Here We Go Again Now Just Dont Break My Heart
"Un-Break My Heart" | ||||
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Single by Toni Braxton | ||||
from the album Secrets | ||||
Released | Oct seven, 1996 (1996-10-07) | |||
Recorded | 1995 | |||
Studio |
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Genre |
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Length | four:32 | |||
Label | LaFace | |||
Songwriter(s) | Diane Warren | |||
Producer(southward) | David Foster | |||
Toni Braxton singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Un-Break My Heart" on YouTube | ||||
"Un-Break My Middle" is a vocal past American singer Toni Braxton for her 2d studio album, Secrets (1996). The song was written by Diane Warren and produced by David Foster. Information technology was released as the 2d single from the album on October 7, 1996, through LaFace Records. The vocal is a ballad about a "baking heartbreak" in which the singer begs a old lover to return and undo the hurting he has caused. Information technology won Best Female person Pop Song Operation at the 39th Annual Grammy Awards in 1997. It has sold over x million copies worldwide almost 3 one thousand thousand in the United States alone, making information technology one of the all-time selling singles of all fourth dimension.
"Un-Interruption My Center" attained commercial success worldwide. In the United States, the song reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100, where it stayed a total of eleven weeks, while reaching the aforementioned position on the Hot Dance Club Songs and Adult Gimmicky component charts. When Billboard celebrated their 40 years charting from 1958 to 1998, the song was declared every bit the most successful song by a solo artist in the Billboard Hot 100 history.[2] In Europe, the vocal reached the top-5 in more than ten countries while peaking at number one in Austria, Kingdom of belgium (Wallonia), Romania, Sweden, and Switzerland.
Bille Woodruff directed the accompanying video for the single. It portrays Braxton mourning the death of her lover, while remembering the good times they had together. Braxton performed the vocal on the opening ceremony of the 1996 Billboard Music Awards. "United nations-Intermission My Heart" has been covered by several artists, including American alternative stone band Weezer on the album Death to False Metal.
Groundwork [edit]
Diane Warren wrote "Un-Intermission My Heart" in 1995. When asked about her songwriting process, she said that songs normally come up to her from a title, a chorus, or a drum vanquish. "United nations-Break My Heart" was conceived from its title, and, according to Warren, "it popped into my head, and I thought, 'I don't recall I've heard that earlier, that'due south kind of interesting.' I started playing around on the piano with these chords and did a fundamental change, and and so I knew, 'OK, this is magic.'"[3] Warren farther explained that she wrote "United nations-Break My Heart" as a ballad and dance vocal, considering that was the style she heard it. She said: "some people only know it every bit a – gay – dance song!"[4]
When Warren played the finished song to Arista Records' future president (2000-2004) L.A. Reid, he thought it would fit Braxton's and then upcoming album.[5] When "Un-Interruption My Heart" was sent to Braxton, she expressed dislike for the vocal. According to Warren, "Toni hated the vocal. She didn't desire to exercise it."[vi] Reid was able to convince Braxton to record it, and it later became her signature song.[six] Following the recording sessions of the vocal, Braxton approached Warren and explained why she was skeptical about recording information technology, further explaining that she didn't want another "heartbreak track".[6]
Recording sessions occurred at The Record Plant and Chartmarker Studios in Los Angeles, California in the same year.[7] "Un-Interruption My Heart" was released as the second single from Secrets on Nov eleven, 1996.[eight]
Composition [edit]
Produced by David Foster, "Un-Break My Heart" is a four minute-25 second pop and R&B power ballad.[i] [7] [11] The song'due south theme alludes to a "blistering heartbreak" in which the singer begs a former lover to return and undo the hurting he has caused.[9] David Willoughby, author of The World of Music (2009), said a few phrases such as "Don't leave me in all this pain" are sufficient to reveal the "sadness and the longing" in the vocal.[12]
Warren showcased Braxton's contralto voice with a low song range.[13] According to canvass music published by Realsongs at Musicnotes.com, the verses of "Un-Intermission My Heart" are composed in the key of B small,[14] and the piece modulates to D minor for the chorus and G ♯ minor for the bridge; the song is set in a time signature of common time with a moderately deadening tempo of 55 beats per minute.[ten] Braxton'south vocal range spans from the low notation of D3 to the high note of D-Sharp/E-Flatfive.
The song was remixed past several DJs such as Hex Hector, Frankie Knuckles and Soul Solution. Every bit noted by Jose F. Promis of AllMusic, the song
in its original form, was a massive adult contemporary and pop hit, and, with its larger-than-life chorus, worked equally well as an unstoppable trip the light fantastic number, even if the vocals were never re-recorded.[15]
The "Soul-Hex Song Anthem" remix, with a length over nine minutes, was influenced by tribal house music; while the "Classic Radio Mix" is a pianoforte-driven house music edit.[15] A Castilian version of "United nations-Break My Middle", titled "Regresa a Mi", was included every bit a bonus rail on Secrets.[7] The CD-single of "Un-Break My Heart" also contained that version, titled "United nations-Break My Heart (Castilian Version)". It was adapted to Spanish by Marco Flores and sung by Braxton herself.[16] MusicOMH correspondent Laura McKee considered information technology "an easy listen" version "that encapsulates the passion and pregnant of the original but opens information technology up to a wider audience."[17]
Reception [edit]
Critical response [edit]
Most.com reviewer Mark Edward Nero named it one of the best R&B break-upwards songs and considered it Braxton's "finest moment". He further commented, "damn, this song is so sad it can make people cry for hours at a time."[18] In 1997, "Un-Break My Middle" won a Grammy Honor for Best Female person Pop Vocal Performance.[19] Bob McCann, author of Encyclopedia of African American actresses in pic and idiot box (2010), considered information technology "just 1 of the nearly haunting R&B records ever fabricated",[twenty] while Robert Christgau named information technology "miraculous" and explained "the miracle being that information technology'southward by Diane Warren and you lot desire to hear information technology once again."[21] Dave Sholin from the Gavin Report commented: "Most who hear this Diane Warren composition, which was produced with skillful guidance by David Foster, will demand to take a few seconds earlier breathing normally again."[22] Insider said that the song "showcased her show-stopping voice".[23] Popular Rescue wrote that Braxton'southward vocals "really smoothen and she's given a real range from very low to powerful highs." They added that "the music here, aside from the acoustic guitar, is admittedly secondary behind Toni's vocal prowess and the tender lyrics."[24] Spin journalist Charles Aaron positively reviewed the song and joked: "this exquisitely crafted, heart-pumping l-u-v song has been droning in the produce section of my grocery store for about a year now, simply I'd simply similar to go on record every bit saying that if it always stops, I'll really exist heartbroken."[25]
While reviewing the anthology, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic said the songs produced by David Foster are too predictable due to their "slick commercial appeal". Still, Erlewine noted that Braxton "manages to infuse the songs with life and passion that elevates them beyond their generic confines" due to her vocal power.[26] Ken Tucker of Entertainment Weekly considered the track "a tearjerker and so grandiose and yet so intrinsically, assuredly hit-bound, it's the kind of mass-appeal grabber that'south probably already sent a jealous Diana Ross diving for a comfort gallon of Häagen-Dazs."[27] Tucker also named it the worst rails on Secrets, and further stated: "Un-Intermission My Heart" is "i of those the-verses-exist-just-for-the-swelling-chorus showstoppers that insinuate to emotions without ever actually embodying them. Braxton does her darnedest to plug some life into the song, to no avail".[27] J. D. Considine of The Baltimore Lord's day described "Un-Break My Heart" equally "overblown".[28]
Chart performance [edit]
In the United states, "Un-Break My Heart" managed to superlative at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 for eleven weeks, from the week of Dec vii, 1996 to the week of February 15, 1997, and stayed in the same position on the Adult Contemporary chart for fourteen weeks. The song was later ranked as the 4th most pop vocal of the decade on the 1990-1999 Decade-Terminate Hot 100 chart. In July 2008, "Un-Intermission My Middle" was listed as the tenth nigh popular song of all-fourth dimension past Billboard. Despite its success on the Hot 100, the song would not achieve the number-1 position of the Hot R&B Singles nautical chart, remaining at number 2 for four weeks behind "I Believe I Can Fly" by R. Kelly.[5] It sold two.4 1000000 copies domestically and was certified platinum by the RIAA.[29] [xxx] [31] "Un-Break My Heart" also achieved commercial success worldwide, reaching number one in Austria, Kingdom of belgium (Wallonia), the European Hot 100 Singles, Sweden, and Switzerland,[8] while reaching the top 5 in several European countries.[8]
In the calendar week of November 4, 1996, the song debuted at number four in the UK Singles Chart, reaching a acme at number two after seven weeks on the nautical chart.[32] Co-ordinate to the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), it has shipped over 600,000 copies in that location, being certified Platinum.[33] In Australia, the song peaked at number six,[8] and was later certified Platinum by the Australian Recording Manufacture Clan (ARIA), for shipments of more than lxx,000 units of the single.[34]
Promotion [edit]
Music video [edit]
LaFace Records deputed a music video to be directed by Bille Woodruff.[35] The concept evolves around the ending of Braxton's relationship with her lover, played by model Tyson Beckford.[36] As the video begins, Beckford is seen leaving their dwelling, with Braxton giving him a cheerio buss, then going to check the mailbox. After he leaves the garage, a fast machine of a sudden appears and causes an accident, leaving him lying on the street while Braxton cries over his body. She then walks effectually the house, remembering the good moments she had with him, such as swimming in the pool and playing Twister. During the bridge and final chorus, Braxton is seen singing the song during a live concert, an allusion to the film A Star is Born. As applause rises, the video fades to blackness. The music video premiered on September 10, 1996, on MTV.[37]
Live performances [edit]
"Un-Break My Heart" was performed during the opening of the 1996 Billboard Music Awards. During the up-tempo rendition of the track, Braxton sported an outfit similar to the ones of theatrical productions Ziegfeld Follies.[38] She also performed information technology equally the closing number of the Libra Tour (2006).[11]
Rails listings [edit]
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Personnel [edit]
- Toni Braxton: lead and background vocals
- Diane Warren: songwriter
- David Foster: producer, arranger, keyboard programming
- Felipe Elgueta: engineer
- Mick Guzauski: mixing
- Simon Franglen: Synclavier programming
- Michael Thompson: electric guitar
- Dean Parks: acoustic guitar
- L.A. Reid: groundwork song arranger
- Tim Thomas: groundwork vocal arranger
- Shanice Wilson: background vocals
Comprehend versions [edit]
Saxophonist Marion Meadows covered the song for his album Pleasure in 1997,[46] while Filipino singer Nina recorded her ain version of it for her 2008 album Nina Sings the Hits of Diane Warren.[47] Italian group Il Divo's cover of the Spanish version of the track, "Regresa a mí", received positive appreciation from critics, who said the embrace "has the potential to be a striking and to open doors for many of opera's most acclaimed stars."[17] American culling stone band Weezer also covered "Un-Interruption My Heart" in 2005.[48] Their version was released on the album Decease to Simulated Metal in 2010.[49] Pb vocaliser Rivers Cuomo explained why the band covered the rails:
"I loved that song. Information technology was actually Rick Rubin's suggestion. Nosotros both loved that song and we both idea information technology would be great for Weezer, and for my phonation, and information technology'd be great to do like a stone version of it with more than of an alternative aesthetic. And y'all know, but the way I would sing it versus in the way Toni Braxton would sing it. And I love the fashion it came out, and I recollect probably the rest of the band really does not like it, and that's probably why it didn't make our 5th record, in 2005 when nosotros were recording it."[48]
Il Divo's Regresa a mí [edit]
"Regresa a mí" | ||||
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Single by Il Divo | ||||
from the anthology Il Divo | ||||
Language | Spanish | |||
English language title | "Return to Me" | |||
Released | 22 October 2004 | |||
Recorded | 2004 | |||
Studio | Metropolis Studios, London | |||
Genre | Classical crossover | |||
Length | 4:36 | |||
Label |
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Songwriter(due south) | Diane Warren Marco Flores (Castilian accommodation) (uncredited) | |||
Producer(southward) | Steve Mac | |||
Il Divo singles chronology | ||||
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A cover version of Toni Braxton'south Spanish-linguistic communication version of the song, "Regresa a mí" (Come Dorsum To Me) was recorded and published as a power ballad by the multi-national UK-based quartet Il Divo.[50] It was released on 22 Oct 2004 as the first single from their debut cocky-titled album.
Il Divo manager Simon Cowell bought the rights of the song from Warren.[51] The song was released every bit the first unmarried from the group's first album Il Divo, released in 2004.[51] The song was recorded at the beginning of 2004 at the Studies Rokstone in London, under the production of the British producer Steve Mac.[51]
The music video, filmed in Slovenia in 2004, under the management of Sharon Maguire and produced past Simon Cowell, shows the lives of the group's four singers as they choose to pursue a career in music.
On 5 Apr 2005, Il Divo appeared on the American television plan 'The Oprah Winfrey Show to perform the vocal.[51]
Charts [edit]
- Toni Braxton's original version
- Il Divo's Regresa a mí
Certifications [edit]
Release history [edit]
References [edit]
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{{cite AV media notes}}
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{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Un-Interruption My Heart (U.s. 12" liner notes). Toni Braxton. LaFace Records. 1997. 73008-24213-1.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Un-Intermission My Heart (European CD liner notes). Toni Braxton. LaFace Records. 1997. 74321 41324 2.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ United nations-Break My Eye (Britain CD liner notes). Toni Braxton. LaFace Records. 1997. 74321 41063 2.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Un-Pause My Heart (European CD liner notes). Toni Braxton. LaFace Records. 1997. 74321 41064 two.
{{cite AV media notes}}
: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ Un-Break My Center (AUS CD liner notes). Toni Braxton. LaFace Records. 1997. 73008-24207-ii.
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- ^ "Guld- och Platinacertifikat − År 1987−1998" (PDF) (in Swedish). IFPI Sweden. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-05-17.
- ^ "The Official Swiss Charts and Music Community: Awards (Toni Braxton;'Un-Break My Heart')". IFPI Switzerland. Hung Medien.
- ^ "All out Warren: Diane Warren's Greatest Hits | Assay | Music Week".
- ^ "Selected New Releases" (PDF). Radio & Records. No. 1164. September 20, 1996. p. 49. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
- ^ "Selected New Releases" (PDF). Radio & Records. No. 1165. September 27, 1996. p. 43. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
- ^ "New Releases: Singles" (PDF). Music Week. October 12, 1996. p. 31. Retrieved August 21, 2021.
Bibliography [edit]
- Willoughby, David (2009). The World of Music. McGraw-Hill Higher Education. ISBN9780073401416.
- McCan, Bob (2010). Encyclopedia of African American actresses in film and tv set. McFarland. ISBN9780786437900.
See also [edit]
- List of Billboard Adult Contemporary number ones of 1997
External links [edit]
- Official music video on "Vevo" on YouTube — Vevo.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Un-Break_My_Heart
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