Love Takes Time

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Love Takes Time"
"Love Takes Time" cover
Single by Mariah Carey
from the album Mariah Carey
B-side(s) "Sent From Up Above" (U.S.)
"Vanishing" (UK)
"You Need Me" (UK)
Released September 09, 1990 (NA)
November 1990 (UK)
Format CD single, cassette single, 7" single
Genre Pop/R&B
Length 3:49
Label Columbia
Writer(s) Mariah Carey, Ben Margulies
Producer(s) Walter Afanasieff
Certification Gold (RIAA)
Chart positions
Mariah Carey singles chronology
"Vision of Love"
(1990)
"Love Takes Time"
(1990)
"Someday"
(1991)

"Love Takes Time" is a pop song written by Mariah Carey and Ben Margulies, and produced by Walter Afanasieff for Carey's debut album Mariah Carey (1990). It was released as the album's second single in the third quarter of 1990 (see 1990 in music). It was the first of several adult contemporary-influenced Carey ballads to be released as a single, and its protagonist informs others to take things easy in a relationship as "love takes time". It became Carey's second number-one single in the United States and Canada, but was only a moderate success elsewhere.

Contents

[edit] Recording

Carey and Margulies had written "Love Takes Time" while Mariah Carey was being produced, but intended to save it for Carey's second album (which became Emotions, 1991). Carey played a demo of the track to Tommy Mottola and other Sony/Columbia executives on a promotional tour after her album was sent to be pressed. The executives insisted that Carey recorded it for the album because they were impressed with it. As their decision was made as Carey's debut was about to be printed, then-struggling producer Walter Afanasieff was forced to produce the song in time for the pressing of the album. Carey had lobbied to co-produce the song, but was denied permission by her record label. Afanasieff had minimal experience in production, but he met the production deadline and went on to enjoy a career of almost ten years co-writing and co-producing with Carey. Some copies of her debut album include the song, but don't list it.

[edit] Commercial release

"Love Takes Time" was another success like Carey's debut single "Vision of Love" in the United States: it reached number one in its ninth week on the Billboard Hot 100 and spent three weeks at the top of the chart, from November 4 to November 24, 1990. It replaced "Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice, and was replaced by Whitney Houston's "I'm Your Baby Tonight". It spent seventeen weeks in the top forty and the RIAA certified it gold. It topped every other Billboard chart for which it was eligible (including the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks and Adult Contemporary charts), a record few singles can claim. Because its success was divided over two calendar years it did not rank high on Billboard's year-end charts, making seventy-sixth on the 1990 chart and sixty-ninth on the 1991 chart.

However, "Love Takes Time" failed to emulate the popularity of "Vision of Love" in any other market. It topped the Canadian charts for one week, but did not make much of an impact elsewhere, becoming a moderate top twenty hit in Australia, hitting the top ten in New Zealand, and almost failing to make the top forty altogether in the UK.

The song did not receive as many awards as "Vision of Love", but it too managed a BMI Pop Award for "Song of the Year". The single's video, directed by Jeb Bien and Walter Maser, features Carey (after receiving a call that upsets her from a phone booth) walking around a beach. Like the video for "Vision of Love", Carey lacked creative control in its production and, ashamed of the result, did not include it on the DVD/home video #1's (1999).

[edit] Track listings

  • U.S. CD single (cassette single/7" single)
  1. "Love Takes Time" (album version)
  2. "Sent from up Above" (album version)
  • UK CD 5" single
  1. "Love Takes Time" (album version)
  2. "Vanishing" (album version)
  3. "You Need Me" (album version)

[edit] Charts

Chart (1990) Peak
position
No. of chart topper
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 1 (3 weeks) 2nd
U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks 1 (1 week) 2nd
U.S. Billboard Adult Contemporary 1 (1 week) 2nd
U.S. ARC Weekly Top 40 1 (2 weeks) 2nd
Canadian Singles Chart 1 (1 week) 2nd
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart 9
Australia ARIA Singles Chart 14
UK Singles Chart 37
German Singles Chart 75

[edit] See also

Preceded by:
"Ice Ice Baby" by Vanilla Ice
Billboard Hot 100 number-one single
November 10, 1990 (3 weeks)
Succeeded by:
"I'm Your Baby Tonight" by Whitney Houston
Preceded by:
"So You Like What You See" by Samuelle
Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number one single
November 10, 1990
Succeeded by:
"B.B.D. (I Thought It Was Me)?" by Bell Biv Devoe

[edit] External links

In other languages