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2017 single by Bruno Mars

2017 single past Bruno Mars

"That's What I Like"
That's What I Like Remixes.jpg

Remixes cover art

Single past Bruno Mars
from the anthology 24K Magic
Released January thirty, 2017 (2017-01-xxx)
Studio Glenwood Place (Burbank, California)
Genre
  • Hip hop soul
  • new jack swing
  • R&B
  • funk
Length three:26
Characterization Atlantic
Songwriter(s)
  • Bruno Mars
  • Philip Lawrence
  • Christopher Brody Dark-brown
  • James Fauntleroy
  • Johnathan Yip
  • Ray Romulus
  • Jeremy Reeves
  • Ray McCullough Two
Producer(s)
  • Shampoo Press & Curl
  • The Stereotypes (co.)
Bruno Mars singles chronology
"24K Magic"
(2016)
"That's What I Like"
(2017)
"Versace on the Floor"
(2017)
Music video
"That's What I Like" on YouTube

"That'south What I Like" is a vocal past American vocalizer-songwriter Bruno Mars from his 3rd studio album, 24K Magic (2016). The song was written by Mars, Philip Lawrence, Christopher Brody Chocolate-brown, James Fauntleroy, Johnathan Yip, Ray Romulus, Jeremy Reeves, and Ray McCullough II. The former iii produced the song nether the name of Shampoo Press & Curlicue with the latter iv, as the Stereotypes, co-producing it. Atlantic Records released the vocal to Hot AC radio in the United States on January 30, 2017, as the second single from the album. The song is a hip hop soul, new jack swing, R&B and funk runway. Vulture 's Craig Jenkins wrote that the production resembles that of "Kitty Kat" (2006) by Beyoncé. The song'southward lyrics address extravagance, a luxurious lifestyle, and love.

"That's What I Like" received mixed reviews from music critics, some of whom considered the song to be one of the best on 24K Magic, while others criticized its lyrical content. The song was a commercial success in the The states, where it peaked at number ane on the Billboard Hot 100; information technology reached number three in Canada and number four in New Zealand. It has been certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and seven-times platinum by Music Canada (MC). The vocal likewise reached the superlative ten in Australia—where it was certified 4-times platinum—Kingdom of belgium, and Portugal. It stands as the highest-charting single in the Us from the album. The song was the world'southward fourth-best-selling digital single of 2017, with 9.7 million units, ranking among the best-selling singles worldwide.

The accompanying music video, which was directed by Jonathan Lia and Mars, depicts the latter reciting the song'due south lyrics and combines choreography with black-and-white animation. Mars performed the song on awards shows such equally the 2017 Grammy Awards and the 2017 Brit Awards, and included information technology on his 24K Magic World Tour (2017–2018). Information technology received several nominations and awards, winning Song of the Year at the 2017 Soul Train Music Awards, as well as Song of the Year, All-time R&B Song, and All-time R&B Operation at the 2018 Grammy Awards. The song has been covered by Kurt Hugo Schneider along with Mario Jose, among others.

Background and development [edit]

The Stereotypes (pictured) co-produced and co-wrote "That'southward What I Similar".

In September 2014, Bruno Mars tweeted, "Now it's fourth dimension to start writing chapter 3", hinting he was working on new music. Post-obit the release of the successful Marker Ronson'south unmarried, "Uptown Funk" (2014) featuring Mars, the latter headed to the studio to record more songs. Mars affirmed he had no plans to release a new album "until it's done". It was due in March 2016, but Mars'south appearance at the Super Bowl one-half-time evidence postponed it for several months. At the fourth dimension, seven songs were already recorded.[1]

The Stereotypes had known Mars and worked with him since 2007, but later he signed a bargain with Atlantic Records they did not collaborate very ofttimes.[2] In 2015, Jonathan Yip talked with Mars about working together. Mars was already recording 24K Magic and asked for "some beats", which Yip sent. Mars later asked for more beats and the Stereotypes sent them, but they never heard from him; "nothing came of it".[three] [iv] In June 2016, Yip contacted Mars, who asked Yip if they would like to assist him finish a song for his album; he needed some other vocal with a certain tempo and key.[three] [4] [5] Yip sent Mars an idea that caught his attention; he asked the Stereotypes to go to the studio.[ii] [3] [6] After they helped Mars finish "24K Magic", Mars challenged the team to aid him with two more songs.[ii] [6]

At this indicate, Mars had already shown the Stereotypes two songs, including a fully written and produced demo of "That's What I Like" that sounded like a ballad, according to Ray Romulus.[ii] [v] [seven] Mars, however, told the Stereotypes he wanted the song to make him move in a certain way and that it was missing a certain "bounciness". He wanted them to focus on the "groove, shifting and fine-tuning" until they found the "precise ingredient of danceable joy" that he wanted.[5] [seven] [8] The team started to change the rhythms and the drums of the song, and Mars danced forth to it and stopped when he could not move to a chord or pulsate.[two] [viii] [9] In one case the programming of the drums was finished, the vocal had a different feeling; despite its tedious tempo it had a "danceable double-fourth dimension". This is due to the trap beats, which modernized the track and gave it "bounciness".[2] [v] [seven] Then, the Stereotypes tore everything else apart, giving the track new chords and a new pre-claw, B section, and bridge.[2]

In Nov 2017, Mars was a guest on the Charlie Rose Testify. He said the anthology was intended to brand people experience fabulous: "I'g talking about eating shrimp scampi and lobster tails and drinking strawberry champagne".[10] Romulus said the lyrical concept came from Mars, adding, "All that nigh the Cadillacs and champagne ... that's how Bruno is. He's giving you a mean solar day in the life".[7] During a phone interview with CBS Mars said that he second guessed the vocal, having to listen to it "for over a year to make certain it's all right."[11] It was the offset song that Mars asked James Fauntleroy to help him write.[12]

Production and release [edit]

"That's What I Like" was written past Mars, Philip Lawrence, Christopher Brody Dark-brown, Fauntleroy, Yip, Romulus, Jeremy Reeves, and Ray McCullough Two. It was produced by Mars, Lawrence and Chocolate-brown under the alias Shampoo Printing & Curl; and co-produced by Yip, McCullough, Romulus, and Reeves equally the Stereotypes. Eric "E-Panda" Hernandez played the live drums while Mars, Fauntleroy, and Lawrence performed background vocals. At Glenwood Place Studios in Burbank, California, Charles Moniz recorded and engineered the track with assistance from Jacob Dennis. It was mixed at MixStar Studios in Virginia Embankment by Serban Ghenea, with John Hanes serving as mixing engineer. The track was mastered by Tom Coyne at Sterling Sound, NYC.[13]

"Versace on the Flooring" was scheduled to exist the second single released from Mars's third studio album 24K Magic (2016). In early January 2017, however, AllAccess reported that "That'due south What I Like" was being sent to Top 40 radio stations equally the second single instead.[fourteen] [15] Atlantic Records released the track on January xxx, 2017, to Hot Air conditioning radio stations in the United States and to American contemporary striking radio and rhythmic contemporary stations on the next day.[sixteen] [17] [18] In the Great britain, the song was sent to contemporary hitting radio on February 24, 2017.[19] Italian gimmicky hit radio stations began adding the track onto their playlists on March three, 2017, through Warner.[twenty] On Apr 21, 2017, a remix packet with four versions of the song was released for digital download in various countries.[21]

Limerick [edit]

"That's What I Like" is a hip hop soul, new jack swing, R&B, and funk song.[four] [22] [23] It was composed in the cardinal of B minor at a tempo of 134 beats per infinitesimal. Mars'south song range spans from Giv to Cfive.[24] The vocal features Mars in the center of the rail, supported by enthusiastic backing vocals, Boyz II Men-mode finger-snaps, a "silky pre-chorus", and "punctuating advert libs".[25] [26] [27] Bill Lamb of ThoughtCo described the single every bit an "R&B groove, giving a nod to the new jack swing music of the late 1980s and early 1990s".[28]

Billboard 's Andrew Unterberger said the song is reminiscent of the R&B from the early 1990s, infused with New Jack Swing and a little hip-hop, comparing information technology to the "harmonies and Uptown production of early Jodeci".[22] Christopher R. Weingarten of Rolling Stone wrote that the track "brings the silky vibes" of R. Kelly's 12 Play (1993) "into the nail of modernistic trap".[29] Chris Molanphy from Slate defined "That's What I Like" as a mix of the "80s-into-90s styles like New Edition pop-and-B and New Jack Swing" infused with "the skittering, thumping 808 drums of a modern trap" song. Molanphy compared Mars'south vocals to those of Bobby Brown, especially in his "high-annals vocal".[xxx] Katherine St. Asaph of Pitchfork compared its sound to that of The xx/20 Experience (2013) by Justin Timberlake.[31] Vulture 's Craig Jenkins noted a resemblance between the composition of "That'south What I Like" and The Neptunes' product of "Kitty Kat" (2006) past Beyoncé.[32] The lyrics of the song have been described every bit "playful" and "opulent"; they were written from the bespeak of view of someone "who loves himself" and luxury ("strawberry champagne and water ice bucket") as much as his lover, with her being promised everything she wants, being allowed to "dictate the pace of the nighttime".[23] [31] [33] Mars references "Julio" from "Uptown Funk".[27] [34] On February 26, 2019, Due west Java's Indonesian Dissemination Commission placed a daytime ban on the radio broadcast of several songs, including "That's What I Similar", due to their adult, offensive and obscene lyrics.[35]

Disquisitional reception [edit]

"That'due south What I Similar" received mixed reviews from music critics. Andrew Unterberger, writing for Billboard, and Rob Arcand of Spin establish the single to be one of the best on 24K Magic.[22] [36] Vulture 's Jenkins said the rail is one of the all-time on the album and sonically i of the "most modern" songs due to "a killer vocal and tasteful trap drums".[32] Peter Helman of Stereogum said the recording is ane of the "catchiest" tracks on 24K Magic.[37] Caroline Sullivan from The Guardian praised the song for paying homage to R Kelly, calling it a "resurrection".[38] Karen Gwee from Issue of Sound commended Mars's vocals and said the singer takes his vocals to the limit. Gwee dubbed the rails "giddy".[25] The Observer 'south Kitty Empire praised the lyrics, saying Mars is able to requite "conspicuous consumption with more than amuse than boorishness".[34] In a mixed review Nick Levine, writing for NME, said he did non enjoy the rails's lyrics, despite finding them playful.[26]

Jonathan Wroble of Slant Magazine criticized the song'due south lyrics, maxim they appear to be "written with a dollar store'southward rhyming dictionary". Wroble choose the rhymes between "beach house in Miami" and "Julio, serve that scampi" as an example.[27] The Independent 'south Andy Gill and Patrick Ryan from U.s. Today both plant the lyrics on "That'south What I Similar" to exhibit a list of "unimaginative" and "obnoxious" hedonism.[39] [twoscore]

"That'due south What I Like" was listed as the second all-time song of 2017 according to Associated Printing's Mesfin Fekadu. She said, "Bruno Mars is perfect. That is all."[41] It was the 34th among Billboard's 100 Best Songs of 2017: Critics' Picks list; Ross Scarano wrote that Mars "is a popular star of total hospitality" showing several clichés of a luxurious life, such as "sex in front of the fireplace and champagne with strawberries", "waking up inside clean sheets without any clothes on", and "the private chef, Julio, preparing shrimp scampi for dinner".[42] In late 2017, Bill Lamb of ThoughtCo considered the single the quaternary-best song by Mars.[28] Minou Clark from HuffPost called the single "the ultimate cuffing season anthem" due to its "sexy smooth tune".[43]

Accolades [edit]

In 2017, "That'south What I Like" was nominated for Pick Vocal: Male person Artist, Option Music: Summer Vocal and Choice Music: R&B/Hip-Hop Vocal at the Teen Choice Awards.[44] That aforementioned year, the song was also nominated for Song of the Year at the Telehit Awards.[45] The single received the awards for Favorite Soul/R&B Vocal at the 2017 American Music Awards and for Vocal of the Year at the Soul Train Music Awards.[46] [47] In 2018, "That'due south What I Like" won Song of the Twelvemonth, Best R&B Performance and Best R&B Song at the 2018 Grammy Awards.[48] The track received a nomination for Favorite Vocal at the Nickelodeon Kids' Choice Awards and won R&B Song of the Year, whilst being nominated for Song of the Year at the 2018 iHeartRadio Music Awards.[49] [50] It also received a Titanium Award from iHeartRadio for reaching a threshold of one billion total audience spins.[51]

Information technology was nominated for Summit Hot 100 Vocal, Superlative Streaming Song (Video), Top Radio Vocal and Top R&B Song at the Billboard Music Awards, winning in the latter category.[52] The vocal was ane of the Acme 10 Gold International Gold Songs at the RTHK International Pop Poll Awards.[53] That aforementioned yr, the rail received the showtime issued accolade for Outstanding Vocal, Traditional category at the 2018 NAACP Image Awards.[54] "That's What I Like" received two awards from ASCAP, i from the Pop Music Awards every bit one of the Most Performed Songs, and another from the Rhythm & Soul Music Awards as Summit R&B/Hip-Hop Song.[55] [56] In the post-obit year, at the same honor ceremonies, it won, again, Most Performed Songs and information technology was one of the winners of Winning R&B/Hip-Hop Song.[57] [58]

Commercial performance [edit]

North America [edit]

Upon the album's release, "That's What I Like" debuted at number 79 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the upshot week of December ten, 2016.[59] In February 2017, Mars's operation at the 2017 Grammy Awards helped the song to enter the height ten of the Hot 100, where it remained for 2 months. The unmarried rose to number two on the chart, spending four weeks in that location behind Ed Sheeran's "Shape of You lot" (2017).[30] Afterwards the release of several remixes, featuring artists such equally Gucci Mane and PartyNextDoor, "That'due south What I Similar" climbed to number one in its fifteenth week on the chart, replacing Kendrick Lamar'southward "Apprehensive" (2017). Both songs spent i calendar week on the meridian of the chart and the former became Mars's seventh number 1 single on the Hot 100.[threescore] [61] The track spent 24 weeks in the top five of the Billboard Hot 100, condign one of five singles to spend at to the lowest degree 24 weeks in the peak five and 28 weeks in the top 10.[62] [63] Equally of 2018, Mars, Sheeran, and Jewel are the only artists with two songs to spend at to the lowest degree half a twelvemonth in the top 10 of the Hot 100.[64] The song spent a full of 52 weeks on the chart and ranked at number three on the Twelvemonth-Cease Billboard Hot 100.[65] [66]

On the Radio Songs chart, "That'southward What I Like" peaked at number one and spent nine weeks at that place, condign Mars'southward longest run at the top as a solo artist.[67] It surpassed his previous seven-week number-one runs for "Simply the Way You Are" (2010) and "Locked Out of Sky" (2013).[68] On the Mainstream Height 40 chart, the single peaked at number one, tying Mars with Justin Timberlake for the highest total amid solo males of number one songs on the nautical chart, with viii each i.[69] For the week of July 22, 2017, the vocal returned to the meridian of the Hot R&B Songs chart, spending 20 weeks at number one. It tied with The Weeknd'south "Starboy" (2016) and Drake's "One Dance" (2016), featuring WizKid and Kyla, for the nigh weeks spent at number one.[70] In August 2020, the accomplishment was broken by The Weeknd's "Blinding Lights" (2019).[71] "That's What I Like" peaked at number one on the U.s. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs Chart and topped the Year-End Chart in the format.[72] [73] The runway reached the pinnacle spot on the Rhythmic nautical chart.[74] The single was certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA).[75] It became the fourth best-selling song of 2017 in the U.s., with i,673,000 downloads and 835,856,000 streams.[76]

On the Canadian Hot 100, the song peaked at number three on April 17, 2017, spending 38 weeks on the chart, and information technology was certified seven-times Platinum past the Music Canada (MC).[77] [78] The song concluded 2017 at number seven on the Twelvemonth-Cease Charts in Canada.[79]

International [edit]

"That's What I Like" peaked at number 12 on the Uk Singles Nautical chart and was certified double platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), denoting sales and streams equivalent to 1,200,000 copies.[80] [81] On the Belgian charts, the single debuted at number 34 on February 25, 2017, on the Ultratop 50 in Flanders, peaking at number three for two consecutive weeks in April.[82] On the Ultratop l in Wallonia, the song debuted at number 34 on March 25, 2017, and went on to elevation at number eight in May.[83] It was certified platinum by the Belgian Entertainment Association (BEA).[84] The track peaked at number seven on the Portuguese Unmarried Charts.[85] It earned a platinum plaque from the Associação Fonográfica Portuguesa (AFP), for its sales and streams equivalent to 20,000.[86] "That's What I Similar" entered the Official New Zealand Music Chart at number 26 on February 20, 2017. In its sixth week, the track peaked at number iv, where it remained for two weeks.[87] The song ranked at the fifth spot on the 2017 Twelvemonth-Terminate List and received a double-platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RMNZ), denoting sales and streams equivalent to sixty,000 copies.[88] [89] In Commonwealth of australia, the unmarried debuted at number 47 on the ARIA Singles Chart for the week of March v, 2017. In its sixth calendar week on the chart, the song peaked at number five, becoming Mars'due south twelfth top-x single in Australia.[xc] It was certified 4-times platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Clan (ARIA) for exceeding seventy,000 units.[91] The song reached the height 20 in several other countries, including Denmark, Ireland, and Scotland.[92] [93] [94] The song was the quaternary-acknowledged digital single of 2017, with nine.seven million units.[95]

Music video [edit]

Groundwork and concept [edit]

On March ane, 2017, Mars announced on his Twitter account that he had been filming the accompanying music video for "That'due south What I Similar"; he said, "Just finished shootin it! I'm gonna edit it, take a chimera bath & then we political party. Gimme 2 hours! Permit the count downwards begin #TWIL". The visual was directed past Mars and Jonathan Lia.[96] The choreography was done by the singer and Phil Tayag prior to the shooting, allowing Lia and Mars to produce animations earlier filming the video. Some animations were added in post-production by GenPop. The music video was filmed confronting a grayness background in Los Angeles using a stationary camera throughout the entire shot. Several hand-fatigued animations "relating to the lyrics" appeared and vanished off-frame; to create this effect, Lia filmed Mars while the song was played at half-speed. Lia then doubled the speed of the footage, making the "synced playback" have a "surreal experience to it", with a single, eight-minute take. Mars and Lia had a different concept for the music video, just the result was not what they expected when the two carried out a exam shoot, and they decided to utilise a single light. When Mars started to dance, him and Lia they knew "that was the video".[97] The video was released on March 1, 2017, via YouTube.[96]

Synopsis [edit]

The visual begins with Mars wearing a black, white, and gold-striped silk shirt, black track pants, white sneakers and sunglasses.[98] [99] [100] During the video, Mars dances alone against a white background with several animations, which move with him during his choreography, enacting the lyrics and music.[43] [96] [98] The blackness-and-white animations include a mirror, Manhattan condominium, sipping strawberry champagne glasses, driving a Cadillac and its wheels, traveling to Paris, and dancing partners that appear as Mars dances across the screen.[96] [99] [101] The cartoon sketches, related to the lyrics, were drawn to prove the flexibility of the vocalist's dance moves.[100] [102] [103] Co-ordinate to Rania Aniftos, Mars exudes charm throughout the music video.[100]

Reception [edit]

Critics including Althea Legaspi from Rolling Stone and Minou Clark of HuffPost complimented Mars's dancing skills and choreography.[43] [96] [98] Mike Wass, writing for Idolator, and Vulture 'southward Karen Brill compared the video to Drake's "Hotline Bling" (2015) due to its simplicity and "unadulterated feeling-yourself-ness". Wass and the staff of Rap-Up called Mars's footwork "fancy", while Brill said the visual is "wondrous" just that it should include "the ubiquitous music video cube".[102] [103] [104] Vibe 'south J'na Jefferson shared a similar perspective, saying "the magic of this video is in the simplicity" considering of Mars'southward performance skills, visual effects, and editing.[99] Alex Young of Effect of Audio praised the combination of the choreographed dance and the blitheness.[105] Billboard 's Rania Aniftos praised the music video, saying information technology will make viewers smiling and hit "the replay button".[100] In 2017, it won Best Male Video at the MTV Video Music Awards Japan and was nominated for Best International Video at the LOS40 Music Awards 2017, a category decided by a Jury.[106] [107] The video received the accolade for Video of the Yr at the 2017 American Music Awards.[46] In 2018, it won the award for Outstanding Music Video at the NAACP Image Awards and earned a nomination for Best Music Video at the iHeartRadio Music Awards.[50] [54] The video effects were available on Facebook for users to endeavour; it was the first time the platform made a based camera effect effectually music.[108] As of July 2020, the music video has reached over one.7 billion views.[109]

Live performances and use in other media [edit]

Mars's showtime alive functioning of "That'southward What I Like" occurred at the 59th Annual Grammy Awards on February 12, 2017.[110] Mars danced in synchronization with his backup singers, and towards the end of the song he made a "doo-wop harmonizing" breakup while interacting with women in the crowd and using his falsetto vocals.[110] [111] [112] The operation was well received by critics. Joe Lynch of Billboard rated Mars's performance 11 out of 20, saying, "Bruno Mars is 1 of pop's finest showmen" who "can make an unextraordinary song such as 'That's What I Like' audio like a bona fide hitting ... he sang the hell out of it".[111] Billy Nilles of E! News wrote that Mars showed his "smooth trip the light fantastic toe moves and silky vocals", and that "every lady in the crowd looked every bit they were putty in Bruno'south hand".[113] Rolling Stone 'southward Elias Leight described the singer every bit being on "seduction mode", using his vocals to demonstrate it. Mars's voice reminded Leigh of the "firepower" of New Edition's Johnny Gill.[112]

Mars later performed the song alive at the 2017 Brit Awards on February 21; he was "dressed in a vintage-inspired 1990s colour-block collared top with navy slacks" and along with his band, performed a routine choreography. Halfway through the runway, Mars serenaded the audience.[114] At the 2017 iHeartRadio Music Awards, he performed the song equally part of a medley with the single "Treasure", a track on Mars'south 2nd studio album Unorthodox Jukebox (2012). Andrew Unterberger, writing for Billboard, found the performance to be the best of the night because Mars made the medley work "seamlessly".[115] An acoustic version of the single was performed on the Charlie Rose Show; information technology featured Mars and some of his bandmates sitting at a table and using information technology as a soft pulsate set.[10] [116] Mars performed the single at the Apollo Theater aslope the majority of the 24K Magic anthology for his CBS prime time special titled Bruno Mars: 24K Magic Live at the Apollo, which aired on Nov 29, 2017.[117] [118] "That's What I Like" was the seventh song on the ready list of Mars's third tour, 24K Magic World Tour (2017–18).[119]

Kurt Hugo Schneider and Mario Jose covered "That'due south What I Like", releasing their version for download on July 13, 2017.[120] Macy Kate recorded a cover of the single, which is now simply available on YouTube.[121]

Rail listings [edit]

Digital download – Alan Walker Remix[122]
No. Title Length
1. "That's What I Like" (Alan Walker Remix) 3:14
Digital download – BLVK JVCK Remix[123]
No. Championship Length
ane. "That's What I Like" (BLVK JVCK Remix) 3:45
Digital download – Gucci Mane Remix[124]
No. Championship Length
1. "That's What I Like" (Remix) (featuring Gucci Mane) 3:54
Digital download – PartyNextDoor Remix[125]
No. Title Length
1. "That's What I Like" (PartyNextDoor Remix) iii:26

Personnel [edit]

Credits adapted from the liner notes of 24K Magic.[thirteen]

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

See also [edit]

  • List of Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles of 2017
  • List of Billboard Mainstream Top forty number-one songs of 2017
  • List of Billboard Rhythmic number-one songs of the 2010s
  • List of number-one R&B/hip-hop songs of 2017 (U.S.)

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • Official audio on YouTube

DOWNLOAD HERE

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