(You Drive Me) Crazy

This article is about the song by Britney Spears. For the N' Sync song, see U Drive Me Crazy.

"(You Drive Me) Crazy"
A picture of a blonde female standing in front of a black background. She has her hands positioned on her hips, and is smiling. Above her head there are the words "BRITNEY SPEARS" in green, "(YOU DRIVE ME) CRAZY" in orange, and "(THE STOP REMIX!)" in white.
Single by Britney Spears
from the album ...Baby One More Time
B-side "I'll Never Stop Loving You"
Released August 23, 1999 (1999-08-23)
Format
Recorded March 1998 (album version)
May 12, 1999 (The Stop! Remix)
Genre Pop
Length 3:18
Label JIVE
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
Britney Spears singles chronology
"Sometimes"
(1999)
"(You Drive Me) Crazy"
(1999)
"Born to Make You Happy"
(1999)
Music video
"(You Drive Me) Crazy" on YouTube

"(You Drive Me) Crazy" is a song recorded by American singer Britney Spears for her debut studio album, ...Baby One More Time (1999). Written and produced by Max Martin, Per Magnusson and David Kreuger, with additional writing by Jörgen Elofsson and remix by Martin and Rami Yacoub, it was released as the album's third single on August 23, 1999, by JIVE Records. It was remixed for the soundtrack of Drive Me Crazy. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" is a pop song. The song garnered positive reviews from music critics, some of whom praised its simple formula and noted similarities to Spears' debut single, "...Baby One More Time".

"(You Drive Me) Crazy" was a commercial success, and peaked inside the top ten on the singles charts of seventeen countries. In the United Kingdom, it became Spears' third consecutive single to peak inside the top five, while it reached number 10 in the United States' Billboard Hot 100, and peaked at number one in Belgium (Wallonia). An accompanying music video, directed by Nigel Dick, and portrayed Spears as a waitress of a dance club, and performed a highly choreographed dance routine with the other waitresses. The video premiered on MTV's Making the Video special, and featured cameo appearances of actors Melissa Joan Hart and Adrian Grenier. As part of promotion for the song, Spears performed the song at the 1999 MTV Europe Music Awards and 1999 Billboard Music Awards. It has also been included on five of her concert tours.

Background

Before recording her debut album, Spears had originally envisioned it in style of "Sheryl Crow music, but younger [and] more adult contemporary".[1] However, the singer agreed with her label's appointment of producers, who had the objective to target a teenage audience at the time.[1] She flew to Cheiron Studios in Stockholm, Sweden, where half of the album was recorded from March to April 1998, with producers Max Martin, Denniz Pop and Rami Yacoub, among others.[1] "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was written by Jörgen Elofsson, while song production and additional songwriting was done by Martin, Per Magnusson and David Kreuger.[2] Spears recorded the vocals for the song in March 1998, at Cheiron Studios in Stockholm, Sweden.[2] It was also mixed at Cheiron Studios by Martin.[2] Esbjörn Öhrwall and Johan Carlberg played the guitar, while bass guitar was done by Thomas Lindberg.[2] Keyboards and programming was done by Kreuger, and additional keyboards by Magnusson.[2] Background vocals were provided by Jeanette Söderholm, Martin, Yacoub and THE FANCHOIR, formed by Chatrin Nyström, Jeanette Stenhammar, Johanna Stenhammar, Charlotte Björkman and Therese Ancker.[2] In May 1999, Martin and Spears went to the Battery Studios in New York City, New York, to re-record the vocals of the track,[3] due to the fact that a remixed version called "The Stop! Remix" was going to be included on the original motion picture soundtrack of the film Drive Me Crazy (1999).[4] "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was released as a remix package as the third single from ...Baby One More Time on August 23, 1999.[5]

Composition

"(You Drive Me) Crazy"
A 20-second sample of the R&B oriented chorus.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

"(You Drive Me) Crazy" is a pop song.[6] The song's composition follows a simple formula and infuses edgy synthesized instruments, including a recurring cowbell,[6][7] and having a roughly similar sound to Spears' debut single "...Baby One More Time" (1999).[8] According to the sheet music published at Musicnotes.com by Universal Music Publishing Group, "(You Drive Me) Crazy" is composed in the key of C minor and runs through a moderately slow dance beat infused metronome of 92 beats per minute.[9] Spears' vocals were deemed as heavily processed when compared to the ones of her previous single, "Sometimes".[10] Her vocal range spans over an octave, from the low-key of G3 to the high-note of D5.[9] The song's primary chord progression is Cm–A-G (vi-IV-III), with a few deviations.[9]

Critical reception

The song garnered positive reviews from music critics. Kyle Anderson for MTV considered "(You Drive Me) Crazy" as "a similar-sounding anthem [to '...Baby One More Time'] with some streamlined rock guitar taking center stage (there's even a solo). It's catchy enough."[11] Spence D. of IGN considered "(You Drive Me) Crazy" a "[Max] Martin's glossy grown-up pop" song,[12] while Caryn Ganz of Rolling Stone called "(You Drive Me) Crazy" a "further hit" from ...Baby One More Time, along with "From the Bottom of My Broken Heart" and "Sometimes".[13] Music critic Walt Mueller wrote "When Spears starts to sing on this one, she sounds a lot like Janet Jackson."[14] Christy Lemire of the Associated Press noted that the song and "Stronger" are "so lamely feel-good" tracks that they "could have been the theme song to a 'Karate Kid' sequel."[15] Evan Sawdey of PopMatters called it a "lightly dorky" song,[16] and Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic deemed it as a "fluffy dance-pop at its best."[17] In a list compiled by Sara Anderson of AOL Radio, "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was ranked ninth in a list of Spears' best songs.[18] During the 2001 BMI Pop Awards, "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was honored with the award of Most Performed BMI Song.[19]

Chart performance

Image of a blond female performer. She is turning her back to the camera, near the end of the stage. She is wearing black pants and a black top with long sleeves, showing her midriff. In front of her, a female dancer is climbing into a pole. A crowd of people clapping, screaming and taking pictures stands can be seen in the audience.
Spears performing "(You Drive Me) Crazy" during the Dream Within a Dream Tour, 2001.

"(You Drive Me) Crazy" was a commercial success. The song peaked at number two on the European Hot 100 Singles, being held off the top spot by R. Kelly's "If I Could Turn Back the Hands of Time".[20] In the United Kingdom, it was Spears' third consecutive single to reach a top five position.[21] The track debuted and peaked at number five on the chart issue dated October 2, 1999, and stayed on the chart for a total of eleven weeks.[22] It was eventually certified Silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), for shipments over 200,000 units.[23] According to The Official Charts Company, "(You Drive Me) Crazy" is Spears' seventh best-selling single in the United Kingdom, with sales over 275,000 physical units.[24] The song peaked at number two in France and number four in Germany, being certified Gold in both countries for shipping over 250,000 units.[25][26] It also peaked at number one in Belgium (Wallonia), finishing the year of 1999 as the 17th best-selling single.[25][27] "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was also able to peak inside the top five in Belgium (Flanders), Finland, Ireland, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, and Switzerland, while reaching top ten positions in Denmark and Italy.[25] Later in 2012, the song managed to peak at number 65 in Czech Republic due to high airplay.[28]

In the United States, "(You Drive Me) Crazy" peaked at number ten on Billboard Hot 100 on the chart issue dated November 13, 1999, and became Spears' second single to peak inside the top ten in the country.[29] On the same week, it peaked at number four on the Pop Songs component chart.[29] On the chart compiled by RPM magazine, the song peaked at number three in Canada.[30] However, on the Canadian Hot 100 compiled by Nielsen Soundscan, it peaked at number 13.[29] The latter revealed that "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was the 44th best-selling single of 1999 in the country.[31] The track peaked at number five in New Zealand, but failed to reach the top ten in Australia, where it peaked at number 12 on the chart issue dated November 12, 1999.[25] However, the single was later certified Platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA),[32] and was one of the best-selling singles of 2000 in the country.[33] "(You Drive Me) Crazy" performed poorly in Japan, where it peaked at number 80, and stayed on the chart for two weeks only. Despite the low sales, it is Spears' 12th best-selling CD release in the country.[34]

Music video

Spears portraying a waitress of a dance club in the music video.

The song's accompanying music video was directed by Nigel Dick.[35] Spears conceptualized the video's treatment, and explained during an interview with MTV in 1999 that "it would be cool to be in a club, and we're dorky waitresses, and we break out and start dancing."[35] At the time, Spears expected that the video would take her "to the next level".[35] To promote the film Drive Me Crazy, actors Adrian Grenier and Melissa Joan Hart were invited to make cameo appearances in the video, since the song had been included on the film's soundtrack, however, Grenier did not want to participate.[35] Dick commented on the issue, saying, "I was given instructions to ring him up and make sure he appeared in the video. I said, 'You know what, Adrian, I just think it would be great for your career, and Britney's a great girl and she's fun to work with.' Eventually he came around."[35] Dick also revealed that he was impressed by the singer's work ethic, adding that she "came to the set completely rehearsed."[35] The music video premiered on MTV's Making the Video special that aired on July 18, 1999.[36]

The video opens with Spears as a waitress of a dance club.[35] She then goes with other waitresses to their dressing room, where they finish their make-up and change costumes. Spears, now wearing a green sparkly outfit, goes through the corridor to the dance floor with her friends, and starts to perform a high profile choreography, including a chair dance sequence referencing Janet Jackson's "Miss You Much" video, which Spears also referenced in live performances of the song on the "Crazy 2K Tour".[35] Scenes of Spears singing in front of a shining orange sign with the word "CRAZY" are also seen throughout the video.[35] On August 24, 1999, the music video debuted at number four on Total Request Live.[37] It is the longest running by a female artist on TRL, staying on the top ten for seventy-three days.[18] The video was nominated on the category of Best Dance Video on the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards; it lost, however, to Jennifer Lopez's "Waiting for Tonight" (1999).[38] An alternate footage of the video can be found on the DVD of Spears first compilation album Greatest Hits: My Prerogative (2004).[39] Jennifer Vineyard of MTV commented, "the alternate audio gives the feel of Spears singing the song as a round, where the beat is in sync but one layer of her vocals is just slightly ahead of the other."[39]

Live performances and covers

Spears performing "(You Drive Me) Crazy", as the encore of her Las Vegas residency show, Britney: Piece of Me.

As part of promotion for "(You Drive Me) Crazy"'s release as a single, Spears performed it at the 1999 MTV Europe Music Awards[40] and at the 1999 Billboard Music Awards.[41] It was also performed on five concert tours, the first being the ...Baby One More Time Tour (1999). The show began with a dance introduction by Spears' dancers among smoke effects.[42] She appeared shortly after at the top of the staircase wearing a hot pink vinyl tube top and white vinyl pants with pink knee patches.[42] During the 2000 leg of the tour, entitled Crazy 2k Tour, Spears changed the opening sequence of the show; the show started with a skit in which the dancers came out of lockers and stayed in the stage until a bell rang. They all sat until a female teacher voice started calling their names. After the teacher called Spears, she emerged at the top of the staircase in a cloud of smoke, wearing a top and white stretch pants, to perform a short dance mix of "...Baby One More Time".[43] She then entered one of the lockers and appeared in another one on the opposite side of the stage to perform "(You Drive Me) Crazy", which included a chair dance sequence referencing Janet Jackson's "Miss You Much" music video that ended with Spears saying "Is that the end?", quoting Jackson's phrase from the video.[44] The song was once again performed in a dance-oriented form on the Oops!... I Did It Again World Tour (2000),[45] while in 2001's Dream Within a Dream Tour, the performance featured Spears being captured by her dancers.[46] "(You Drive Me) Crazy" was also performed on The Onyx Hotel Tour (2004). For the tour, the song was remixed with elements of latin percussion.[47] "Crazy" would not be performed by Spears for another nine years until it was included on the setlist of her Las Vegas residency show Britney: Piece of Me.[48]

In 2003, American musician Richard Cheese covered "(You Drive Me) Crazy" and included it on his album Tuxicity.[49] American pop band Selena Gomez & the Scene performed a homage to Spears during their 2011 We Own the Night Tour. They performed "(You Drive Me) Crazy" along with a medley of hits that included "...Baby One More Time", "Oops!... I Did It Again", "I'm a Slave 4 U", "Toxic" and "Hold It Against Me", mixed similar to the Chris Cox Megamix included in Greatest Hits: My Prerogative.[50] In the 2012 Glee episode "Britney 2.0", the characters of Marley Rose and Jake Puckerman performed a medley of the track with Aerosmith's "Crazy" (1993).[51]

Track listings

  • European CD single
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] — 3:16
  2. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] {Instrumental} — 3:16
  • Australian and European CD maxi single
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] — 3:16
  2. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] {Instrumental} — 3:16
  3. "I'll Never Stop Loving You" — 3:41
  • Japanese CD maxi single
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] — 3:20
  2. "I'll Never Stop Loving You" — 3:44
  3. "...Baby One More Time" (Davidson Ospina Chronicles Dub) — 6:34
  4. "Sometimes" (Soul Solution Drum Dub) — 3:32
  5. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] {Instrumental} — 3:19
  6. "Sometimes" (Thunderpuss 2000 Mix) — 8:03

  • UK CD maxi single
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] — 3:16
  2. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [Spacedust Dark Dub] — 9:15
  3. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [Spacedust Club Mix] — 7:20
  • Cassette single
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix!] — 3:16
  2. "I'll Never Stop Loving You" — 3:41
  • 12" vinyl
  1. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [The Stop Remix] — 3:16
  2. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [Jazzy Jim's Hip-Hop Mix] — 3:40
  3. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [LP Version] — 3:17
  4. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [Pimp Juice's Souled Out 4 Tha Suits Vocal Mix] — 6:30
  5. "(You Drive Me) Crazy" [Mike Ski Dub] — 6:31

Credits and personnel

Credits for "(You Drive Me) Crazy" are taken from the single's liner notes.[52]

Technical
Personnel

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (1999-2000) Peak
position
scope="row"Australia (ARIA)[25] 12
scope="row"Austria (Ö3 Austria Top 40)[53] 10
scope="row"Belgium (Ultratop 50 Flanders)[54] 3
scope="row"Belgium (Ultratop 50 Wallonia)[55] 1
Canadian RPM Singles Chart[30] 3
Denmark (Tracklisten)[56] 9
Europe (Music & Media)[20] 2
scope="row"Finland (Suomen virallinen lista)[57] 3
scope="row"France (SNEP)[58] 2
scope="row"Germany (Official German Charts)[26] 4
Ireland (IRMA)[59] 3
Italy (FIMI)[60] 9
Japan International (Oricon)[34] 1
scope="row"Netherlands (Dutch Top 40)[61] 2
scope="row"New Zealand (Recorded Music NZ)[62] 5
scope="row"Norway (VG-lista)[63] 2
scope="row"Spain (PROMUSICAE)[64] 1
scope="row"Sweden (Sverigetopplistan)[65] 2
scope="row"Switzerland (Schweizer Hitparade)[66] 4
scope="row"UK Singles (Official Charts Company)[22] 5
scope="row"US Billboard Hot 100[67] 10
scope="row"US Mainstream Top 40 (Billboard)[68] 4
Chart (2012) Peak
position
scope="row"Czech Republic (Rádio Top 100)[28] 65

Year-end charts

Chart (1999) Position
Belgian Singles Chart (Flanders)[69] 27
Belgian Singles Chart (Wallonia)[27] 17
Canadian Singles Chart[31] 44
French Singles Chart[70] 46
New Zealand Singles Chart[71] 21
Chart (2000) Position
Australian Singles Chart[33] 41
French Singles Chart[72] 63
German Singles Chart[73] 37
New Zealand Singles Chart[74] 35
Swedish Singles Chart[75] 20
Swiss Singles Chart[76] 36

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Australia (ARIA)[32] Platinum 70,000
Belgium (BEA)[77] Platinum 50,000
France (SNEP)[78] Gold 409,000[79]
Germany (BVMI)[80] Gold 250,000
New Zealand (RMNZ)[81] Gold 7,500
Sweden (GLF)[82] Platinum 30,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[23] Silver 286,000[83]

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone
xunspecified figures based on certification alone

Release history

Country Date Format Label
Austria September 13, 1999[84] CD single BMG
Germany
Switzerland
United States[85] September 28, 1999 12" JIVE
Japan[86] September 29, 1999 CD single Sony

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Notes

  • Bennett, Andy; Peterson, Richard A. (2004). Music scenes: local, translocal and virtual. Vanderbilt University Press. ISBN 978-0-8265-1451-6. 
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