Say My Name

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

"Say My Name"
North Hollywood, California)
Genre
Length
  • 4:31 (album version)
  • 4:00 (radio edit)
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Rodney Jerkins
Destiny's Child singles chronology
"Thug Love"
(1999)
"Say My Name"
(1999)
"Jumpin', Jumpin'"
(2000)
Music video
"Say My Name" on
YouTube

"Say My Name" is a song by American group Destiny's Child from their second studio album, The Writing's on the Wall (1999). It was written by Beyoncé Knowles, LeToya Luckett, LaTavia Roberson, Kelly Rowland, LaShawn Daniels, Fred Jerkins III, and Rodney Jerkins, featuring production by the latter. While the song and single artwork features the group's original line-up consisting of Luckett and Roberson, the music video for the single marked the introduction of the group's second line-up with replacement members Michelle Williams and Farrah Franklin. "Say My Name" was released as the third single from The Writing's on the Wall on October 14, 1999, by Columbia Records.

"Say My Name" was the most successful of the four singles from The Writing's on the Wall, becoming Destiny's Child's second number-one single on the US Billboard Hot 100 and reaching the top ten in Australia, Belgium, Canada, France, Iceland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, and the United Kingdom. Critically acclaimed, the song won two Grammy Awards at the 2001 ceremony for Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals and Best R&B Song, while also being nominated for Record of the Year and Song of the Year.

The accompanying

Pitchfork ranked it at number eight on their 2022 list of "The 250 Best Songs of the 1990s".[4][5]

Writing and production

"Say My Name" was the group's first collaboration with producer-songwriter Rodney Jerkins, who was one out of several people hired to work with Destiny's Child on their second album. The demo for the track had a different approach and Jerkins said that it was inspired by 2-step garage music he heard while in a club in London.[6] When they wrote the song, however, the lead singer Beyoncé Knowles was initially displeased with the track they were working on. She commented that there was "too much stuff" on the track and it sounded like a "jungle".[7][8] During the photo shoot for the album, Beyoncé's father-manager Mathew Knowles went to the studio informing her that Jerkins reworked on the track she "hated". He told her to "just have to take a listen to it". When the new mix was played to the group, they liked it.[7]

Music and lyrics

Lyrically, "Say My Name" has a female protagonist telephoning her lover and suspecting him of cheating. She asks him to "say her name". The young man hesitates, and the narrator believes it is because he does not want the girl he is cheating with to know who she is. Jerkins supported the song's lyrics with a backing track that shifts back and forth in dynamics, steadily bringing different elements, including

syncopated, 808 drum programming, synthesized strings and 1970s-style wah-wah guitar licks, in and out of the mix. Knowles sings lead on the verses and bridge and leads the melody of the chorus with Kelly Rowland adding the second part harmony. LeToya Luckett sings the high harmony on the pre-chorus and second chorus. LaTavia Roberson
sings second part harmony with LeToya on the pre-chorus and sings the bottom harmony late in the second chorus.

Release

"Say My Name" was first released in Japan as a

12-inch vinyl, and cassette.[15] These "Say My Name" singles have several remixes that were included alongside the original version, including remixes by Timbaland, Maurice Joshua, and Dreem Teem. The Timbaland remix features guest appearances from Static Major and Timbaland himself.[16][17][18] Elsewhere, various versions of the single were released in France in March and April 2000,[19][20] in the United Kingdom on March 27,[21] and in Germany on April 10.[22]

Commercial performance

"Say My Name" debuted at number 83 on the US Billboard Hot 100. After being released on physical formats, it reached the top of the chart in its 13th week, selling 134,000 copies during its first week of commercial availability. It took longer than any other of Destiny's Child's number-one singles to reach the top. The song spent a total of 32 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100 and was one of the top ten best-selling CD singles of 2000 in the United States. It also reached the top of both the Radio Songs and the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs charts for three weeks in 2000. "Say My Name" is the group's third best-selling single in the US after "No, No, No" and "Bills, Bills, Bills", and was also their third single to be certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).

In the United Kingdom, it was the group's biggest hit up to that point, peaking at number three on the

TLC's "No Scrubs
", and helped propel The Writing's on the Wall to multi-platinum status.

Music video

The video for "Say My Name" marked the band debut of Michelle Williams (pictured) and Farrah Franklin.

Conflict among members of the group arose in December 1999, following allegations that the group's manager and Knowles' father,

BET
simultaneously with the publication of a press release announcing the line-up change. Luckett and Robersons' vocals still appear on the song, despite their absence from the video. Franklin and Williams' vocals are not included on the track.

The video, directed by Joseph Kahn, shows the four members along with two females and one male dancer singing and dancing in color-coded sets resembling apartment living rooms. Rowland is in blue clothes to match her equally blue room. Knowles is in an orange room, while Franklin is in a red room and Williams in a white room. After the first verse and the chorus, the girls, along with furniture from their respective color-coded sets, switch rapidly between the other members' sets. Soon after the second verse, all girls gather in a garage-like room complete with cars and Destiny's Child in black PVC-pants and orange tops and all of the dancers, dressed in black, from the video.

Legacy

In October 2011,

Pitchfork, at number 8 on their 2022 list of "The 250 Best Songs of the 1990s".[26]

Jody Rosen from The New Yorker credited Beyoncé's slippery rap-style syncopations in the song with creating a new sound that did not exist in the world before her. He further wrote, "If they sound 'normal' now, it's because Beyoncé, and her many followers, have retrained our ears."[27]

Track listings

Credits and personnel

Credits are taken from The Writing's on the Wall album booklet.[34]

Studio

  • Recorded and mixed at Pacifique Studio (
    North Hollywood
    , California)

Personnel

  • Rodney Jerkins – writing, all music, production
  • Fred Jerkins III – writing
  • LaShawn Daniels – writing, vocal production, recording
  • Beyoncé Knowles – writing
  • LeToya Luckett – writing
  • Kelly Rowland – writing
  • LaTavia Roberson – writing
  • Brad Gildem – recording
  • Jean-Marie Horvat – mixing

Charts

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[78] 2× Platinum 140,000^
Belgium (BEA)[79] Gold 25,000*
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[80]
Homecoming Live Version
Gold 30,000
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[81] Platinum 90,000
France (
SNEP)[82]
Gold 66,666
Germany (BVMI)[83]
Timbaland remix featuring Static
Gold 250,000
Portugal (AFP)[84] Gold 20,000
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[85] Gold 30,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[86] 2× Platinum 1,200,000
United States (RIAA)[87] 3× Platinum 3,000,000

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for "Say My Name"
Region Date Format(s) Label(s) Ref.
Japan October 14, 1999 Maxi CD SME
United States November 1999 Promotional recording Columbia
January 10, 2000
Urban contemporary radio
Australia January 31, 2000 Maxi CD Sony Music
United States February 29, 2000 Columbia
France March 13, 2000 Maxi CD Sony Music
United Kingdom March 27, 2000
  • Cassette
  • two maxi CDs
Columbia
Germany April 10, 2000 Maxi CD Sony Music
France April 17, 2000 CD

Cover versions

In 2021, English rapper ArrDee released his third solo single, "Flowers". The song heavily samples the track of the same name by Sweet Female Attitude and interpolates "Say My Name".[89] It peaked at number 5 on the UK's Official Singles Chart Top 100,[90] spending thirteen weeks in the Top 40, seventeen weeks in the Top 100, with seven of those weeks being in the chart's Top 10.[91]

In popular culture

In February 2020, the first trailer for the horror film Candyman (2021) was released with a slowed-down version of the song.[92]

See also

  • List of number-one singles in Australia in 2000
  • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 2000
  • List of number-one R&B singles of 2000 (U.S.)

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Further reading