Genre =Dance-pop , R&B, hip hop
Length = 4:46 (Album Version)
3:19 (No Rap Version)
Label = Sony
Writer = Mariah Carey,Jay-Z ,Jeff Cohen ,Narada Michael Walden ,Shirley Elliston ,Lincoln Chase
Producer = Mariah Carey,DJ Clue , Mr Fingaz
Misc = Extra chronology
Artist =Mariah Carey
Type = singles
Last single = "I Still Believe "
(1999)
This single = "Heartbreaker"
(1999)
Next single = "Thank God I Found You "
(2000)Extra chronology
Artist =Jay-Z
Type = singles
Last single = "Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem) "
(1998)
This single = "Heartbreaker"
(1999)
Next single = "I Just Wanna Luv U (Give It 2 Me)"
(2000)Extra tracklisting
Album = Rainbow
Type = studio
prev_track =
prev_no =
this_track = "Heartbreaker"
track_no = 1
next_track = "Can't Take That Away (Mariah's Theme) "
next_no = 2Extra tracklisting
Album = Greatest Hits (CD #2)
Type = compilation
prev_track = "I Still Believe"
prev_no = 10
this_track = "Heartbreaker"
track_no = 11
next_track = "Thank God I Found You"
next_no = 12Extra tracklisting
Album = The Remixes (CD #1)
Type = remix album
prev_track = "My All (Morales "My" Club Mix)"
prev_no = 1
this_track = "Heartbreaker/If You Should Ever Be Lonely (Junior's Heartbreaker Club Mix)"
track_no = 2
next_track = "Fly Away (Butterfly Reprise) (Fly Away Club Mix)"
next_no = 3Extra tracklisting
Album = The Remixes (CD #2)
Type = remix album
prev_track = "Loverboy (Remix)"
prev_no = 7
this_track = "Heartbreaker (Remix)"
track_no = 8
next_track = "Sweetheart"
next_no = 9"Heartbreaker" is a song co-written by American singer
Mariah Carey and rapperJay-Z , and recorded for Carey's sixth studio album "Rainbow" (1999). Co-produced byDJ Clue and featuring Jay-Z, it is built around a sample of theStacy Lattisaw song "Attack of the Name Game", written byJeff Cohen ,Narada Michael Walden , Shirley Elliston and Lincoln Chase. ("Attack of the Name Game" samples "The Name Game", written by Elliston and Chase.) The song's protagonist laments a man who has broken her heart. It was released as the first single from "Rainbow" in August 1999 (see1999 in music ) and reached the top ten in several countries, including theUnited States , where it reached number one.Composition and release
Carey had originally written the song (along with others on "Rainbow") for use in a film and soundtrack project that she was developing titled "All That Glitters" (later titled "Glitter" and released in 2001). The film was to be set in the 1980s, and Carey said she and co-producer DJ Clue deliberately made the song "kind of retro, cutesy". The "
Chicago Sun-Times " wrote that the original version of the song had "a bouncy, good-time groove harking back to the roller-disco craze of the early '80s". When production of the film was pushed back, Carey decided to incorporate the material she had written for the film into a new studio album. She enlisted Jay-Z to contribute some rapped parts to the song, and according to her Jay-Z suggested that it be released as a single as soon as possible. Carey said, "I was like: 'They're right. I have to get it out. It's a summer record. I should, I should, I should'". [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4155/is_19991214/ai_n13835381]The release of "Heartbreaker" broke new ground by being one of the first instances where a major recording artist premiered a song on the internet before it was released to radio. "Heartbreaker" could be heard exclusively on the WindowsMedia.com site for twelve hours on
August 16 1999 , [ [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1999_August_13/ai_55434902 Mariah Carey to Release First Studio Album in Two Years: Rainbow | Business Wire | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ] before the track was officially released to radio the next day. After that, it was available to be accessed on-demand at the Microsoft site untilAugust 20 , during which timee-Media reported that 375,000 individually broadcast audio streams were delivered.Fact|date=February 2007Chart performance
"Heartbreaker" reached number one on the U.S. "Billboard" Hot 100, earning Carey her first new number-one single since the release of "My All" in 1998, although "I Still Believe" was a Top 5 in 1999. It also made Carey the only artist to have a number-one single in every year of the 1990s, a record that she extended by a further year with "
Thank God I Found You " (2000). It spent two weeks at the top of the chart, fromOctober 3 toOctober 16 1999 ; it replaced TLC's "Unpretty " and was replaced by Santana's "Smooth" featuring Rob Thomas. When "Heartbreaker" spent a second week at number one, Carey had spent a total of sixty weeks at number one in the U.S., beatingThe Beatles by one week (from 1964 to 1970 they had managed fifty-nine weeks). [ [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1999_Oct_7/ai_56053824 Mariah Carey Surpasses the Beatles as the Artist/s With the Most Weeks At No. 1 in the History of the Billboard Hot 100 | Business Wire | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ]The success of the single was because of a combination of strong radio airplay and commercial CD single sales: it produced Carey's best showing on the
Hot 100 Airplay chart since "Always Be My Baby " (1996) and topped theHot 100 Single Sales chart with the highest first-week sales of her career (271,000 copies [ [http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0EIN/is_1999_Sept_29/ai_55916242 Mariah Carey Hits No. 1 With Her History-Making "Heartbreaker" | Business Wire | Find Articles at BNET.com ] ] ) thanks, in part, to a low 49 cent single price. Carey eventually topped this with "Touch My Body " which sold 286,000 in the first week of its release"Billboard". [http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/news/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003784083 Mariah, Madonna Make Billboard Chart History] . April 2, 2008. Retrieved April 2, 2008] . It received a gold certification from the RIAA, remained on the Hot 100 for twenty weeks and was ranked thirty-fourth on the "Billboard" Hot 100 year-end charts for 1999."Heartbreaker" was a hit outside the U.S. and topped the charts in
Canada ,New Zealand ,Spain and thePhilippines . It peaked inside the top ten in most markets, includingAustralia andGermany , where it was only one of four top-ten hits for her. It became Carey's last top-five single as a lead artist in the UK until 2003, peaking at number five, and picked up substantial radio airplay across the world, while the videos for it and its remix received heavy rotation.Music videos and remixes
The single's video, directed by
Brett Ratner , is Carey's most expensive. A 2000MTV special estimated the video for "Heartbreaker" to be the fifth most expensive of all-time (seeList of most expensive music videos ); it reportedly cost over US$2.5 million to make, which was less only thanPuff Daddy 's "Victory", Madonna's Die Another Day, Michael andJanet Jackson 's "Scream", and30 Seconds To Mars ' "From Yesterday ". In it Carey's friends urge her to confront her unfaithful boyfriend (played byJerry O'Connell ), who is inside a film theater on a date with Carey'salter ego , Bianca.When the video was released,
Jay-Z had recorded the single "Girl's Best Friend" for the soundtrack to the film "Blue Streak" and was subject to a short-term exclusive deal withEpic Records that stipulated that he could not appear in any other videos. During the part of the song that Jay-Z raps, an animated sequence featuring cartoon versions of Carey and her friends was shown instead. After the contract expired, another version of the video with a new scene featuring Jay-Z, which paid homage to the bathtub sequence in the film "Scarface" (1983), was released. Other film references in the video include a scene with Carey in a pillowfight with the scene of the song "Look At Me, I'm Sandra Dee " taken from "Grease" (1977), and a catfight in a washroom between Carey and Bianca inspired by "Enter the Dragon " (1973). To date the video has received over 1,000,000+ video hits on the video global network site 'youtube'.One of Carey's most famous
remix es is known simply as "Heartbreaker (Remix)". Although the basic song structure is kept the same, Carey re-recorded her vocals and used a new sample:Snoop Dogg 's "Ain't No Fun (If The Homies Can't Have None)" which originally samples "Think (About It) " byLyn Collins ". The remix was produced by Carey,Duro , andDJ Clue (who introduces the remix), and it features rapped parts byDa Brat andMissy Elliott . There is a video for the remix, directed byDiane Martel and shot entirely in black and white. It features Carey having a jello catfight with Bianca, skating around in a skimpy bikini and washing the car of Snoop Dogg, who makes a cameo appearance. Missy Elliot, Da Brat, Bianca (Carey's alter ego), Nate Dogg and DJ Clue also make guest appearances.Carey and
Junior Vasquez created dance remixes of "Heartbreaker" that include interpolations of thedisco song "If You Should Ever Be Lonely". In early statements related to the film "Glitter" (2001), Carey had said that there would be yet another remix of "Heartbreaker" on the album. Instead, Carey performed a remix known as "Love Hangover/Heartbreaker" at the "VH1 2000Divas Live " tribute toDiana Ross . Never performed elsewhere, this has Carey singing "Heartbreaker" over the background of Ross's "Love Hangover " (1976), along with "Love Hangover" itself and parts ofDonna Summer 's "Love to Love You Baby" (1975).List of remixes
*Heartbreaker [Album Version ft. Jay-Z] 4:46
*Heartbreaker [Pop Version ft. Jay-Z] 4:18
*Heartbreaker [Remix ft. Missy Elliott & Da Brat] 4:32
*Heartbreaker [No Rap Version] 3:22
*Heartbreaker (If You Should Ever Be Lonely) [Junior's Club Dub] 10:12
*Heartbreaker (If You Should Ever Be Lonely) [Junior's Heartbreaker Club Mix] 10:18
*Heartbreaker (If You Should Ever Be Lonely) [Junior's Hard Mix] 10:19Charts
{| class="wikitable"!align="left"|Chart (1999)!align="center"|Peak
position
-
align="left"|France Top 100 Singles
align="center"|4
-
align="left"|Brazil Singles Chart
align="center"|5
-
align="left"|UK Singles Chart
align="center"|5
-
align="left"|Netherlands Top 100 Singles
align="center"|7
-
align="left"|Switzerland Top 100 Singles
align="center"|7
-
align="left"|Italy Singles Chart
align="center"|8
-
align="left"|Germany Singles Chart
align="center"|9
-
align="left"|Australian ARIA Singles Chart
align="center"|10
-
align="left"|Norway Top 20 Singles
align="center"|14
-
align="left"|Sweden Top 60 Singles
align="center"|18
-
align="left"|JapaneseOricon Singles Chart
align="center"|37ee also
*
Hot 100 number-one hits of 1999 (USA)
*R&B number-one hits of 1999 (USA)
*ARC Weekly Top 40 number-one hits of 1999 (U.S.)
*List of number-one singles in 1999 (NZ) Notes
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