Come on over Baby (All I Want Is You)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)"
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" cover
Single by Christina Aguilera
from the album Christina Aguilera
Released September 26, 2000
Format CD single, Cassette single
Genre Pop
Length 3:23
Label RCA Records
Writer(s) Johan Aberg, Paul Rein, Christina Aguilera, Ron Fair, C. Blackmon, R. Cham, E. Dawkins, Shelly Peiken, Guy Roche
Producer(s) Ron Fair, Celebrity Status
Certification Platinum (ARIA)
Gold (RIAA)
Chart positions
Christina Aguilera singles chronology
"I Turn to You"
(2000)
"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)"
(2000)
"Pero Me Acuerdo De Tí"
(2000)

"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" is a song co-written by American pop singer Christina Aguilera, Paul Rein, Johan Aberg, Celebrity Status (C. Blackmon, R. Cham, E. Dawkins), Guy Roche, Shelly Peiken and Ron Fair for Aguilera's debut album Christina Aguilera (1999). It was co-produced by Fair and Celebrity Status.

The song is about Christina eyeing a prospective boyfriend and declaring come on over baby ... 'cause all I want is you. It was released as the album's fourth single in the summer of 2000 (see 2000 in music), and was the first single on which Aguilera had been given significant creative control. It peaked at number one in the U.S., but was less successful elsewhere (3.500.000).

Contents

[edit] Writing and recording

Like "What a Girl Wants" (the second single from Christina Aguilera), a new remixed and re-recorded version of "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" was released as a single rather than the original album version. The album version, which had been known simply as "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)", was seen as unsuitable for single release. Since the single had been originally produced and written by Paul Rein and Johan Aberg, the pair were given the first opportunity to change the song. Aguilera and Ron Fair (her mentor) were not impressed with their efforts, and turned to the producing team known only as Celebrity Status.

With Celebrity Status and Ron Fair producing, "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)" was transformed into "Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" with a more pop oriented, hip hop-influenced production (as opposed to the original piano rich production). New and more sexual lyrics, a chord progression for the song's b-section, a bridge (the original song did not have a bridge), a "rap" from Aguilera, a new mid-song dance breakdown, and more powerful vocals by Aguilera were also added. (The song also features limited new elements from Guy Roche and Shelly Peiken.)

As the original album version does not have a bridge, it had previously been performed live with an interlude that sampled the disco song "Got to Be Real" by Cheryl Lynn. When the original songwriters of "Got to Be Real" were contacted for permission to sample the song for the new version of "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)", they denied clearance. Instead Aguilera's team added a part to the song that makes reference to "What a Girl Wants", with the lyric You give me, what a girl feels, what a girl likes, what a girl needs, what a girl wants.

Aguilera helped write the song's controversial and slightly sexual rap section in which she asks, Don't ya wanna be the one tonight? We can do exactly what you like. Don't ya wanna be just you and me? We can do what comes naturally. This rap (and also a section in the second verse in which Aguilera discusses sexuality and a man's hands on her body) caused Radio Disney to ban the song initially, as it had done to "Genie in a Bottle" (the album's first single). The original album version of the song, "Come on Over (All I Want Is You)", was allowed to be played, and an edited version of "Come on Over Baby" (which removed the second verse and the rap) was also given some airplay. Reportedly, the edited single version received more airplay on the station than the album version of the song.

[edit] Chart performance

"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" became Aguilera's third number-one hit on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, and the RIAA eventually certified the single gold. It spent four weeks at the top, from October 8 to November 4, 2000; it replaced "Music" by Madonna, and was replaced by Creed's "With Arms Wide Open". It spent twenty-one weeks on the Hot 100, and ranked thirty-eight on the Hot 100's 2000 year-end charts. The Spanish-language version of the single, "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)", was also a huge latin music success, becoming Aguilera's first number-one single on Billboard's Hot Latin Tracks chart.

"Come on Over Baby (All I Want Is You)" reached the top ten in the UK, Japan and Australia and the top twenty in Canada, but was less successful in Continental Europe, reaching the top forty in most markets.

[edit] Alternative Covers

Commercial Brazil with Genie in a bottle

[edit] Charts

Chart (2000) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 1
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Tracks 6
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Mainstream 4
U.S. Billboard Rhythmic Top 40 6
U.S. Billboard Hot Latin Tracks 1 1
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart 2
United World Chart 4
Dutch Top 40 6
UK Singles Chart 8
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 9
'Tokyo Hot 100' (airplay chart) 10
Canadian Singles Chart 14
Switzerland Top 100 Singles 21
Belgium Top 50 Singles 21
Sweden Top 60 Singles 23
Germany Top 100 Singles 23
France Top 100 Singles 33
Brasil Top 100 Singles 50
  • 1 "Ven Conmigo (Solamente Tú)".

[edit] External links

Preceded by
"Music" by Madonna
Billboard Hot 100 number-one single
October 14, 2000
Succeeded by
"With Arms Wide Open" by Creed
In other languages