Dirrty
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"Dirrty" | ||
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Single by Christina Aguilera featuring Redman | ||
from the album Stripped | ||
Released | September 2002 | |
Format | CD single, 12" maxi single | |
Genre | Pop/Hip-hop | |
Length | 4:58 | |
Label | RCA Records | |
Writer(s) | Christina Aguilera Rockwilder Redman B.Muhammed J.Cameron |
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Producer(s) | Xtina Rockwilder B.Muhammed J.Cameron |
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Certification | Platinum (ARIA) | |
Chart positions | ||
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Christina Aguilera featuring Redman singles chronology | ||
Lady Marmalade (2001) |
Dirrty (2002) |
Beautiful (2002) |
Audio sample | ||
Play (in browser) (help·info) | ||
"Dirrty" is the first single from Christina Aguilera's sophomore album, Stripped. Released in 2002, the single (which features rapper Reggie "Redman" Noble) peaked at number 48 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Aguilera's eighth 'Hot 100' chart entry. Due to the song's low peak, it is generally believed to be her first flop in the US. The single was much more successful in the UK, where it peaked at number 1. It is generally considered Aguilera's breakthrough single; for the first time in her career, she was allowed full creative control on a single, evident by her having both writing and production credits for the first time. She was also allowed creative control for the music video of the song which forever changed the public image of Aguilera from her "girl next door" image to the "dirrty" image she retained until her most recently released album, Back to Basics. The song is often considered to be one of her signature songs.
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[edit] Song information
"Dirrty" was written by Aguilera, Dana "Rockwilder" Stinson, Redman, B. Muhammed and J. Cameron and was produced by Aguilera, Rockwilder, Muhammed and Cameron. The song, thought to be one of Aguilera's signature songs, is often believed to have had the most impact in pop culture out of all her singles and videos due to its racy music video (which has often been mimicked by other female artists without apparent success).
Due to the song's seemingly "dirty" nature, it is often thought to be about sex; instead the song is meant to be a female empowerment anthem dedicated to being strong and rowdy. As she wanted to make the song "dirtier" than it would have been, she explained in interviews that as result, she added an extra "r" to the title to make it "Dirrty" instead of the correct "Dirty".
However, the song almost did not come to be. In the summer of 2002, while adding the final touches to her album Stripped, both Aguilera and her record label felt that the album was not complete because it lacked a catchy first single. Aguilera was looking for something explosive and jaw-dropping that would put her back on the scene since her hiatus.
She teamed up with producer Rockwilder, and together they created a song which was supposed to be a reply to an earlier hit by rapper Redman called "Let's Get Dirty (I Can't Get In Da Club)", which features DJ Kool (besides being a reply song, "Dirrty" also sampled "Let's Get Dirty (I Can't Get In Da Club)"). Aguilera and Rockwilder agreed that it would have been appropriate to include Redman on the single, and the rest became history.
After Christina submitted the song to her record label, they felt it would be too risky of a single and could cause a negative affect towards her album. Linda Perry publicily stated that she disagreed with Christina's choice for releasing 'Dirrty' at the time, and wanted 'Beautiful' to be released as the first single (That track would end up being the quickly followed up 2nd Single) as she felt that 'Dirrty' was a huge misrepresentation of what the album really was. Nonetheless, Christina decided to go forward with releasing 'Dirrty' as the first single, with a much planned out new image and attitude that she soon began displaying at public events.
The much-anticipated single leaked onto the internet on August 27, 2002. Radio stations around the country quickly began playing the edgy single when Aguilera decided to promote her new raunchier image at the 2002 MTV Video Music Awards by wearing a revealing outfit. Dirrty was nominated for Best Pop Collaboration with Vocals at the Grammy awards in 2003. It was also nominated at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards for Best Female Video, Best Dance Video, Best Pop Video, and Best Choreography(Jeri Slaughter).
On Aguilera's high-profile, high-grossing 2003 Justified and Stripped Tour, "Dirrty" was the show's opening number.
[edit] Remixes
Official Remixes
- "Dirrty" (MaUVe Main Mix) (8:11) - also known as Dirrty (MaUVe Vocal Mix)
- "Dirrty" (MaUVe Dub)
- "Dirrty" (MaUVe Radio Mix)
- "Dirrty" (Tracy Young Club Mix) (8:39)
- "Dirrty" (Tracy Young Radio Mix) (4:05)
- "Dirrty" (Sleaze Sisters Anthem Mix)
- "Dirrty" (Sleaze Sisters Radio Edit)
Unofficial Remixes by famous remixers
- "Dirrty" (Coco Snatch Club Mix)
- "Dirrty" (Jensen's Rowdy Anthem Mix)
- "Dirrty Magic" (Go Home Productions) - mash up between Christina Aguilera's Dirrty and Grover Washington's Mr. Magic
- "Dirrty/I'm A Slave 4 U" (Dance Remix) (featuring Britney Spears)
- "Upside Down And Dirrty" mash up between Christina Aguilera's Dirrty and Diana Ross's Upside Down
[edit] Music video
On September 30, 2002, "Dirrty" premiered on MTV's Making the Video, where Aguilera could be seen wearing chaps while attending an underground night club. Scenes in the video included Aguilera coming in on a motorcycle, boxing, and in a shower with dancers. The video quickly caused some controversy from the general public as people were not used to Aguilera's new raunchy image. Frequent Rolling Stone photographer David LaChapelle directed the video, which is to this day still her most controversial.
The video gave Aguilera the attention she wanted, as there was not one entertainment television show that did not talk about the video when it was released. Only two weeks after its premiere, the video had already been spoofed by Buffy the Vampire Slayer star Sarah Michelle Gellar on Saturday Night Live, who said (playing Aguilera): "Once people see this video, they’ll stop seeing me as this bubble-gum ho and start seeing me as an actual ho." Aguilera later commented that it was disappointing and that "[she] could have made better fun of herself than Sarah did". Later that month, the video also caused more controversy when it was banned from Thailand for containing Thai-language posters that read "Thailand's Sex Tourism" and "Young Underage Girls". Aguilera also simulates masturbation while singing the lyric "I need that, uh, to get me off". Aguilera dismissed all the negative publicity she was receiving by explaining her reasoning for the video; she claimed that the video was different from the average hip-hop video, because in her video, she (the female) is the one who is in control of her settings and the one calling the shots and making all the decisions.
[edit] Alternative covers
Commercial | Mexico | USA |
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[edit] Chart success
The controversial music video did not help the song's airplay on radio stations, as it performed poorly on the U.S. charts. The single stalled and peaked prematurely on the Billboard Hot 100 at a low number 48 but was on the chart for 20 weeks, and on the Hot 100 Airplay chart at #49. However, the song did have a very long and successful run on the Hot 100 Singles Sales chart, where it peaked at number 2 but at the time of "Dirrty"'s release, airplay affected the positions of songs on the Hot 100 much more than commercial single sales. However, it is the second most-downloaded of Aguilera's songs (after "Ain't No Other Man") in legal music download stores such as iTunes.
In a nearly opposite effect, the track was highly successful internationally. In the UK, the song debuted at number one, and reigned at the top for two weeks. The song was very successful elsewhere, achieving a top ten positioning in most of the countries in which it charted.
[edit] Charts
Charts (2002) | Peak Position |
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U.S. Billboard Hot 100 | 48 |
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Tracks | 22 |
U.S. Billboard Top 40 Mainstream | 14 |
U.S. Billboard Rhythmic Top 40 | 20 |
U.S. ARC Weekly Top 40 | 11 |
Australian ARIA Top 50 Singles | 4 |
Austrian Top 75 Singles | 5 |
Brazilian Top 100 Singles | 25 |
Belgium Top 50 Singles | 4 (Gold 25.000 copies sold) |
Canadian Top 100 Singles | 5 |
Dutch Top 40 | 2 |
French Top 100 Singles | 98 |
Finnish Single Chart | 20 |
German Top 100 Singles | 4 |
Irish Top 50 Singles | 1 (1 week) |
Italian Top 50 Singles | 8 |
Latvian Airplay Top | 7 |
Mexican Top 100 Airplay | 5 |
New Zealand RIANZ Top 50 Singles | 20 |
Spanish Top 20 Singles | 3 |
Sweden Top 60 Singles | 6 |
Swiss Top 100 Singles | 3 |
'Tokyo Hot 100' | 16 |
U.K. Official Top 75 Singles | 1 (2 weeks) |
United World Chart | 1 (2 weeks) |
[edit] References
Preceded by "Unbreakable" by Westlife |
UK number one single November 17, 2002 |
Succeeded by "If You're Not The One" by Daniel Bedingfield |
Christina Aguilera |
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Discography |
Albums |
Christina Aguilera (1999) • Stripped (2002) • Back to Basics (2006) |
Other Albums |
Mi Reflejo (2000) · My Kind of Christmas (2000) · Just Be Free (2001) |
Singles |
"Reflection" · "Genie in a Bottle" · "The Christmas Song" · "What a Girl Wants" · "I Turn to You" · "Come on Over Baby" · "Pero me acuerdo de ti" · "Christmas Time" · "Nobody Wants to Be Lonely" · "Falsas Esperanzas" · "Lady Marmalade" · "Dirrty" · "Beautiful" · "Fighter" · "Can't Hold Us Down" · "Infatuation" · "The Voice Within" · "Car Wash" · "Tilt Ya Head Back" · "Ain't No Other Man" · "Hurt" · "Tell Me" · "Candyman" |
Related articles |
Discography · Awards · B-Sides/Unreleased songs · RCA Records |
Categories: Articles lacking sources from March 2007 | All articles lacking sources | Wikipedia articles needing style editing | 1980s retro movement | 2002 singles | Christina Aguilera songs | Moral panics | Music videos directed by David LaChapelle | Number-one singles in Ireland | Number-one singles in the United Kingdom