Uptown Funk
"Uptown Funk" | ||||
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Single by Mark Ronson featuring Bruno Mars | ||||
from the album Uptown Special | ||||
B-side | "Feel Right" (BB Disco Dub Mix) | |||
Released | 10 November 2014 | |||
Recorded | 2014 | |||
Studio | ||||
Genre |
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Length |
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Songwriter(s) |
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Mark Ronson singles chronology | ||||
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Bruno Mars singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Uptown Funk" on YouTube |
"Uptown Funk" is a song by British record producer Mark Ronson and featuring American singer Bruno Mars. It was released on 10 November 2014, as the lead single from Ronson's fourth studio album, Uptown Special (2015). "Uptown Funk" was written by Ronson, Mars, Jeff Bhasker, and Philip Lawrence; it was produced by the aforementioned first three. The song began during a freestyle studio session while they worked on a jam Mars and his band had been playing on tour. Copyright controversies arose after the song's release resulting in multiple lawsuits and amendments to its songwriting credits.
The song is a funk-pop, soul, boogie, disco-pop, and Minneapolis sound track. It has a spirit akin to the 1980s-era funk music. Its lyrics address fashion, self-love and "traditional masculine bravado", performed in a sing-rapping style filled with metaphors, arrogance, charisma, and fun. Upon its release, the single received generally positive reviews from critics, who praised the instrumental, style and influences of the track. Others criticized it for not being innovative as it tried to emulate 1980s funk music.
The song topped the charts of 19 countries and reached the top 10 of 15 others, making it the most successful single of Ronson and Mars to date. In the United States, "Uptown Funk" topped the
Director
Background
After producing three songs for Bruno Mars's second studio album Unorthodox Jukebox (2012), Mark Ronson said in June 2014, that he and Mars planned on working together again.[1][2] Ronson ended up working on "Uptown Funk" for seven months, recording it in various locations, in a number of grueling, stressful sessions.[3][4] Its earliest version was a jam that Mars and his band played on tour.[4][5] When Ronson joined Jeff Bhasker and Mars for a jam session at the latter's studio, he wanted to finish leftover demos from Unorthodox Jukebox, however, Mars wanted to do something different. He started playing on a drum kit in the studio, while Bhasker and Ronson played keyboard and guitar, respectively. They decided to work on the tour jam and thought it would be "cool" to fit in the Trinidad James song, "Don't believe me, just watch. Don't believe me, just watch", played during the tour's soundcheck. At this point, they found the opening line: "This hit, that ice cold/Michelle Pfeiffer, that white gold", which led them to believe they had an "exciting idea". However, both Ronson and Mars had busy schedules and could not complete the single. They spent the next several months working on the song,[3][4][5] fighting over which sections of the track would fit better. Mars was not a fan of early versions of the song.[6]
The trio recorded the song in Los Angeles, London, Memphis, New York, Toronto, and Vancouver.
The stress over "Uptown Funk" was so high that Ronson passed out during one session trying to perfect the guitar part. Two days later in Toronto they figured out the guitar part when Ronson was playing it in front of The Hooligans after 82 takes.
Production and release
"Uptown Funk" was initially written by Ronson, Mars, Lawrence, and Bhasker. Since the song embodies some of "All Gold Everything" (2012), Trinidad James and Devon Gallaspy were credited as a songwriters. In May 2015, the track was re-registered as it also contains portions of "Oops Up Side Your Head" (1979). Additional writing credit was given to Charlie Wilson, Robert Wilson, Ronnie Wilson, Rudy Taylor, and Lonnie Simmons.[15] The single was produced by Ronson, Bhasker, and Mars. Ronson was in charge of the guitars, LinnDrum and programming, while the keyboards and talk box were handled by Bhasker. Mars sang the vocals and played drums. Ronson and several others engineered the song. The track was recorded at six studios. Serban Ghenea and John Hanes, who served as the mix engineer, mixed "Uptown Funk" at MixStar Studios in Virginia Beach. It was mastered by Tom Coyne at Sterling Sound, NYC.[7]
On 30 October 2014, Ronson announced, via Twitter, the release of "Uptown Funk". The date 10 November 2014 appeared on the poster image Ronson included in the tweet.
Composition and influences
"Uptown Funk" has been described as a funk-pop,
Jamieson Cox of
Reception
"Uptown Funk" received positive reviews from most
Jim Farber of the New York Daily News said the recording "isn't even a song", adding "[i]t's a vamp, a rush of 'hit me' rhythms of the style patented by James Brown". Farber added that the vocals have "zip", but they "lack soul, not to mention an ounce of individuality". He called "Uptown Funk" the only "lazy track" on the album.[56]
The song made the cut on several lists of best songs. In June 2015, Spin compiled a list of The 63 Best Songs of 2015 So Far with "Uptown Funk" at number 51. Andrew Unterberger wrote, the song enters "the canon of "September", "Celebration", and "I Gotta Feeling", jams to be played at every wedding from now until the end of time".[57] Stereogum called it the best pop song of 2015: "Channeling Morris Day by way of Trinidad James, Mars and Mark Ronson crafted the year's most universal hit, one that will live on for decades at all kinds of jubilant public gatherings. It flaunts its sexiness and owns its freakiness. It's so hot that it probably sent several dozen dragons into early retirement."[58] Vulture ranked it at number 6 on its "The 10 Best Songs of 2015" list: ""Uptown Funk" will be played at every wedding reception you attend for the rest of your life, and its opening notes will fill you with neither embarrassment nor dread. By the most reliable rubric, then, "Uptown Funk" is a great pop song."[59] MTV placed it on its "Best Songs Of 2015" list: "As the year's most existential pop question goes: "Who was I before 'Uptown Funk'?" Really, can any of us actually remember a time this ubiquitous, certifiably catchy song wasn't part of our lives? Even if Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars didn't roll up to the VMAs in hair curlers, they still took home Best Male Video—and everyone with a pulse knows why. "Uptown Funk" is not just a song. "Uptown Funk" is lightning in a bottle. That white gold."[60] On the list of the 101 best songs of 2015 compiled by Spin, Dan Weiss ranked the song at number 87 saying it emulates "Morris Day-esque funk ditty" and each one of us contributed to its success.[61] Rolling Stone ranked "Uptown Funk" at number 25 on its 100 Greatest Songs of the Century – So Far in 2018. The magazine's writers described it as a "perfect Eighties funk-pop nostalgia bomb", praising the singer's "sparkling showmanship", and dubbing it "one of a kind".[33] The Village Voice's annual year-end Pazz & Jop critics' poll selected it as the 23rd best song of 2014, tied with Meghan Trainor's "All About That Bass". The same critics selected "Uptown Funk" as the eighth best track of 2015.[62] NPR included it on their list of favorite songs Of 2015. Stephen Thompson wrote, "If you're going to hear a song on the radio 15,000 times in a single summer, it might as well be this one".[63] On 26 January 2015, the song was voted number six on radio station Triple J's Hottest 100 of 2014.[64] Billboard included it on "The 50 Best Song Interpolations of the 21st Century" as it uses "All Gold Everything" (2012) by Trinidad James. Christine Werthman wrote that Mars "turned it into a jubilant call to shout from the rooftops and kick off a dance-funk break".[65]
Accolades
"Uptown Funk" has received various awards and nominations following its commercial success. In 2015, the song won
In 2016, "Uptown Funk" received Grammy awards for
Controversies and lawsuits
"Uptown Funk" was the subject of several lawsuits over copyright infringement. In 2015, similarities with "Oops Up Side Your Head" (1979) by the Gap Band led them, along with keyboardist Rudolph Taylor, and producer Lonnie Simmons to be added as co-writers of "Uptown Funk" receiving 17% of the publishing royalties.[15][87] In the same year, Serbian artist Viktorija argued that "Uptown Funk" infringed on her track "Ulice mračne nisu za devojke". She decided not to sue Mars and Ronson.[88] In 2016, electro-funk band Collage sued Ronson and Mars for copying their single, "Young Girls" (1983), while the Sequence, a rap group, claimed it infringed their single "Funk You Up" (1979) and sued a year later.[89][90] In 2017, Lastrada Entertainment filed a lawsuit citing similarities with "More Bounce to the Ounce" (1980) by Zapp.[91] In 2018, the Collage and Zapp lawsuits were dropped, with no word if there was a financial settlement.[92][93] The track drew comparisons with the theme tune of The Really Wild Show,[94] a BBC children's nature program that first aired in 1986. When Ronson was asked if he heard similarities between "Uptown Funk" and the theme tune, he said, "Oh, then the horns, I understand what they're saying, yeah, we owe a little bit ... all equally influenced by Quincy Jones".[95] In 2021, Ronnie and Robert Wilson of the Gap Band filed another lawsuit due to the similarities between "Uptown Funk" and "Oops Up Side Your Head" as Ronnie Wilson and Robert Wilson's heirs "have yet to receive any publishing rights income".[96]
Commercial performance
United States
The single debuted at number 65 on the
In its thirteenth week at number one, "Uptown Funk" became the first song to top the Billboard Hot 100 and its three main component charts for nine non-consecutive weeks.
International
On 29 November 2014, "Uptown Funk" debuted at number 63 on the
The track was certified six times platinum by the
It reached the top spot in France in its sixth week, spending 11 weeks in the number one position. It charted for a total of 117 weeks, never leaving it from 2014 to 2017.
Impact
The success of "Uptown Funk" made it a worldwide phenomenon with a major impact on
In an interview with Time, Mark Ronson said the recording was being played in Morocco, Puerto Rico and Nigeria, countries his music had never reached before. He also confessed the track led to people starting to recognise him.[170] Newsweek's Jed Gottlieb explained the reason "Uptown Funk" is an immortal track is because "the song is an increasingly rare phenomenon", since dancing allows us to connect "divergent demographics". "[T]he song creates an ephemeral flash where disparate groups get along because they've been spiked with the same euphoria". He believed "for the next quarter-century, it will persist as a choice wedding spin."[171] NME's Barry Nicolson dubbed the single "an insta-phenomenon".[22] Jeremy Allen of BBC said that "the biggest hits of the past few years", such as Ronson's "Uptown Funk" and Daft Punk's "Get Lucky" (2013) drew inspiration from the 80s funk/soul works by Prince, Michael Jackson, Nile Rodgers and others, leading the "80s to dominates modern culture".[172] Nevertheless, when Angus Harrison of Vice asked musicologist Dr. John Burgoyne if it would be remembered in twenty years he explained that despite "the melody being sung, the hook is not" and he is unsure if it will be remembered as "the hook is that trumpet drop, whereas the words "Uptown Funk" just sort of disappear."[173]
In November 2019, Consequence of Sound compiled a list of the "Top 100 Songs of the 2010s" with "Uptown Funk" at number 77. Ali Szubiak wrote, the song became "so embedded in our cultural core that it proved inescapable". Szubiak added, "not since "Uptown Funk" has the world felt so united."[174] A month later, Rolling Stone also compiled a list of the "Top 100 Songs of the 2010s" with "Uptown Funk" at number 66. Jon Dolan affirmed the song "kick-starting a 2010s funk revival that Mars himself and Lizzo would blow wide open".[175] The staff from NME dubbed "Uptown Funk" as one of The 100 Best Songs of the 2010s, ranking at number 56, Rhian Daly classified it as "a gigantic, joy-giving earworm".[176] On the same month, Jay Cridlin writing for Tampa Bay Times compiled a list of the 50 "The best pop songs of the 2010s", placing "Uptown Funk" at the top of it. Cridlin felt the track "it is timeless, and somehow, it still sounds fresh."[177] Nerisha Penrose from Elle dubbed the track as one of the 52 Best Songs That Defined the 2010s, ranking at number 25, saying it "had the whole world smiling and dancing for weeks."[178] Stereogum complied a list of The 200 Best Songs Of The 2010s, ranking "Uptown Funk" at number 19, Margaret Farrell affirmed the record "was a monstrously successful, inescapable single, the soundtrack for 2014 and well into 2015."[179] According to Billboard, the single was one of the "Songs That Defined the Decade". Taylor Weatherby described it as "Four and a half minutes of pure fun, with hooks galore and memorable lines".[180] In 2021, Rolling Stone placed "Uptown Funk" at number 417 on their "Top 500 Greatest Songs of All Time".[181] In 2022, Billboard's staff ranked the "500 Best Pop Songs", placing the single at number 76. Danielle Pascual wrote "fusing a rhythmic vocal base line ("doh doh doh"), a blaring horn section, a Trinidad James lift and Bruno Mars' soulful tone to create a brilliant and unpredictable modern disco-pop song".[182]
Music video
Development and synopsis
The music video was filmed at the 20th Century Fox Studios' "New York Street" backlot in Los Angeles.[183] Mars and Cameron Duddy directed the video released on 17 November 2014.[184] In it, Ronson and Mars are wearing clothing from the late 1970s and 1980s.[184][185] Mars wears a "salmon-colored blazer" and both put on sun glasses.[186] Throughout most of the video, Ronson, Mars and The Hooligans are singing, walking and dancing in the middle of the streets. Ronson is seen mostly lingering in the background, while Mars takes the spotlight.[184][185][186] At one point, during the video, Ronson and Mars get their hair put in perm curlers at a hair salon and their shoes shined.[184][185][186] As Mars sings "Fill my cup, put some liquor in it", one of his bandmates does so. The singer also yells at his chauffeur to get the limousine as he, Ronson and the band "jive" next to it.[184][187] Towards the end of the video, Ronson, Mars, The Hooligans and Jeff Bhasker perform the song in a closed set to several people.[188]
Reception
Joe Lynch of Billboard praised the video, finding it to be as "ebullient" as the song, calling Ronson and Mars "impossibly cool".[186] Rap-Up praised the dance moves performed by Mars and The Hooligans.[185] Tom Breihan of Stereogum said, "I had no idea [Mars] had "ersatz Morris Day" in his arsenal."[187] Ryan Reed from Rolling Stone called the video "goofy".[184] The clip made the cut on several lists of best music videos of the year. Lyndsey Parker, also writing in Rolling Stone felt Ronson and Mars complement Morris Day and The Time's "funky-fresh-to-death tradition well", ranking it number six on the list of 20 videos.[189] On its list of the 20 Best Music Videos of 2014 compiled by Paste, Dacey Orr ranked the video at number 11 saying it "has all of the fun and embellishment and color and choreography to be a real classic".[190] On the Stereogum 40 Best Music Videos of 2014, Breihan placed it at number 25. He wrote, "imagine a world in which circa-1986 Jonathan Demme had directed a movie about Morris Day & The Time".[191] Harriet Gibsone writing for The Guardian found the video has "super-slick, Jackson-like group choreography, glossy production and retro styling".[23] On the Stereogum 20 Best Music Videos of 2010s, Breihan placed the music video at number four.[192]
The video received multiple awards and nominations. In 2015, it was nominated for British Video of the Year at the BRIT Awards.[193] At the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards, it received nominations for Video of the Year, Best Pop Video, Best Collaboration and Best Direction and an award for Best Male Video.[194] In the same year, the UK Music Video Awards awarded it Best Pop Video-UK and it was nominated for Best Male Video at the 2015 MTV Video Music Awards Japan.[195][196] It received an award for Video of the Year and a nomination for Best Dance Performance at the 2015 Soul Train Music Awards.[71][72] The video has over 4.9 billion views on YouTube as of July 2023, making it the ninth most viewed YouTube video of all time.[188]
Live performances
"Uptown Funk" was first performed live by Ronson and Mars on
Ronson and Mars performed "Uptown Funk" live on
After Coldplay were announced as the lead performers for the Super Bowl 50 halftime show, Chris Martin asked Mars to join them, but he declined. Martin explained he wanted Mars to perform "Uptown Funk" with Beyoncé. Mars still did not think it was a good idea, but Beyoncé was receptive to the idea.[1] On 7 February 2016, the trio took the stage during the halftime show. Ronson appeared handling DJ duties, while Mars and his dancers performed "Uptown Funk", wearing an all-black Versace outfit with gold chains.[209][210] During the show, Beyoncé, in a Michael Jackson-inspired outfit appeared with a set of backing dancers dressed as Black Panthers. She performed her single "Formation" (2016) in choreography before being challenged by Mars to a dance-off, while singing the track.[210][211][212] At that point Martin joined Beyoncé and Mars singing the song.[210][211] Jon Caramanica of The New York Times explained that Beyoncé and Mars brought "soul and funk" to the show, while The Guardian's Alex Needham and Caroline Framke of Vox praised Beyonce, but criticised Mars and Coldplay's performance.[210][211][212] During The Late Late Show with James Corden on 13 December 2016, Mars included "Uptown Funk" on the popular segment Carpool Karaoke.[213] Mars performed the song as the closing act at the Apollo Theater alongside the majority of the 24K Magic (2016) album for his CBS prime time special titled Bruno Mars: 24K Magic Live at the Apollo, which aired on November 29, 2017.[214] On the 24K Magic World Tour (2017–18), Mars performed "Uptown Funk" as the last track of the setlist, sung as an encore.[215]
Use in other media and covers
The song was also featured in commercials for
The song has been parodied several times. Scot Pankey, a teacher at
Ronson recorded a new version of the song with six unknown musicians for YouTube at the Abbey Road Studios. Initially, the group thought they were covering the track for a documentary about Ronson.[228] On 12 February 2015, Ronson premiered the first official remix of "Uptown Funk", a radio-exclusive, during his interview on Hot 97. It includes a new intro verse by rapper Action Bronson; the final version includes a verse by rapper Bodega Bamz.[229] The song has been used by Ligue 1 club Paris Saint Germain to celebrate home goals.[230]
Track listing
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Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of Uptown Special and Billboard.[7][15]
- Mark Ronson – engineer
- Jeff Bhasker – songwriting, production, keyboards, talkbox
- Bruno Mars – lead vocals, songwriting, production, drums
- Philip Lawrence – songwriting
- Nicholas Williams – songwriting
- Devon Gallaspy – songwriting
- Charlie Wilson – songwriting
- Robert Wilson – songwriting
- Ronnie Wilson – songwriting
- Rudolph Taylor – songwriting
- Lonnie Simmons – songwriting
- Jamareo Artis – bass
- Phredley Brown – additional keyboards
- David Guy – trumpet
- Michael Leonhart – trumpet
- Jimmy King – trumpet
- Neal Sugarman – tenor saxophone
- Dwayne Dagger – tenor saxophone
- Ian Hendrickson-Smith – baritone saxophone
- Ray Mason – trombone
- Kameron Whalum – trombone
- Boo Mitchell – engineer
- Charles Moniz – engineer
- Wayne Gordon – engineer
- Josh Blair – engineer
- Inaam Haq – engineer
- Ken Lewis – additional engineering
- Devin Nakao – additional engineering
- Matthew Stevens – additional engineering
- Riccardo Damian – engineer
- Serban Ghenea – mixing
- John Hanes – mix engineering
- mastering
Charts
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
Decade-end charts
All-time charts
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Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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Australia (ARIA)[156] | 22× Platinum | 1,540,000‡ |
Austria (IFPI Austria)[319] | Gold | 15,000* |
Belgium (BEA)[152] | 3× Platinum | 60,000‡ |
Canada (Music Canada)[132] | Diamond | 800,000‡ |
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[320] | 3× Platinum | 270,000‡ |
France ( SNEP)[149]
|
Diamond | 250,000* |
Germany (BVMI)[321] | Platinum | 400,000‡ |
Italy (FIMI)[154] | 5× Platinum | 250,000‡ |
Japan (RIAJ)[322] | Gold | 100,000* |
Mexico (AMPROFON)[323] | 2× Diamond+Platinum | 660,000‡ |
Netherlands (NVPI)[324] | Platinum | 30,000‡ |
New Zealand (RMNZ)[162] | 5× Platinum | 75,000* |
Norway (IFPI Norway)[325] | 3× Platinum | 30,000‡ |
Spain (PROMUSICAE)[326] | 4× Platinum | 160,000‡ |
Sweden (GLF)[327] | Platinum | 40,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[139] | 7× Platinum | 4,200,000‡ |
United States (RIAA)[124] | 11× Platinum | 11,000,000‡ |
Streaming | ||
Japan (RIAJ)[328] | Gold | 50,000,000† |
South Korea | — | 100,000,000[329] |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Release history
Region | Date | Format | Version | Label | Ref. |
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Australia | 10 November 2014 | Digital download | Original |
|
[17] |
New Zealand | Sony | [18] | |||
United States | [19] | ||||
11 November 2014 | Contemporary hit radio | Unknown | RCA | [20] | |
Italy | 14 November 2014 | Original | Sony | [21] | |
United Kingdom | 8 December 2014 | Digital download | Columbia | [25] | |
Contemporary hit radio | Unknown | Unknown | [26] | ||
Austria | 9 January 2015 | CD single | Original | Sony | [27] |
Germany | |||||
Switzerland | |||||
United Kingdom | 16 February 2015 | 12" |
|
Columbia | [28] |
United States | 24 February 2015 | [29] | |||
13 April 2015 | Digital Download | Remixes | Sony | [30] | |
29 June 2015 | Trinidad James remix | [31] | |||
Various | 19 July 2018 | Radio edit | Columbia | [32] |
See also
- List of best-selling singles in Australia
- List of best-selling singles in the United Kingdom
- List of best-selling singles in the United States
- List of number-one singles of 2014 (Australia)
- List of number-one singles of 2015 (Australia)
- List of number-one digital tracks of 2015 (Australia)
- List of number-one streaming tracks of 2015 (Australia)
- List of number-one urban singles of 2014 (Australia)
- List of number-one urban singles of 2015 (Australia)
- List of Ultratop 50 Flanders number-one singles of 2015
- List of Ultratop 50 Wallonia number-one singles of 2015
- List of Canadian Hot 100 number-one singles of 2015
- List of number-one hits of 2014 (France)
- List of number-one hits of 2015 (France)
- Lists of number-one singles of the 2010s (Hungary)
- List of number-one singles of 2015 (Ireland)
- List of number-one songs of 2015 (Mexico)
- List of Mexico Airplay number-one singles from the 2010s
- List of Mexico Ingles Airplay singles of the 2010s
- Lists of number-one singles from the 2010s (New Zealand)
- List of Romandie Charts number-one singles of 2015
- List of Scottish number-one singles of 2015
- List of number-one international songs of 2015 (South Korea)
- List of number-one singles of 2015 (South Africa)
- List of number-one singles of 2015 (Spain)
- List of UK Singles Chart number ones of the 2010s
- List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 2015
- Lists of Adult Top 40 number-one songs of the 2010s
- List of Billboard Dance/Mix Show Airplay number-one singles of 2015
- List of Hot 100 Airplay number-one singles of the 2010s
- List of number-one dance singles of 2015 (U.S.)
- List of number-one digital songs of 2015 (U.S.)
- List of Billboard Mainstream Top 40 number-one songs of 2015
- List of Billboard Rhythmic number-one songs of the 2010s
- List of most liked YouTube videos
- List of most streamed songs on Spotify
- List of most streamed songs in the United Kingdom
- List of most-viewed YouTube videos
- List of best-selling singles
References
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External links
- "Uptown Funk" audio on YouTube