Sometimes (Britney Spears song)

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"Sometimes"
Standard artwork, used for most non-US commercial releases and US promotional single
Single by Britney Spears
from the album ...Baby One More Time
B-side"I'm So Curious"
ReleasedApril 6, 1999 (1999-04-06)
RecordedMay 1998[1]
StudioCheiron (Stockholm)
GenreBubblegum pop
Length3:55
LabelJive
Songwriter(s)Jörgen Elofsson
Producer(s)
Britney Spears singles chronology
"...Baby One More Time"
(1998)
"Sometimes"
(1999)
"(You Drive Me) Crazy"
(1999)
Music video
"Sometimes" on
YouTube

"Sometimes" is a song by American singer Britney Spears from her debut studio album, ...Baby One More Time (1999). Written by Jörgen Elofsson and produced by Elofsson, Per Magnusson and David Kreuger, the song was released as Spears' second single on April 6, 1999, by Jive Records. "Sometimes" is a bubblegum pop ballad that alludes to a relationship where a shy girl is reserved on expressing feelings to her lover. The song received generally favorable reviews from contemporary critics.

"Sometimes" attained worldwide success, peaking inside the top ten in multiple countries. In the United States, the song peaked at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100. The song reached number one in Belgium (Flanders), Netherlands and New Zealand, while reaching number two in Australia. In the United Kingdom, the song reached number three, and is also Spears' third best-selling single in the country. An accompanying music video, directed by Nigel Dick, was shot at the Paradise Cove in Malibu, California. It portrays Spears watching her love interest from afar. Spears has performed "Sometimes" in four of her concert tours: the ...Baby One More Time Tour (1999), the (You Drive Me) Crazy Tour (2000), the Oops!... I Did It Again Tour (2000–01), and the Dream Within a Dream Tour (2001–02).

Background

Before recording her debut album, Spears had originally envisioned it in the style of "

Background vocals were provided by Anders von Hoffsten.[5] Spears also co-wrote and recorded a track called "I'm So Curious", produced by Eric Foster White, that was released as a B-side to "Sometimes".[5] The track was recorded in 1997 at 4MW East Studios in New Jersey.[5] "Sometimes" was released as the second single from ...Baby One More Time on April 30, 1999.[6]

Songwriting controversy

The song created controversy over the writing credits. Steve Wallace, an Indiana songwriter, claimed he wrote "Sometimes" in 1990, but did not copyright it until 2003, four years after Spears registered the song's copyright. Wallace claimed Spears confessed he wrote the song, by showing to the court a possible e-mail from the singer, which said, "I now know for a fact that you wrote ['Sometimes']. But there's nothing I can do about it. That's all I can say about it."[7] The e-mail was considered fake and the lawsuit was dismissed on October 31, 2005, when Judge John D. Tinder ruled that the singer did not steal the song.[8]

Composition

"Sometimes" is a romantic

beats per minute. After the bridge, it transposes to B major. Spears' vocal range spans almost two octaves from the low note F3 to the high note E5.[11] The song has a sequence of Cm11–F7sus–B–B(9)/D–F/A–F as its chord progression.[11] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic said that "Sometimes" and the album's other hit songs revealed Max Martin's mastery of the pop hook, Eurodance rhythm, and memorable melody.[12]

Lyrically, the song is a "heartbroken

ballad",[13] where Spears declares on the introduction, "You tell me you're in love with me / That you can't take your pretty eyes away from me / It's not that I don't wanna stay / But every time you come too close I move away".[11] According to musicologist Melanie Lowe, "Spears shows a different side of her personality [with 'Sometimes'] than she does in her other songs."[9] Both of them also commented the song "lacks rhythmic drive and the backing track is fuller, with smoother and rounder synthesized instruments",[9] while describing Spears' vocals as more natural when compared to "...Baby One More Time" and "(You Drive Me) Crazy".[9]

Critical reception

A reviewer from CD Universe commented that the song "warns a potential love of [Spears'] need for time and patience, rolling along nicely with a slow groove and a big beat".[14] Amanda Murray of Sputnikmusic considered "Sometimes" a competent single, but claimed the song as unremarkable.[15] Kyle Anderson of MTV said that the song "introduces the first sorta-ballad to [...Baby One More Time]", and considered it "reasonable enough, though through three songs, Spears' lyric approach appears to be entirely about guys. Like, she never stops thinking about them".[16] Caryn Ganz of Rolling Stone called "Sometimes" a "further hit" from ...Baby One More Time, along with "From the Bottom of My Broken Heart" and "(You Drive Me) Crazy".[17] Spence D. of IGN considered "Sometimes" a "[Max Martin] glossy grown-up pop" song,[18] while Annabel Leathes of BBC Online said the song "represents the innocent years when Britney annoyed and titillated in equal measure".[19]

Nicholas Hautman, from

Pink News, deemed it one of Spears' "more adult (but not adult) early tracks that drips with '90s singer-songwritery charm".[25] Shannon Barbour from Cosmopolitan opined that it was "cool, but mostly forgettable".[26] During the 2000 BMI Pop Awards, "Sometimes" was honored with the award of Most Performed BMI Song.[27] In 2017, ShortList's Dave Fawbert listed the song as containing "one of the greatest key changes in music history".[28]

Commercial performance

"Sometimes" achieved commercial success worldwide. The song reached number one in

Syndicat National de l'Édition Phonographique (SNEP), for sales over 250,000 units of the single in France,[35] where it peaked at number 13.[29]

Music video

Spears with her love interest in the music video

Spears started rehearsing for the music video for "Sometimes" in February 1999.[36] However, during the rehearsals, the singer injured her knee and was forced to start sessions of physical therapy.[36] A month later, Spears released in a statement: "I want to thank my wonderful fans and all of the people who have offered their love and support during this time," while revealing she wouldn't be able to shoot the music video until April 1999.[37] The music video was later directed by Nigel Dick,[38] who also directed her previous video for Spears' 1998 debut single "...Baby One More Time".[38] It was shot at the Paradise Cove in Malibu, California.[39] The music video was released on May 6, 1999, on Total Request Live.[38]

According to MTV, the initial concept for the music video was to portray Spears on the porch of a beachfront home watching a group of kids having fun, prompting flashbacks about her former boyfriend.[36] However, the video begins with Spears, in a long sleeveless white dress, walking barefoot through a lawn to a telescope, and looking through it. The concept was later changed to a man and a dog walking on the beach, portraying the singer as the girl next door, watching her love interest, played by model Chad Cole, from afar.[40] The beach location was kept,[40] and the music video intercuts with scenes of Spears' dancing on the Paradise Cove pier with her dancers dressed all in beach-friendly white attire, then Spears sits near a car.[40] A writer of Rolling Stone noted the video is best known for "purifying the sexy persona Spears introduced in the '... Baby One More Time' video",[41] while describing it as "a virginal Britney in a long, flowing white dress (and other demure outfits) gazing at a clean-cut boy on the beach, then she walks on the balcony with a pink ball and does some chaste choreography that features her dancers forming a heart while she sings that she only wants to "hold you tight, treat you right." Spears is sitting on a picnic blanket wishing she was there with him. She leaves alone."[41] On February 20, 2012, behind the scenes footage of the music video leaked online.[42]

Track listings

Credits and personnel

Credits for "Sometimes" and "I'm So Curious" are taken from the single's liner notes.[5]

Charts

Certifications

Certifications for "Sometimes"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[101] Platinum 70,000^
Belgium (BEA)[102] Platinum 50,000*
France (
SNEP)[35]
Gold 250,000*
Netherlands (NVPI)[103] Gold 50,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[30] Gold 5,000*
Sweden (GLF)[104] Gold 15,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[105] Platinum 600,000
United States (RIAA)[106] Gold 500,000

* 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 "Sometimes"
Region Date Format(s) Label(s) Ref.
United States April 6, 1999 Contemporary hit radio Jive
Japan April 14, 1999 Maxi CD Avex Trax
United States April 27, 1999 Rhythmic contemporary radio Jive
Germany June 7, 1999 Maxi CD BMG
United Kingdom June 14, 1999
Jive
Belgium July 27, 1999 CD
France

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Bibliography