Though it produced five top tens in the UK, Gotta Tell You's only other single in the U.S. was this highly danceable sexual proposition, in which Samantha Mumba finds out her man's STD tests are clean and she's finally ready to get it. ("Body II Body" was also a minor club hit here.) Slightly rewritten from the original album version, with a new instrumental arrangement and a dance breakdown, "Baby, Come Over (This Is Our Night)" didn't repeat the success of "Gotta Tell You," but it did manage to reach the top twenty of the pop and dance charts.
Best bit: the funky breakdown into the middle eight, which reimagines Kool and the Gang's "Ladies' Night"
The music video... is an enormous dance party inside a Samantha Mumba-branded M.C. Escher house.
"AM to PM"
"Another Dumb Blonde"
"Bring It All To Me"
"Crush"
"Dip It Low"
"Gotta Tell You"
"He Loves U Not"
"I Wanna Be Bad"
"No More (Baby I'ma Do Right)"
"Perfect Day"
"AM to PM"
"Another Dumb Blonde"
"Bring It All To Me"
"Crush"
"Dip It Low"
"Gotta Tell You"
"He Loves U Not"
"I Wanna Be Bad"
"No More (Baby I'ma Do Right)"
"Perfect Day"
1. No More
2. I Wanna Be Bad
3. Gotta Tell You
4. Bring it All to Me
5. Perfect Day
6. AM to PM
7. He Loves U Not
8. Dip It Low
9. Another Dumb Blonde
10. Crush
Dip It Low is so out of place because it's not even a guilty pleasure like the other songs, i feel like people aren't embarrassed to admit they like it
Dip It Low is so out of place because it's not even a guilty pleasure like the other songs, i feel like people aren't embarrassed to admit they like it
You could say the same thing about No More though.
Dip It Low is so out of place because it's not even a guilty pleasure like the other songs, i feel like people aren't embarrassed to admit they like it
I'm not embarrassed to admit I like any of this music. And the top ten is jam after jam.
“Everybody Doesn’t” (2001) Everybody Doesn't
Hot 100: #81
Days on TRL: —
Overall score: 7.24 High score:9.8 (Ace Reject) Low score:2 (PeopleLikeUs)
Once signed to Madonna’s Maverick Records, French-born Swedish teenager Amanda contributed a song to the Rugrats in Paris soundtrack and released one album before disappearing completely from the music scene. Her only single was “Everybody Doesn’t,” an empowerment jam informing girls how to resist rude boyfriends who pressure them to have sex, which features the kind of heavy, hip-hop-tinged production that crept into pop music around 2001 as urban artists began to dominate. The highest-ranking track not to receive any 10’s, Amanda can take some comfort in knowing that she outlasted her sister, Play’s Anaďs Lameche, on this countdown.
Best bit: “If I loved you, I would/If you loved me, I wouldn’t have to/If I were in your shoes/Never expect you to get down”
The music video... can’t be found anywhere online. Poor Amanda is that irrelevant.
Outraged. This should be number one. It's like Let's Wait Awhile sung by a **** star. The dissonance the vocal creates with the lyric is fascinating.