Through the Rain

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"Through the Rain"
One of the alternative commercial artworks.
Single by Mariah Carey
from the album Charmbracelet
B-side"Bringin' On the Heartbreak" (Live)
ReleasedSeptember 30, 2002 (2002-09-30)
RecordedMay 2002
GenreR&B, soul
Length4:48 (album version)
4:19 (radio edit)
LabelIsland Def Jam
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Mariah Carey singles chronology
"Never Too Far/Hero Medley"
(2001)
"Through the Rain"
(2002)
"Boy (I Need You)"
(2002)
Music video
"Through The Rain" on
YouTube

"Through the Rain" is a song by American singer

studio album, Charmbracelet (2002). It was written by Carey and Lionel Cole, and produced by the former and Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. The song was released as the album's lead single on September 30, 2002, and a shorter version was used as the ending credits theme for a 2002 Japanese drama known as You're Under Arrest.[1] Classified by Carey as a ballad, it is influenced by R&B and soul music genres, and features a simple and under-stated piano melody, backed by soft electronic synthesizers
. "Through the Rain" was meant to be an insight into Carey personal struggles throughout 2001, and lyrically talks about encouraging others.

The song has been well-received, with many complimenting its inspirational lyrical content, and described it as an open window into Carey's personal life for listeners. Commercially, it was Carey's lowest-charting lead single on the US

Hot Singles Sales
chart. The song achieved higher placements in international markets, reaching the top spot in Spain and peaking within the top ten in Canada, the Netherlands, Italy, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom.

Carey performed "Through the Rain" live on several television and award show appearances around the world. She debuted the song at the 2002

Charmbracelet World Tour: An Intimate Evening with Mariah Carey
, which spanned throughout 2003–04.

The music video, directed by Dave Meyers, was set in the late 1960s. It features a past and present story-line based on Carey's childhood, and stars J. D. Williams and Jamie-Lynn Sigler as the singer's parents. The video begins with past scenes of Carey's mother being disowned by her family after becoming romantically involved with a black man, and finds the singer in the present walking through a heavy rainstorm in New York.

Background

In 2000, Carey parted from

MonarC. To add further to Carey's emotional burdens, her father, with whom she had little contact since childhood, died of cancer that year.[10]

Release

Throughout the first years of her career, Carey's musical styles mainly involved

hip-hop into her musical palette. As her music changed, so too did her image, which became more sexual, and aimed at younger audiences than the more contemporary appeal of her earlier works. According to Michael Paoletta from Billboard, "Through the Rain" was used not only as a vehicle for listeners to become more in-tune with Carey's personal struggles, but also as a means to "re-capture" her audience throughout the earlier stages of her career. A contemporary and pop ballad, he felt the song would find "much embrace" from her older fans, while her audience that grew accustomed to her hip-hop flavored music would feel "lost and abandoned".[11] In an interview with MTV News, the song's co-producer Jimmy Jam described why Carey chose to release it as the lead single: "I think 'Through the Rain' is a great way to start the record, because it is emotional and it kind of speaks directly to the questions people might have about the last year of her life. It's a good idea to get that out of the way and move on to happy, less emotional songs."[12]

Remix

The song's official remix features guest vocals from Kelly Price and Joe. The remix incorporates a more up-tempo background, and differs melodically from the original.[13] While the album's co-producer, Jimmy Jam, described it as a "star search," Sarah Rodman from the Boston Herald felt that even though the remix was more up-beat than the original, it "failed to quicken the pulse."[14]

Composition

"Through the Rain" is a mid-tempo

B-major, with Carey's vocal range spanning from the low-note of E3 to the high-note of F5.[17]

Lyrically, the song features an inspirational message of inner strength, and finds Carey reaching out to listeners.

Sydney Morning Herald wrote "it's an insight into her recent troubles."[21]
In an interview with MTV News, Carey described the song's lyrical content in depth:

I've always tried to insert positivity into my songs wherever I can, to inspire other people who go through stuff. I mean the stuff they talked about in tabloids and the things that were so overly exaggerated, that's one aspect. I also went through a lot of personal stuff, a lot of family stuff this year. Losing a parent is an intense thing for anybody. It's brought me to another place. People are going to read into it as, 'This is Mariah and her struggle'. But the way I try to word it is, 'It's OK once you say I can make it through the rain.' Not just me going, 'I can make it through the rain,' it's me telling people that if you believe you can get through whatever you're going through, you can get to the other side.[22]

Critical reception

"Through the Rain" received positive reviews from music critics; many complimented Carey's restrained vocal performance, as well as the song's simple instrumental accompaniment, while others criticized it for being overly-dramatic.

Allmusic's Stephen Thomas Erlewine.[24] He described it as a song that was designed as "'Vision of Love' meets 'Hero'", and wrote, "Mariah is back in the adult contemporary camp, no longer trying to prove that she's real."[24] Cara DiPasquale from the Chicago Tribune called it a "powerhouse ballad",[25] while Entertainment Weekly's Tom Sinclair wrote "embellished with her trademark vocal pyrotechnics, it is one of those highly personal songs about finding your way out of an emotional wilderness, but it sinks in its own sodden sentimentality".[26] Similarly, a writer from Newsday also described "Through the Rain" as a "powerhouse ballad", and felt it was reminiscent of Carey's previous single "One Sweet Day" (1995).[27] Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Randy Lewis noted how the song was able to effectively take listeners right into Carey's personal struggles from the previous year.[28] Tina Brown from Newsweek felt that while Carey's personal troubles may not have been fully solved, the song made her appear "strong and triumphant".[29] Bob Waliszewski of Plugged In noted that "Through the Rain" "encourages listeners to weather life's storms with the help of faith, prayer and perseverance".[30]

Accolades

Publication Accolade Rank Ref.
Rolling Stone
(Readers' Picks)
The 10 Best Singles of 2002
7

Commercial performance

After premiering in the United States, "Through the Rain" peaked at number 81 on the

Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA), denoting shipments of over 50,000 units.[35] Throughout Australasia and Europe, the song managed to peak within the top five in several countries. In Australia, "Through the Rain" debuted at its peak position of number fifteen on the singles chart, during the week of November 14, 2002.[36] The following week, the song began its decline, and had a total chart trajectory of ten weeks.[36] On November 11, 2002, "Through the Rain" debuted at number forty-eight on the Ö3 Austria Top 40 chart.[37] The song peaked at number forty-five the next week, and fell out of the chart in its eleventh week, while it was at sixty-eight.[37]

The song achieved relatively weak charting in both the Flemish and Wallonian territories in Belgium, peaking at numbers forty-four and twenty-nine, respectively.

UK Singles Chart, "Through the Rain" debuted at its peak of number eight.[48] The following week, the song dropped to number twenty-one on the chart,[49] before dropping outside the top-forty two weeks later.[48]

Music video

Background

Jamie-Lynn Sigler (pictured) plays the role of Carey's mother in the video.

The music video, directed by Dave Meyers, was filmed on location in New York City on September 30, and October 1, 2002.[50] It is loosely based on the singer's parents, Alfred and Patricia Carey, during the times that she was conceived.[51] The characters are played by J. D. Williams and Jamie-Lynn Sigler respectively and incorporates themes from Charmbracelet as well as from Carey's life.[52] In an interview with MTV News, Carey said that originally, the plot for the video wasn't going to have anything to do with her parents' past experiences with racism, but was changed a few days before shooting began.[51] During the interview, she described how to plot came into reality:

Originally it wasn't going to have anything to do with that, but people were looking through my photo albums this year. My father and I had made some photo albums together of his relatives and different people in the family. A couple people saw [the albums] and they were like, 'This is amazing that you have this.' I guess everybody was like, 'How would you feel about this type of concept [for a video]?' So I guess I thought if someone's going to do it might as well be me. The story line [of the video] is about an interracial couple. It's sort of Romeo and Juliet but it's set in the '60s and they're kind of torn apart. It's about their struggle and I'm sort of the narrator. I don't want to give too much away about it, but it's nice. Something I could relate to, being the product of an interracial union, though [my parents] did not wind up happily ever after standing in church together.[51]

Sigler, who was offered the role only days before filming commenced, said that she had always been a fan of Carey, and accepted the offer immediately. She described that the shoot was set in the 1960s, and that she played the singer's mother during and after her pregnancy.[52] Sigler described the plot: "With my character, she's basically going against her parents' wishes to be with this gentleman. She's pregnant with a baby, which is Mariah, and they run away together. So it's kind of an epic love story, it's nice."[51] Carey revealed that the video would incorporate a rainstorm scene in New York City.[52] Carey jokingly explained how she originally did not intend to get wet, but felt it added a lot to the video.[51]

Synopsis

The video begins with a view of a Carey's personal family album. As the pages open, the camera zooms to one particular photograph, of her young mother facing a wall, with her back turned. As the picture comes into full view, it turns into actual footage. Her mother turns around in anguish, as her own mother begins shouting at her and calling her a disgrace to the family. This is due to the fact that she is pregnant with the child of a black man, with whom she wants to move out with. As she goes to leave the home, her mother grabs her arm and rips a charm bracelet from her wrist. As she picks it up off the floor, she tells her mother she hates her and leaves in a taxi. From the clothing and scenery, it is notable that the scenes depicted are happening in the late 1960s, prior to Carey's birth. As the song starts playing, the video focuses on Carey, walking down the street in New York City. As she continues singing and walking down the street, the camera aims to the sky, which is darkened with cloud while light starts to peer through.

While rain starts to fall, and people start to clear the streets, Carey remains walking on the pathway. The girl now reaches her destination, and is welcomed into the home of her lover. They soon board a bus, and travel to a new home where they will live together. As they are about to enter the bus, the girl's mother is seen screaming in tears for her daughter to return to her. She hesitates, and then continues with her lover onto the transport. The scene once again focuses on Carey, who is standing in the midst of a torrential downpour, singing to the heavens. As she reaches the song's climax, Carey, now dry and dressed in a long black gown, is shown singing at the altar of a church. As she sings at the church, scenes of the girl lighting a candle, and her lover laying together with her on a bed are shown, before focusing back on Carey. She stares at an elderly couple in the first row at the church, an inter-racial couple now revealed to be her parents, and smiles while wearing her mother's charm bracelet. The elderly woman begins crying, as her husband holds her hand as they intently stare at Carey. Their faces rejuvenate to show them as a young couple, as their photo is taken and placed into the family album from the beginning of the video.

Live performances

Following the release of "Through the Rain", Carey embarked on several stateside, European and Asian promotional tours in support of Charmbracelet, as well as its accompanying singles. Promotion for the former song began at the 2002

Azteca Stadium.[60]

One month later, Carey was featured as one of the headlining performers at the

Charmbracelet World Tour: An Intimate Evening with Mariah Carey, which spanned throughout 2003–04.[67] During the performances, Carey wore a sparkling bra and mini-skirt. During most of the song, Carey performed it while sitting on a large sofa, before standing for the climax.[67] At her concert in Manila, Rito P. Asilo from Philippine Daily Inquirer praised Carey's live rendition of the song, describing it as one of the show's high-lights.[67]

Formats and track listings

Credits and personnel

Credits for "Through the Rain" adapted from the Charmbracelet liner notes.[77]

Charts

Certifications

Certifications and sales for "Through the Rain"
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Canada (Music Canada)[120] Gold 5,000^

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Release dates and formats for "Through the Rain"
Region Date Format(s) Ref(s).
United States September 30, 2002 [121]
October 14, 2002
  • urban radio
[122]
Australia November 11, 2002
  • CD 1
  • CD 2
[123]
Europe [124]
Japan November 13, 2002 CD [125]
Belgium November 14, 2002 [126]
United Kingdom November 18, 2002 CD [127][128]
Canada November 19, 2002 CD [129]
Cyprus November 21, 2002 CD 2 [130]
Greece
United States Digital download [131]
December 10, 2002
12-inch vinyl
[132]
February 4, 2003 CD [133]

Cover versions

The song was covered by several Asian artists. In 2003, singer Regine Velasquez performed a live rendition of "Through the Rain" as part of an intimate concert that was later broadcast on Asian television.[134]

The song was also covered by

Charice Pempengco sang an a cappella version of the song's bridge and climax.[135] Nasser Amparna also cover the song on 2018 for the soundtrack of Waves of Life on Philippines. Additionally, his cover is his most-streamed song on Spotify.[136]

See also

  • List of number-one dance singles of 2003 (U.S.)

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