You Make Me Feel...
"You Make Me Feel..." is a song recorded by American synthpop band Cobra Starship with guest vocals by American pop singer Sabi. It was the first single released from their fourth studio album, Night Shades. The song was released digitally through iTunes on May 10, 2011. The song is a dance-pop, electropop song and it talks about looking for a soul mate in the club. It received mixed reviews from most music critics: some of them thought that the song was "catchy and happy,” but at the same time they criticized it for being too "faceless and empty.” Commercially, the song reached No. 1 in New Zealand and the Top 10 in Australia, Canada, Hungary, Japan, and the United States.
Background
After the success of the single "Good Girls Go Bad", which was their most successful single on the charts, Cobra Starship began to record what would be their fourth studio album. "You Make Me Feel..." was released before the album finish and it served as the first single from the album entitled "Night Shades". It was released on May 10, 2011 and features American pop singer/rapper Sabi. The singer/actress turned rapper first came to many people's attention after Britney Spears gave her a spot on her track " Beautiful".Composition
"You Make Me Feel" was written by Steve Mac and Ina Wroldsen and produced by Mac. The song finds Gabe Saporta singing of looking for his soul mate.
"Obviously, some of my personal drama was about feeling alone, and feeling like I was searching the world for the right person". "And one of the things we want for this song and this record – even though it has personal stuff in it – is to be something everyone can relate to, and I think that the concept of people trying to find the right person is something that's universal."
The song is written in common time maintaining a tempo of 126 beats per minute. The song is set in the key of B-flat major.
Backed up by a simple beat and minimal synth arrangement, Saporta sings about finding the girl he’s been missing: "Girl, I’ve been all over the world looking for you / I’m known for taking what I think I deserve, and you’re overdue." Sabi, provides the chorus and the "la-la-la-la-la" melody that carries the song as Saporta sings "You make me feel that…," but never quite finishes the thought. According to Monica Herrera, a writer from Rolling Stone, the song has a riff that suggests Pink's "Raise Your Glass".
Critical reception
The song received mixed reviews from most contemporary music critics. Scott Shetler from "Pop Crush" gave the song 8 out of 10 stars, and wrote that the song "is more understated than some of the group’s previous work, but it feels like a potential summer hit." Bill Lamb, writer of About.com, gave to the song 3 stars out of 5, praising the "catchy hook" and the "upbeat, happy melody", but criticized the track, calling it a "bland hit factory pop" and "faceless". He ended up the review, stating that "it's certainly catchy, but it is all rather bland and empty as well." The Idolator Staff agreed, writing that "On the one hand, it’s a totally serviceable dance track, and Sabi’s vocals are much stronger here than in her weak, cringe-inducing rap on " Beautiful", but on the other hand, we’ve heard this synth hook before from other artists and frankly, it sounds like Cobra Starship may be trying too hard to keep up with the Euro dance trend while totally abandoning their old sound." Monica Herrera wrote for Rolling Stone that "Saporta drops weak pickup lines, but guest diva Sabi calls herself 'the baddest baby in the atmosphere,' and is right."A positive review came from Alternative Press editor Aubrey Welbers, who wrote that the "catchy, calculated hit is a bona fide jam for lonely partygoers looking for dance floor romance." In most of the reviews from the album, including the Allmusic and Entertainment Weekly reviews, the song was picked as one of the album's best tracks. Megan Rozell from Blogcritics gave the song a positive review, writing that the song "allows for sing-along lyrics, beautiful words from Sabi, and pop sounds that allow the listener to let loose and dance."
Chart performance
On July 4, 2011, the song debuted at No. 1 in New Zealand, becoming Cobra Starship's first chart topper and second Top 3 single there, after "Good Girls Go Bad". The song also reached the Top 3 in Australia, debuting at No. 31 on August 28 and climbing to No. 3 on October 2, staying on the chart for 21 weeks in total. In the United States, the song peaked at No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the band's highest-charting single alongside "Good Girls Go Bad" and their second Top 10 single, as well as peaking at No. 4 on Billboard's pop chart and No. 13 on its Hot Digital Songs chart. It has sold over 2,000,000 downloads in the US alone. In Canada, the single reached a peak of No. 4 on the Canadian Hot 100. In every aforementioned country, the song went Platinum or multi-Platinum, receiving its highest certification in Australia.In Europe, the song debuted at No. 16 on the UK Singles Chart and No. 4 on the UK Dance Chart. It was slightly more popular in Scotland—peaking at No. 14 on the Scottish Singles Chart—and Ireland, where it reached No. 12. In mainland Europe, the song reached the Top 10 in Hungary, reaching No. 8, and charted within the Top 20 of Belgium, Finland, and France. It was a moderate chart hit in Denmark, the Netherlands, and Switzerland, reaching No. 40, No. 58, and No. 47, respectively. Elsewhere, the song charted at No. 21 in Brazil and No. 10 in Japan.
Music video
The music video premiered on June 28, 2011 on MTV. The video's main theme is a "magic photobooth" that once it takes someone's picture, it tells how said person is feeling.Background
Saporta explained to MTV News the concept of the music video:
"It's a song about a guy and a girl, and the concept is, at the beginning of the video, I find one of Sabi's photos, and she's feeling the same way that I'm feeling, which is incomplete without each other," he said. "We're sharing feelings, and that's what I realize, so I'm like, 'Wow, I want to find this girl.' So I look all over the world for her, and our world is the nightclub. The video is about the photo booth. It's just not any photo booth; it's a photo booth that tells you how you're really feeling. That's the main star of the video."
Synopsis
At the beginning of the music video, Gabe gets his picture taken in the photobooth, and when he's grabbing it, a picture of Sabi appears to be stuck in the slit. Both picture's feelings read "Incomplete". Then Gabe makes his goal of the night to find the girl in the picture. While this is happening, Victoria Asher is seen dragging different people into the bathroom, these people including twins and a girl, hence her feeling being "kinky". Gabe goes around the club trying to find Sabi and stumbling upon different people who embrace him in hugs or handshakes. Sabi is seen dancing around the club when her part of the song comes on. Nate Novarro instead of dancing, orders a burger through Vicky-T's iPad; his feeling being "munchy". During the video, all drinks get taken away from Ryland Blackinton, hence why on his picture he's feeling "thirsty". When Gabe finally finds Sabi, they give each other a look of sheer happiness, before they both enter the photobooth. The lights go off, and at the moment they go back on, Gabe and Sabi seem to be kissing. They take a new picture together, and it reads "Complete", thus ending the video.The music video also includes cameos by lookalike DJs Andrew and Andrew, Brooklyn hip-hop duo Ninjasonik, photographer Nicky Digital, MTV News correspondent James Montgomery, Elle Magazine creative director Joe Zee, JustJared.com's own Jared Eng, Jersey Shore's The Situation, singer Wynter Gordon, actress Zelda Williams and her late father, comedian and actor Robin Williams.