"Candyman" is a song by American singer
Christina Aguilera from the second disc of her fifth studio album, Back to Basics (2006). "Candyman" was planned to be released as the second single from Back to Basics; however,
RCA Records decided to release "
Hurt" instead. Subsequently, the track was released on November 19, 2006, as the third single from the album. "Candyman" is described as a
pop and
jazz song that imitates
swing music whose lyrics are about sex.
"Candyman" received praise for its musical style while some criticized the sexual references. Commercially, the single peaked within the top 10 in Australia, Canada, Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, New Zealand and Romania, as well as the top 20 in Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Germany, Ireland, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. In the United States, it peaked at number 25 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart and was
certified Platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America for selling one million copies in the country. "Candyman" is also certified Gold in seven additional countries.
"Candyman" was described as a
pop song by Leah Greenblatt from Entertainment Weekly;[1]Stylus Magazine's Thomas Inskeep opined that it imitated
swing music,[2] while Joan Anderman from The Boston Globe commented that Perry and Aguilera attempted to modernize early 20th century pop and
blues "only to end up imitating the
Andrews Sisters,"[3] and Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani characterized the song as standard
jazz and blues.[4] "Candyman" is composed on the
key of
E major. The song has a moderate
tempo of 172 beats per minute. Aguilera's vocals on the song span two octaves from the low-note of
G3 to the high-note of
G5.[5] The song opens and concludes with the lyrics, "Tarzan and Jane were swingin' on a vine / Sippin' from a bottle of vodka double-wine", which was credited as a sample used from "Tarzan & Jane Swingin' on a Vine" from the 1998 album Run To Cadence With U.S. Marines.[6] Lyrically, "Candyman" talks about sex;[7]Jenny Eliscu for Rolling Stone quoted the lyrics "He's a one-stop shop / Makes the panties drop" and deemed it "nasty".[8] Sputnikmusic's Amanda Murray described its lyrics as "dumb and cheekily vulgar".[9]
Jim McMillen played the
trombone, while Ray Herrmann and Glen Berger performed the
saxophone, and Chris Tedesco played the
trumpet. Perry also played the piano,
mellotron,
bass, and served as the musical director. Nathan Wetherington played the
drums.[6] According to Aguilera and Perry, the song was a tribute to the Andrews Sisters' song, "
Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy".[10]
Release
"Candyman" was planned to be released as the second single from Back to Basics in late 2006.[11] In July 2006, Aguilera told Seventeen that "Candyman" would be released as the follow-up single to "
Ain't No Other Man".[12] However,
RCA Records chose "
Hurt" to be released as the second single off the album; therefore, "Candyman" was released as the third.[11] The song was sent to
contemporary hit and
urban contemporary radio stations in the United States on February 27, 2007.[13] In Germany, the single was released for
digital download on April 6, 2007.[14] One day later, "Candyman" was released as a
CD single in France[15] and Germany.[16] On April 10, the song was available as a CD in the United States.[17] A digital EP was released via
iTunes Stores in European countries consisting of Belgium,[18] France,[19] Germany,[20] Spain,[21] and Sweden.[22] On the same day, the digital version of "Candyman" was released in France.[23] It was also available as a
maxi single there on September 1, 2007.[24] In the United States, a remix EP was released digitally on May 1, 2007.[25]
Critical reception
Billboard called the single "raunchy" and praised Aguilera's vocals, saying that "few popular vocalists could pull off such a laudable feat."[26] Sputnikmusic's Amanda Murray deemed the song as "fun" and reminiscent of the
Spice Girls' "The Lady Is a Vamp" from Spiceworld (1997).[9] Sean Daly from Tampa Bay Times complimented Aguilera's vocals and its "X-rated lyrics".[27]Pittsburgh Post-Gazette's Scott Mervis labelled it "the swingiest single since
Brian Setzer jumped, jived and wailed,"[28] while
Yahoo! Music critic Dan Gennoe called "Candyman" "a good-time 1940s big band romp",[29] and Leah Greenblatt from Entertainment Weekly cited it as one of the few "pop-song highs" in Aguilera's career.[1]
AllMusic's
Stephen Thomas Erlewine selected "Candyman" as one of the two outstanding songs on the second disc of Back to Basics, alongside "Mercy on Me".[7] Lucy Davis for
BBC Music was negative towards the song, writing that it "successfully turns the volume and intensity down from 11 to somewhere like 5."[30] Jenny Eliscu from Rolling Stone criticized "Candyman" as "a dead rip-off" of the Andrews Sisters' "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy".[8] A reviewer from The Guardian disapproved of the "awful creation" and wrote that "the jollier she sounds, the more terrifying it becomes."[31] "Candyman" received a
Grammy Award nomination for
Best Female Pop Vocal Performance at the
2008 Grammy Awards.[32]
Chart performance
In the United States, "Candyman" debuted at number 99 on the
Billboard Hot 100 chart on January 20, 2007.[33] It peaked at number 25 on the chart, becoming Aguilera's fourteenth top 40 single on the Hot 100.[34] On the
Pop Songs chart, the single peaked at number 23 and remained there for a total of seven weeks.[35] "Candyman" also peaked at number 18 on the
Hot Dance Club Songs chart and stayed there ten weeks.[36] It has been certified
platinum by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for selling more than 1,000,000 units in the United States.[37] As of August 2014,
Nielsen SoundScan has reported that "Candyman" has sold in the United States 1,153,000 copies.[38] In Canada, the single peaked at number nine on the
Canadian Hot 100[39] and was certified gold.[40]
In the United Kingdom, "Candyman" peaked at number 17 on the
UK Singles Chart and remained within the top 75 for 20 weeks.[41] Throughout Europe, the single attained the top 25 of most countries, peaking at number 11 in Belgium (Flanders)[42] and Switzerland;[43] number 12 in Denmark,[44] Germany,[45] Ireland[46] and the Netherlands;[47] number 13 in Belgium (Wallonia);[48] number 14 in Austria;[49] and number 24 in Sweden.[50] In Denmark, the single achieved gold certification by
IFPI Denmark.[51] "Candyman" was a commercial hit in Oceania. The single peaked at number two in both Australia and New Zealand.[52][53] In Australia, the song remained in the top ten for 15 weeks[52] and earned platinum certification by the
Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA).[54] In New Zealand, the single also achieved gold certification by the
Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RIANZ).[55]
Music video
The music video for "Candyman" was filmed on January 28, 2007, in an airport hangar in Southern California. It was co-directed by Aguilera and
Matthew Rolston. The video is based on the 1940s
World War II theme.[56] In most of the music video, she dances and sings in three different hair colors: red, blonde and brown, as if she were in a singing trio, a tribute to
The Andrews Sisters. The audience is mostly composed of men in military uniforms, many of whom are singing and dancing.[57] In other shots she appears as the famous biceps-flexing factory worker from
Westinghouse's "
We Can Do It!" poster[11][56] and as
pin-up girlsJudy Garland,
Betty Grable and
Rita Hayworth.[56] The video also features product placement for
Campari.[56][58]Benji Schwimmer, 2006 winner of the American dancing competition So You Think You Can Dance, makes a cameo appearance as Aguilera's GI dance partner. Benji's sister
Lacey Schwimmer also appears in the video as a jitterbugger. Aguilera asked Rolston to co-direct the video with her after he worked with her for a photo shoot for the cover of Rolling Stone. Shooting the sequences of Aguilera as a singing trio took the longest since they had to be shot for each hair color and camera angle, which was computer-controlled for precision. Choreography was carefully arranged so that none of the versions overlapped and the takes could be spliced together. The clip's
color scheme is based on
Technicolor films, focusing on primary colors and bright secondary colors.[56]
Sal Cinquemani for Slant Magazine praised it as the best video for a song from Back to Basics.[11] John Montgomery for MTV News commented on Aguilera's "bad girl" image, writing "though Aguilera's mostly going for glam here, she's also plenty bad, too, swinging her way into some servicemen's heart, coyly sipping on a milkshake and shaking it so hard your even your grandpa had to notice."[59] The video brought Aguilera and Rolston an
MTV Video Music Award nomination for
Best Direction at the
2007 MTV Video Music Awards, but lost to
Justin Timberlake's "
What Goes Around... Comes Around".[60] The video received a
Vevo Certified Award on
YouTube for over 100 million views.[61]
Live performances and covers
Aguilera first performed "Candyman" during a concert held in front of 1,500 fans and invited guests in London on July 20, 2006. The 40-minute concert comprised songs from the then-upcoming Back to Basics and other songs, including "
Lady Marmalade" (2001) and "
Beautiful" (2002).
MTV UK wrote, "The gig reflected the jazz club mood of Christina's new album, with a swinging brass-heavy backing band and fit dancers bounding sexily around the stage".[62] On September 8, 2006, Aguilera performed "Candyman" at
Fashion Rocks in a white sailor suit with cap. The performance included photos of jazz standard artists that appeared on the backdrop.[63] She also performed "Candyman" on Dick Clark's New Year's Rockin' Eve on December 31, 2006,[64] and at the halftime show of the
2007 NBA All-Star Game.[65] The song was included on the setlist of Aguilera's worldwide
Back to Basics Tour.[66] The recording of the performance was included on the video release Back to Basics: Live and Down Under (2008).[67] Aguilera performed "Candyman" again on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in 2013 in military-styled suits in efforts to honor the
US troops.[68]
* Sales figures based on certification alone. ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – RADIO – TOP 100 and insert 200940 into search. Retrieved June 28, 2013.