"What Do You Mean?" is a song by Canadian singer
Justin Bieber. It was released on August 28, 2015 by
Def Jam as the lead single from his fourth studio album Purpose (2015). The song was produced by MdL and co-produced by Bieber.
It was featured in several year-end lists of best songs of 2015. Commercially, the song topped the charts in several countries, including Canada, Ireland, New Zealand, and Norway. In Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom, "What Do You Mean?" was Bieber's first number-one single. The song's music video features Bieber in bed with a young woman,
Xenia Deli, and masked men kidnapping them, as well as an appearance from actor
John Leguizamo. Since its release Bieber has mentioned that the song is about his relationship with
Selena Gomez.[2]
Background
Following the release of the
EDM track "
Where Are Ü Now" (2015), where Bieber collaborated with
Skrillex and
Diplo for their project
Jack Ü and achieving worldwide success and acclaim with it, the singer announced "What Do You Mean?" as the first single from his then-upcoming album on July 28, 2015, on On Air With Ryan Seacrest.[3] While he was there, his manager,
Scooter Braun, made Seacrest a promotional sign for the single to hold and suggested he should put the photo on his
Instagram account. To further promote the song's release, Braun contacted several celebrities who started counting down the days until the release,[4] among them
Mariah Carey,
Ed Sheeran,
Ariana Grande,
Big Sean,
Alanis Morissette,
Meghan Trainor,
Britney Spears,
Hilary Duff,
Little Mix,
Chris Martin,
Carly Rae Jepsen, and many others.[5] During an interview with
Ryan Seacrest, he described it as fun, summery, and amazing. Regarding its lyrics, he commented, "Well, girls are often just flip-floppy. They say something and they mean something else. So what do you mean? I don't really know, that's why I'm asking." Later, on August 19, 2015, Bieber direct-messaged different lyrics from the song to 49 randomly selected Twitter followers.[3] As explained by Billboard's Jason Lipshutz, Each message included a clock animation with a different time that corresponded to the lyric's placement in the song, and Beliebers spent Wednesday collectively piecing together the upcoming single's lyrics in order.[4] On August 5, 2015, Bieber presented the song to radio professionals at an
iHeartMedia event.[6]
Release
The song was released on August 28, 2015,[7] and was serviced to
contemporary hit radio on September 1, 2015.[8] On October 16, 2015, it was revealed that a remix of the song with
Ariana Grande would be made available if fans pre-ordered the album on
iTunes.[9]
On January 8, 2016, the official remix by
Alison Wonderland was released on online.
Composition
"What Do You Mean?" was written by Justin Bieber,
Jason "Poo Bear" Boyd and Mason Levy.[10] It was produced by MdL and co-produced by Bieber. It was initially speculated by the media that
Skrillex produced "What Do You Mean?". However, a spokesperson for Bieber confirmed in an interview for Rolling Stone that the song was produced by Bieber, and MdL who had previously collaborated with the singer on his single "
Boyfriend" (2012).[11] Written in the key of
A♭ major, it has an upbeat
tempo of 125
beats per minute. Bieber's vocal range spans from the low note of
F3 to the high note of
G4.[12] It is a
pop[13] and
tropical house song.[14][15][16]Downtempo with hints of dark
electropop.[17]
During the song, Bieber uses a
breathy vocal, which was considered smooth and soulful.[10] The production contains flute instrumentation, looped vocal samples, piano chords, tropical synths,[11] bass and slick beat elements with the sound of a clock ticking.[6] Gil Kaufman of
MTV News wrote that the track contains a slippery flute-like trill over a spare tick-tock island groove and a super chill vibe, and is a kind of sequel to
Skrillex and
Diplo's "
Where Are Ü Now", which featured Bieber.[18]
Lyrically, "What Do You Mean?" talks about looking for romantic clarity and not being able to figure out the opposite sex,[11][19] with Bieber singing in the chorus, "What do you mean/When you nod your head yes, but you wanna say no?/What do you mean/When you don't want me to move, but you tell me to go?".[11]
Ariana Grande remix
A remix with American singer
Ariana Grande was released on October 16, 2015, and would be available to listen to if fans had already pre-ordered the album on
iTunes before November 13, 2015 (the album's release date). The fans who did not pre-order the album before the 13th would not be able to listen to it fully on iTunes and Apple Music but could listen to a short sample of the song via iTunes and through a third-party source online.[9]
Critical reception
USA Today's Carly Mallenbaum, who heard the song in early August, described it as a "catchy dance track for the club".[6] Similarly, a writer for The Daily Beast said, "['What Do You Mean?' is] pretty damn catchy; a slow-burner that, like that collab, swells into a Bieber banger".[20] Gil Kaufman of MTV News also called it a "banger", explaining, "the track is classic JB: seductive, earnest, pleading and just the right amount of sexy".[18]Idolator's Mike Wass praised the song's "instantly memorable chorus", and added, "Vocally, [Bieber] has never sounded better".[21]Digital Spy's Amy Davidson named it "the perfect pop track as well as a skewed love song for millennials."[19] Andrew Unterberger of Spin opined the song was "really quite delightful".[22] Sean Fitz-Gerald of New York magazine was also positive, noting that it "sounds like what would happen if you took
Steve Aoki's alarm clock to a tropical beach resort. (In other words, electro-catchy as hell.)"[23] Jason Lipshutz of Billboard gave the song a four-out-of-five-stars rating and commented that it was "positioned as [Bieber's] huge comeback bid", adding: "The song synthesizes the positive components of 'Where Are U Now' and presents something warmer and friendlier, but no less nuanced or impressive".[24]NME's reviewer named it "the perfect pop confection: light as air and catchy as hell, allowing us to glimpse the vulnerability behind the megastar façade as Biebs grappled endearingly with the mysteries of womankind."[25]
Andy Kellman of
AllMusic selected the song as one of the album's highlights, citing the song and "Sorry" as tracks that "showed him making a deeper connection with his material and that, yes, he was progressing from performer to artist."[15] In a similar mode, Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly cited both songs and "Where Are Ü Now" for being "stripped down for maximum aerodynamics, the vocals mentholated and sweetened with a brushstroke of bass here, a snake-charmer synth line there."[26] Brad Nelson of Pitchfork praised the song and "Sorry" for being "vivid tropical house tracks that sound like sunlight drifting down through palm fronds. Bieber's voice often resembles a breath contorted inexpressively through notes; here, he lets it weightlessly fall through textures. They are his best performances to date, allowing him to flex a rhythmic playfulness without communicating an iota of legible emotion."[14] Sheldon Pearce of Complex called it "the album's spiritual centerpiece,"[27] while Janine Schaults of
Consequence of Sound selected it as one of the album's essential tracks.[28] Josh Duboff of Vanity Fair considered it "breezy and low-key, like "Where Are Ü Now?" with 35 percent less propulsion." He also found it to be "vaguely reminiscent of
OMI's omnipresent '
Cheerleader'," and that "Bieber sounds more relaxed and confident than perhaps ever before on the track."[29] Nick Messitte of
Forbes agreed with the "Cheerleader" comparison, noting that it has "the intersection of the mellow and the danceable, the four-on-the-floor with the smooth."[30]
Consequence of Sound wrote in a positive review "Skrillex serves as producer of this slow burner, providing loops of tropical-flavored house beats to complement Bieber's delicate croons."[31]
In the United States, "What Do You Mean?" debuted at number 28 on the
Mainstream Top 40 chart dated September 12, after three days of release, with a radio audience of 20 million.[38] On the chart dated October 24, after earning "Greatest Gainer" honors for two consecutive weeks, it rose from 3 to 1 on the
Mainstream Top 40 chart, becoming Bieber's first number-one song on the Pop Songs chart.[39] The song debuted at number one on the
Billboard Hot 100 issued for September 17, 2015, replacing
The Weeknd's "
Can't Feel My Face" at the top of the chart for one week.[37][40] It marked Bieber's first number-one single and seventh top 10 hit in the United States, and was also the 23rd song to begin at number one in the Hot 100's 57-year history.[37] Additionally, the single's debut made Bieber the youngest male artist to enter atop of the chart, and the youngest artist since
Fantasia's "
I Believe" (2004).[37] The track also debuted at number one on the
Billboard Hot Digital Songs chart, selling 337,000 copies in the week ending September 3, 2015, marking Bieber's second number one single on the chart, following "Boyfriend" which sold 521,000 in its debut week.[37] In its second week, "What Do You Mean?" stayed at the top of the Hot Digital Songs chart with sales of 159,000 copies, however, it descended to number three on the Hot 100, with a decrease of 30% in overall activity,[41] but rebounded to the runner-up spot the following week and stayed as the best-selling song with 128,000 downloads.[42]
On the chart dated December 5, 2015, after the release of Purpose, the song ascended from 6 to 5 on the Hot 100. That week, Bieber's "Sorry" and "Love Yourself" (a track from Purpose, which debuted on the chart, after selling 140,000 downloads) were at number two and four, respectively, which made the singer only the third artist to have three singles inside the chart's top five (the others being
The Beatles in 1964 and
50 Cent in 2005). Additionally, the same week, Bieber had 17 songs on the Hot 100 simultaneously, breaking the record previously held by
The Beatles and
Drake.[43] On the chart dated 6 February 2016, the song spent a 21st consecutive week inside the Hot 100's top ten, tying with
Nicki Minaj's "
Starships" and
Maroon 5's "
Sugar" for the most weeks a song has logged in the Hot 100's top 10 from its debut.[44] The record was surpassed later by Bieber's "
Love Yourself", which spent 23 consecutive weeks in the top ten since its debut.[45] As of February 2016, "What Do You Mean?" has sold over 1,600,000 copies in the United States.[46]
In Bieber's native Canada, "What Do You Mean?" debuted at number one on the
Canadian Hot 100,[47] with sales of 48,000 copies, becoming the biggest first-week sales total of 2015 at the time and the highest since Eminem released "
The Monster" (2013). It also broke the streaming record in Canada, with 3.1 million streams in its first week.[48] Both records were later surpassed by
Adele's "
Hello", which sold 140,000 copies and was streamed 4.79 million times in its first week.[49] "What Do You Mean?" marked Bieber's second number-one single in the country, following 2012's "
Boyfriend".[50] After six consecutive weeks at number one in Canada, it was briefly knocked off the top spot by another Canadian singer,
The Weeknd, with his single "
The Hills", but returned for a seventh week at number one, being replaced by Adele's "Hello" the following week.[51][52][53]
Europe and Oceania
In the United Kingdom, "What Do You Mean?" debuted at the top of the
UK Singles Chart for the week ending September 10, 2015, with a combined sales total of 84,000 units. It surpassed his previous best sales week of 55,000, which "Boyfriend" had sold in April 2012, and marked Bieber's first chart-topping song in Britain. The track broke the highest first-week streams record in the country with 3.2 million streams, surpassing the stream tally of 2.03 million set by
One Direction's "
Drag Me Down".[54] In its second week, the song descended to number two, however, it broke the country's all-time streaming record, with 3.87 million streams in seven days, later surpassed by
Adele's "
Hello" (which streamed 7.32 million times in November 2015, almost doubling the record).[55][56] After three weeks since its release, the song remained as the most streamed track in the country and returned to the number one spot for another two weeks.[57][58] On October 2, the song was knocked off the top spot by
Sam Smith's "
Writing's on the Wall", but a week later, it returned to the number one spot for another two weeks. This means that it has spent five non-consecutive weeks at number one in the UK Singles Chart.[59] Bieber became only the fourth person to have the same single reach number one on the
UK Singles Chart on three separate occasions. The other songs to top the chart three separate times are
Frankie Laine's "
I Believe",
Guy Mitchell's "
Singing the Blues" and
Pharrell Williams' "
Happy".[60][61] "What Do You Mean?" was the ninth best-selling single of 2015 in the UK with combined sales of 988,000 copies.[62]
In Australia, "What Do You Mean" debuted atop the
ARIA Singles Chart on September 5, becoming Bieber's first number-one single on the chart.[63] The song spent four consecutive weeks on top of the chart, becoming the second-longest running chart-topping track for 2015 and gaining a platinum certification from the
Australian Recording Industry Association.[64][65] On October 3, Bieber was knocked off the top by
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis's "
Downtown".[66] "What Do You Mean" also debuted at the top of the charts in both New Zealand and Ireland, becoming his first number-one single in both countries. It spent seven consecutive weeks at number one in Ireland, and eight consecutive weeks at number one in New Zealand.[67][68]
Music video
A lyric video for "What Do You Mean?", directed by Laban and featuring skateboarders
Ryan Sheckler and Chelsea Castro, was released on August 28, 2015.[18] The
music video, directed by
Brad Furman and starring
John Leguizamo and
Xenia Deli, premiered on August 30, 2015, following the
2015 MTV Video Music Awards.[69] As of July 2023, the video has amassed over 2.2 billion views on
YouTube, making it one of the 60 most viewed music videos on the site.[70]
Synopsis
The video starts off with a man (played by
John Leguizamo) waiting at a stop sign in front of a motel in the rain. A dark hooded figure (revealed to be
Justin Bieber) walks to the man. It is realized that Bieber is in debt to him, and then gives him money and is promised to do one job: protect a girl (played by
Xenia Deli), who is his love interest, as Bieber then walks away. As the song begins, it cuts to a neon-lighted hotel room, where the girl that was mentioned earlier is. Bieber knocks on the door, is let in, and they end up
having sex. As Bieber sings the second verse of the song, a group of masked men burst in. They tie, then kidnap the two. It then cuts to the pair tied up in an abandoned warehouse. They eventually use a lighter to burn the rope and escape. When the masked men discover they've escaped they chase after them. They open a door, only to find themselves peering at the road below. With the men nearing, Bieber jumps out, then the girl. They land safely on an inflatable mat. Leguizamo reveals himself to be the leader of the masked men, as he's greeted by Bieber. They're now in an underground skating party, as Bieber sings the rest of the song. The video ends with Bieber standing alone in the dark, in the skatepark.[71]
Purpose: The Movement version
A second music video was released on November 14, 2015, part of a series of short films commemorating the release of the album, entitled "
Purpose: The Movement".[72] The short music video, like the video for "Sorry", features the dancers from
ReQuest Dance Crew and The Royal Family dance crew, and was also directed and choreographed by Parris Goebel.[73]
* Sales figures based on certification alone. ‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. † Streaming-only figures based on certification alone.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – RADIO – TOP 100 and insert 201546 into search. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Digital Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – SINGLES DIGITAL – TOP 100 and insert 201536 into search. Retrieved September 18, 2015.
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ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Singles Digital Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Select SINGLES DIGITAL - TOP 100 and insert 201536 into search. Retrieved September 18, 2015.