Britney Spears Oops I Did It Again Lipstick Alley

2001 single by Britney Spears

2001 single past Britney Spears

"Overprotected"
Britney Spears - Overprotected.png
Unmarried by Britney Spears
from the anthology Britney
B-side "I'g a Slave four U"
Released December 10, 2001 (2001-12-x)
Recorded 2001
Studio Maratone (Stockholm)
Genre
  • Dance-popular
  • R&B (remix)
Length 3:18
Label Jive
Songwriter(s)
  • Max Martin
  • Rami
Producer(s)
  • Max Martin
  • Rami
  • Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins[a]
Britney Spears singles chronology
"I'chiliad a Slave 4 U"
(2001)
"Overprotected"
(2001)
"I'g Non a Girl, Non Yet a Adult female"
(2002)
Music video
"Overprotected" on YouTube

"Overprotected" is a vocal by American vocalist Britney Spears from her 3rd studio anthology, Britney (2001). It was written and produced by Max Martin and Rami. The song was released on December ten, 2001, by Jive Records as the second international single from Britney. "Overprotected" is a dance-pop vocal about a girl who is tired of existence overprotected and just wants to be herself. The vocal received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Its remixed R&B form, produced by Darkchild, was released as the tertiary Usa single from Britney on April two, 2002.

While it peaked only at number 86 on the US Billboard Hot 100, "Overprotected" peaked at number 22 in Canada and reached the height five in Italy, Romania, Sweden and the Britain. An accompanying music video, directed by Billie Woodruff, portrays Spears dancing inside an abandoned factory; the music video for The Darkchild Remix, directed past Chris Applebaum, portrays Spears dancing and having fun with her friends. Spears has performed "Overprotected" a number of times, including during the Dream Within a Dream Tour (2001–2002) and The Onyx Hotel Tour (2004). In 2003, the song received a nomination for a Grammy Accolade for Best Female Pop Vocal Operation.

Background [edit]

During the Oops!... I Did It Again Tour (2000), Spears revealed she felt inspired by hip hop artists such as Jay-Z and The Neptunes and wanted to create a record with a funkier audio.[1] In Feb 2001, Spears signed a $7–8 1000000 promotional bargain with Pepsi, and released another book co-written with her female parent, entitled A Mother's Souvenir.[2] On the same month, Spears started to tape material for her third studio anthology,[three] with "Overprotected" being recorded at Maratone Studios in Stockholm, Sweden. Additional recording was done in April 2001 at Maratone in Sweden, in which the song's vocals were completed. Background vocals were provided by Spears and Bosslady, with the rail being mixed by Martin and Rami at Maratone Studios.[3] Her third studio anthology, Britney, was released in November 2001.[one] In an interview with the Daily Record, Spears ended she tin chronicle to "Overprotected" "on a personal basis, considering I feel kind of overprotected. When I want to go out, everything has to be organized in accelerate. I retrieve that other kids of my age can chronicle to information technology to a sure extent."[4]

Composition [edit]

"Overprotected" is a dance-pop vocal that lasts for three minutes and xviii seconds.[5] David Browne of Amusement Weekly noticed Europop influences on the song,[half dozen] while other critics compared it to previous songs released by Spears.[7] According to the sail music published at Musicnotes.com by Universal Music Publishing Group, "Overprotected" is composed in the key of C minor and is set in time signature of common time, with a moderate tempo of 96 beats per minute. Spears vocal range spans from A iii to C5.[5]

Lyrically, the track is nearly a girl who is tired of beingness manipulated by people around her and doesn't need to exist told what to do,[6] which is perceived in lines such as "You lot're gonna have to encounter through my perspective/ I need to brand mistakes just to learn who I am/ And I don't want to be so damn protected".[8] Dana Alice Heller, author of Makeover tv: realities remodelled (2007), said that, with "Overprotected", "Spears addresses the problem of being a teen star whose personal and professional are handled past others."[9] She also compared "Overprotected" with the singer'due south first reality show, Britney and Kevin: Chaotic (2005), maxim that "Britney frames her makeover equally a move toward to independence, a rebellion against overly controlling parents and their stand-ins."[ix]

Remixes [edit]

The vocal'south main release in Due north America was a reworked R&B remix by Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins. Jerkins said that the label "needed a remix that'south crazy" and that the remix has "an sometime-school-blazon rhythm, which I recall is kinda absurd because information technology'southward an element [that Spears] never had, merely I even so gave it her edge. I was up all dark rocking that articulation. [It has the] same lyrics, I just reproduced the track."[10] "The Darkchild Remix" was originally scheduled for release to radio stations in the United States in mid-March 2002; this date was pushed back and the song was released on Apr 1, 2002.[xi] [10] The remix was heavily played in trip the light fantastic clubs, and Jerkins said he was not surprised with its popularity, stating "[Spears] reinvented herself. Everybody thought she was gonna come back with some other 'Oops!... I Did It Again', just she went left and came with the 'I'm a Slave 4 U' joint, which is basically a club banger. You gotta big upward people who reinvent themselves. I ever said she was gonna be one of the people that'due south gonna exist around for a infinitesimal, because I see that in her."[10]

Finnish musician and record producer Jaakko Salovaara as well created two remixes for the track, titled "JS16 Dub" and "JS16 Remix".[12] The latter was included on the promotional soundtrack of Spears' picture, Crossroads (2002).[13]

Critical reception [edit]

"In "Overprotected", her voice hovers between testiness and aggression. Good for her, you retrieve, until you lot realize the Max Martin-produced rails is pretty much the same stentorian Europop of her past records. Spears may proclaim she'south not afraid to brand a 'mistake', but the song is a report in risk management".

Amusement Weekly 's David Browne review of the song.[6]

Upon release, the runway received generally positive reviews from music critics. Jocelyn Vena of MTV said that "with songs like 'Overprotected' and 'Let Me Be', Spears seemed to be letting out her boyish angst",[xiv] while Kyle Anderson of MTV Newsroom said, "the real first blush with emancipation from [the singer] teen popular past came with ['Overprotected']".[15] While reviewing Spears' third studio album Britney (2001), Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic said the track, along with "I'chiliad Non a Girl, Not Still a Adult female" and "What It'south Like to Be Me", "are pivotal moments on Britney Spears' third album, the record where she strives to deepen her persona (not the same thing as her graphic symbol, of form), making it more developed while still recognizably Britney".[sixteen] Christopher Rosa, from Glamour, deemed it Spears' eight best vocal, and said that "feeling overly controlled or scrutinized is a consistent theme in Spears's discography, only this motif started with Overprotected", calling the song "introspection with a killer claw.[17]

Critic Robert Christgau also considered "Overprotected" and "Cinderella" as the highlights of Britney, while saying, "inappreciably the get-go not-terribly-vivid teenager to approach self-noesis via the words of others".[18] Nikki Tranker of PopMatters said the song "is an absolute belter reminiscent of Britney'due south previous big-blindside singles, 'Oops! I Did It Over again' and 'You lot Drive Me Crazy' [sic]", while commenting that Spears "sings nearly ridding herself of the girlie bondage around her, gripes most her demand for space in the whirlwind that is her life, and lets us know she don't demand nobody telling her what to do".[vii] The staff from Entertainment Weekly placed it at number 24 on their ranking of Spears'southward songs and said that "at that place'southward an eerie amount of foreshadowing for what was to come in her personal life. And Max Martin shows once again he had an unassailable gift for crafting that decade'south most indelible hooks".[19] In 2003, the song received a Grammy nomination for All-time Female Pop Vocal Operation.[20] Digital Spy's Alim Kheraj hailed information technology "an anthem that deals with the complexities of growing upward and existence held back past other people's perceptions [...] full of distinctive chord progressions and more hooks than information technology seems possible to include in one song".[21]

Nautical chart performance [edit]

"Overprotected" attained commercial success in Europe. In French republic, it peaked at number fifteen, and was later certified Gilded by the Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP), for selling over 250,000 units of the single.[22] In Sweden, the song reached number two, and was later certified Gold by the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI), for selling over 15,000 units.[23]

"Overprotected" reached number one in United mexican states and was the best-selling single of 2002 in that country, besides reached the pinnacle five in Italy,[24] Romania,[25] and United Kingdom,[26] while reaching the peak 10 in Belgium (Flanders), Finland, Republic of ireland, and Norway.[24] In the United States, on the week of May four, 2002, "The Darkchild Remix" peaked at number 86 on Billboard Hot 100, where it stayed on the chart for 5 weeks. It also entered on the Pop Songs nautical chart, where information technology peaked at number 37 on the week of May 25, 2002, before dropping the nautical chart in the following chart effect.[27] In Canada, the song peaked at number 22 on the Canadian Hot 100.[28]

Music videos [edit]

Original version [edit]

The music video for "Overprotected" was directed by Billie Woodruff and produced under Geneva Films,[29] while choreographed by Brian Friedman.[29] In an interview with Harper's Bazaar in 2011, Spears recalled the music video, maxim, "I just think it says a lot. It was directed and so well, it was really colorful and the dancing was amazing".[30] It begins with Spears driving away from the paparazzi, with a part of the instrumental version of the song "Bombastic Beloved", featured on the album Britney, playing. She makes her mode into an alleyway and decides to enter an abased factory, hoping her pursuers will exist thrown off course. When she enters the building she begins to dance her way effectually the warehouse. Spears' dancers, having spotted her walking into the factory, follow her within. They notice Spears dancing around and joke nearly it, before heading into a heavy trip the light fantastic routine. Towards the end of the video, segments of Spears in a room with walls covered in pictures and articles nigh herself are likewise shown. These walls move in and out before the video ends, signifying that she is "overprotected". At the end of the video, Britney walks to a wall, and exits the building. The music video was the number-1 video of MTV Mexico in the final countdown of 2002 "Los 100 más pedidos".[ citation needed ]

The Darkchild Remix [edit]

One of the hallways of the Biltmore Hotel, which was featured in the music video.

The music video for "The Darkchild Remix" was directed by Chris Applebaum and filmed in the first weekend of March 2002 in Los Angeles, California.[11] It was produced nether A Band Apart Productions,[29] while the choreography for this version was also created past Brian Friedman.[29] The full shooting took 23 hours,[xi] and Applebaum was said to be impressed with Spears' "stamina and patience through the marathon shoot, which wrapped 5 a.m."[11] Co-ordinate to Joe D'Angelo of MTV News, "the clip furthers her 'I'chiliad Non a Girl, Not Yet a Woman' crusade to shirk her boyish image, every bit she and five friends outsmart her bodyguard with the onetime 'yous're wanted elsewhere' trick and sneak out of a hotel and into an surreptitious dance gild."[xi] It was released on March 26, 2002.[31]

Spears directly referenced Janet Jackson's "Son of a Gun (I Betcha Retrieve This Song Is About You)" in the scenes on the lift and when she and her dancers walk downwards the hotel lobby. Both videos likewise employ the same hotel setting, filmed at Los Angeles' Millennium Biltmore Hotel.[32]

The video opens with Spears and her friends in a hotel room, where a tabloid reporter on telly criticizes her for the sexy, revealing outfits she is oftentimes seen wearing publicly.[11] Spears and her friends express their disagreement with the report. Spears, determined to be cocky-sufficient and unaffected by media comments,[11] then makes a phone call to her babysitter, and using a cloth to disguise the sound of her voice, coaxes him to leave the area so that her group may sneak out of the hotel and enjoy the twenty-four hour period. They see an lift and fool effectually briefly with the security cameras earlier going up to the master lobby. A strut downwardly the lobby of the hotel and a brusque trip the light fantastic sequence follows. As they leave the hotel, they follow towards the trip the light fantastic toe club. All the same, before they get in, they are caught in an aisle by several paparazzi,[11] and start to perform a dance routine in the eye of the rain. Every bit they make their entrance, they are dripping wet, an image which makes for more sensationalist fodder for the tabloid reporter.

Live performances and usage in media [edit]

"Overprotected" was performed for the first time on 2001's Dream Within a Dream Tour. During the performance, Spears was dancing to the song surrounded past laser lights. The video backdrop showed images of a bald Spears, with her pilus growing as the vocal went forth. Yet, the properties was later removed for unknown reasons.[33] Afterwards the announcement of the 2002 extension of the tour, some changes were made to the setlist, replacing the original mix of the song past "The Darkchild Remix".[33] The remix was afterwards performed on The Onyx Hotel Tour (2004), during the opening human activity, right afterwards the performance of "Toxic".[34] Spears' film, Crossroads (2002), features a performance of the song during the credits.[35]

Track listings [edit]

Credits and personnel [edit]

Credits for "Overprotected" are adjusted from Britney liner notes.[3]

Technical

  • Recorded and mixed at Maratone Studios in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Boosted recording at Battery Studios in New York City, New York.

Personnel

  • Britney Spears – lead and background vocals
  • Max Martin – songwriting, product, mixing, guitar
  • Rami Yacoub – songwriting, product, mixing
  • Boss Lady – groundwork vocals
  • Rodney Jerkins – remixing
  • Michel Tucker – Pro Tools engineer
  • Daniel Savio – turntables

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Jerkins produced only The Darkchild Remix of "Overprotected".
  2. ^ 12-inch vinyl edition of "Overprotected" features The Darkchild Remix as its A-side and the original version as its B-side.

References [edit]

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Bibliography [edit]

  • Heller, Dana Alice (2007). Makeover television: realities remodelled. I.B.Tauris. ISBN978-1-84511-330-viii.
  • Hentges, Sarah (2006). Pictures of girlhood: modern female adolescence on motion picture. McFarland. ISBN978-0-7864-2402-three.

External links [edit]

  • Official music video on Vevo

bordenlardboy.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overprotected

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