Dirty Desire

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"Dirty Desire"
Island Def Jam
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Utada singles chronology
"Come Back to Me"
(2009)
"Dirty Desire"
(2009)
"Hymne à l'amour (Ai no Anthem)"
(2010)

"Dirty Desire" is a song by Japanese-American singer-songwriter Utada. The single was released exclusively in the fourth quarter of 2009 as a promotional single to US dance/club radio. The single later received a digital commercial release in December 2009 and peaked on the US Billboard Dance Club Songs chart at number 16.

Composition

The song itself is about fantasizing over someone who is already in a relationship (somewhat similar to "

synths
and a very prominent drum beat, that lasts throughout the entire song. It finishes with the repeated line "Bring that beat back!" before fading out.

Promotion and reception

In a review of This Is the One, Adam Benjamin Irby of Bleu Magazine called "Dirty Desire" his favourite song from the album, partly due to its "in-your-face sexual departure from her past work", and going on to say the song is "pure pop perfection".[1] Not all reception was positive, as Daniel Robson of

X-rated, particularly on the line "During my 9 to 5 / I'm thinking six and nine". He also added "Is this what it takes to find Stateside success? Whoring yourself both musically and lyrically?".[2]

Track listing

"Dirty Desire" Remixes
No.TitleLength
1."Dirty Desire" (Mike Rizzo Radio Edit)3:34
2."Dirty Desire" (Digital Dog Radio Edit)2:35
3."Dirty Desire" (Razor N' Guido Radio Edit)3:49
4."Dirty Desire" (Mike Rizzo Club Mix*)7:05
5."Dirty Desire" (Digital Dog Club Mix)6:02
6."Dirty Desire" (Razor N' Guido Club Mix)8:20
7."Dirty Desire" (Mike Rizzo Dub Mix)6:41
8."Dirty Desire" (Digital Dog Dub Mix)6:20
9."Dirty Desire" (Razor N' Guido Dub Mix)6:20
  • also known as the "Mike Rizzo Funk Generation Club Mix"

Charts

Chart performance for "Dirty Desire"
Chart (2010) Peak
position
US Dance Club Songs (Billboard)[3] 16

Release history

Release history and formats for "Dirty Desire"
Region Date Format
Japan December 21, 2009 Download
United States

References

  1. ^ Irby Benjamin, Adam (April 20, 2009). "Bleu Critic: Utada 'This Is the One'". Bleu Critic. Archived from the original on June 1, 2009. Retrieved May 18, 2021.
  2. ^ "Utada "This is the One" | The Japan Times Online". search.japantimes.co.jp. Archived from the original on April 12, 2009.
  3. ^ "Hikaru Utada Chart History (Dance Club Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved February 10, 2020.