Almost Doesn't Count
{{Short description|1999 single by Brandy}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=October 2021}}
{{Infobox song
| name = Almost Doesn't Count
| cover = Brandy Norwood – Almost Doesn't Count.jpg
| border = yes
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = Brandy
| album = Never Say Never
| released = {{Start date|1999|3|23}}
| recorded =
| studio =
- Banana Boat Studios (Burbank, CA){{cite AV media notes|title=Never Say Never|others=Brandy|year=1998|publisher=Atlantic Records|type=booklet}}
- Pacifique Recording Studios (North Hollywood, CA){{cite AV media notes|title=Never Say Never|others=Brandy|year=1998|publisher=Atlantic Records|type=booklet}}
| venue =
| length = 3:37
| label = Atlantic
| writer = {{hlist|Shelly Peiken|Guy Roche}}
| producer = {{hlist|Fred Jerkins III|Roche}}
| prev_title = Angel in Disguise
| prev_year = 1999
| next_title = U Don't Know Me
| next_year = 1999
}}
"Almost Doesn't Count" is a song by American singer Brandy Norwood. It was written by Shelly Peiken and Guy Roche and recorded by Norwood for her second studio album, Never Say Never (1998). Atlantic Records consulted Fred Jerkins III to recut the song to be more consistent with the overall sound of the album. He would subsequently share production credit along with Roche. A pop and R&B-ballad combining elements of country, it incorporates Latin flavored riffs. The song's lyrics are based on an on-again, off-again relationship that Peiken had experienced during her college years.
The song was released as the fourth overall single from Never Say Never on March 23, 1999. "Almost Doesn't Count" received a positive response from most music critics, who called it one of the album highlights, with major praise for Norwood's vocal performance. A commercial success, "Almost Doesn't Count" hit the top twenty in New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and on the US Billboard Hot 100. It earned Norwood her third Best Female R&B Vocal Performance nomination at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards and was awarded a BMI Pop Award in 2000.
The accompanying music video for "Almost Doesn't Count," filmed by Kevin Bray in the Lancaster area, depicts Norwood as an unnoticed wedding guest in the backyard of an expressway hotel, following the breakdown of her car in the Mojave Desert. Norwood performed the song in the 1999 made-for-television musical drama film Double Platinum, directed by Robert Allan Ackerman, and starring Diana Ross and herself. She included the song in the set-list of various live shows and future tours, including the Never Say Never World Tour, the Human World Tour and the Slayana World Tour.
Background
"Almost Doesn't Count" was written by Shelly Peiken and Guy Roche. Inspired by a powerful but unfruitful on-again, off-again relationship she had with a man in her college years,{{cite web|first=Carl|last=Wiser|title=Songwriter Interviews: Shelly Peiken|website=songfacts.com|url=https://www.songfacts.com/blog/interviews/shelly-peiken|accessdate=May 3, 2020}} Peiken recalled her emotions during a writing session with Roche decades later when she "dug up that laundry list of all the 'almosts' I felt we had, and we put it into the song." In a 2020 interview, she further elaborated about the lyrics: "It was a relationship that was more in my head than in his, and I always felt like we almost got there, he almost said I love you, he almost broke up with the girlfriend he had the whole time. He almost faced his feelings but he never quite got there – maybe that was all in my head too. Maybe he never had any of those feelings, maybe it was all my imagination."{{cite book|first=Shelly |last=Peiken|title=Confessions of a Serial Songwriter|website=songfacts.com|date=March 2016|publisher=Hal Leonard Corporation |isbn=9781495063619|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=V4LfCwAAQBAJ&q=%22BRANDY%22&pg=PT115|accessdate=May 3, 2020}}
Written in the thirty-two-bar form structure, which the pair considered "very sort of country," Peiken and Roche put the song on the back burner since they were not sure how to finish it, feeling undecided about the genre that they were looking for in the song. They resumed work on "Almost Doesn't Count" a few months later when, according to Peiken, "it was a lot clearer – not so much the genre, but that it was good enough that we couldn't leave it on the back burner – it was really good and we had to finish it. So we did, and then we sent it around." Picked up by Atlantic Records, the demo, produced by Roche, was eventually polished by producer Fred Jerkins III for Norwood's second album Never Say Never (1998). Recording took place at Banana Boat Studios in Burbank and at Pacifique Recording Studios in North Hollywood, California, with Peiken providing backing vocals. In 2019, Roche ranked the song among his favorite productions.{{cite web|title=When Shelly [...]|website=Twitter|url=https://twitter.com/BrandyLegion/status/1176266322814128129/photo/1|accessdate=May 3, 2020}}
Critical reception
In his review of parent album Never Say Never, Shaheen Chughtai, editor for The Daily Star Lebanon, wrote that "Brandy does have a fine voice, drenched in sex-appeal, and in good form on tracks like 'Almost Doesn’t Count'."{{cite web|first=Shaheen|last=Chughtai|title=Party Animal|work=The Daily Star|url=http://www.dailystar.com.lb/ArticlePrint.aspx?id=102429&mode=print|date=July 25, 1998|accessdate=May 3, 2020}}{{Dead link|date=July 2024 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }} San Francisco Chronicle{{'}}s Lee Hildebrand described the song as "haunting" and added: "Brandy takes her time with the ballad, wrapping her warm, melismatic alto pipes around their melodic contours with womanly nuance."{{cite web|first=Lee |last=Hildebrand|title=The New Brandy Is Watered Down |work=San Francisco Chronicle|url=https://www.sfgate.com/music/article/The-New-Brandy-Is-Watered-Down-3004688.php|date=June 7, 1998 |accessdate=May 3, 2020}} Stephen Thomas Erlewine from Allmusic cited the song one of the album's highlights along with "The Boy Is Mine" and "Have You Ever?."{{cite web|first=Stephen Thomas|last=Erlewine|work=Allmusic|url={{AllMusic|class=album|id=r351851|pure_url=yes}}|title=Never Say Never review|accessdate=July 16, 2010}} Billboard editor Chuck Taylor wrote that "breezy, sensual, straightforward, and drenched with those gorgeous harmonies that are recognizable in an instant, Miss Norwood serves up a tasty slow jam about letting go of love. While the single is a certain bull's-eye at mainstream R&B radio – where it'll first be worked – top 40 will undoubtedly be waiting in the wings, licking its chops."{{cite magazine|first=Chuck|last=Taylor|title=Singles|magazine=Billboard|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XQ0EAAAAMBAJ|date=March 25, 1999|accessdate=May 4, 2020}}
Less impressed, Lorraine Ali from Rolling Stone declared "the Spanish guitar and chimes in "Almost Doesn't Count [...] the cheesiest moment" on Never Say Never.{{cite magazine|first=Lorraine|last=Ali|date=1998-06-18|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/artists/brandy/albums/album/200271/review/5945797/never_say_never|title=Brandy: Never Say Never : Music Reviews|magazine=Rolling Stone|accessdate=May 4, 2020|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20071002111003/http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/brandy/albums/album/200271/review/5945797/never_say_never|archivedate=2007-10-02|url-status=dead}} Her colleague Rob Sheffield ranked the song 67th on his The 98 Best Songs of 1998 listing for Rolling Stone and called it a "a doleful weeper where Ms. Norwood comes close to true love – but alas, not close enough – over a flourish of Latin acoustic guitar."{{cite magazine|first=Rob|last=Sheffield|title=Party Animal|series=The 98 Best Songs of 1998: Pop’s Weirdest Year |magazine=Rolling Stone|url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-lists/the-98-best-songs-of-1998-pops-weirdest-year-628131/brandy-almost-doesnt-count-627810/|date=June 4, 1998|accessdate=May 3, 2020}} Music Week labeled the song a "smoochy ballad" with "its typically Smooth production, Spanish guitars, Lazy groove and Brandy's breathy vocals."{{cite magazine|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-Week/1999/Music-Week-1999-05-29.pdf|date=May 29, 1999|title=Single Reviews|magazine=Music Week|page=22|accessdate=August 27, 2023}} The publication also felt that it could be commercial success like her previously released singles from the same album. The Village Voice ranked "Almost Doesn't Count" 16th on its Pazz & Jop 1998 Singles listing.{{cite web|title=Pazz & Jop 1998: Dean's List |work=The Village Voice|url=https://www.robertchristgau.com/xg/pnj/deans98.php|date=March 2, 1999|accessdate=May 3, 2020}} In 2020, Lela Olds from Vibe, ranked the song eighth on his Brandy's 15 Best Songs listing.{{cite web|first=Lela |last=Olds|title=From Teen Sensation To Vocal Bible: Brandy's 15 Best Songs |work=Vibe|url=https://www.vibe.com/photos/brandy-best-songs|date=March 25, 2020|accessdate=May 3, 2020}} One of the most-performed songs of the year, "Almost Doesn't Count" was honored with BMI Citations of Achievement at the BMI Pop Awards in 2000.{{cite web|title=Rob Thomas, Eagle-Eye Cherry Receive BMI Awards |work=MTV News|url=http://www.mtv.com/news/1428483/rob-thomas-eagle-eye-cherry-receive-bmi-awards/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141223212916/http://www.mtv.com/news/1428483/rob-thomas-eagle-eye-cherry-receive-bmi-awards/|url-status=dead|archive-date=December 23, 2014|date=May 17, 2000|accessdate=May 3, 2020}} In addition, the song earned Norwood her third nomination in the Best Female R&B Vocal Performance category at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards, though she lost to Whitney Houston's "It's Not Right but It's Okay."{{cite web|title=List of Brandy's GRAMMY Awards history|website=grammy.com|url=https://www.grammy.com/grammys/artists/brandy|accessdate=May 3, 2020}}
Music video
File:Cave Mountain Interstate 15.jpg in California.]]
A music video for "Almost Doesn't Count" was directed by Kevin Bray in April 1999.{{cite book|title=The Brandy Star Profile|work=Master Dance Tones|first=Nina|last=Porter|date=January 25, 2000}} It marked his second collaboration with Norwood following their work on the video for "Have You Ever?" (1998). Filmed in Lancaster, California and the surrounding Mojave Desert,{{cite magazine|title=Production Notes|magazine=Billboard|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Pg0EAAAAMBAJ&q=brandy+%22ALMOST+DOESN%27T+COUNT%22+%22BRAY%22&pg=PA83|date=April 17, 1999|accessdate=May 2, 2020}} it depicts Norwood as a wedding guest and singer whose oldtimer suffers from a breakdown prior to the wedding ceremony in the evening. After a walk of several miles, a pick up drives by and she climbs inside the back where a fellow passenger gives her his cowboy hat. At night, they drop her off at a gas station which Norwood finds closed, prompting her to check into a nearby hotel off the expressway. In the hotel room, she unpacks and changes her outfit when she, out from the window, watches a couple getting married in the courtyard across the street. The video ends with Norwood crashing the celebration, unnoticed, before joining the band who play to an empty courtyard.
Track listings
{{Track listing
| headline = Australian CD single
| extra_column = Producer(s)
| title1 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note1 = Radio Remix
| writer1 = {{hlist|Shelly Peiken|Guy Roche}}
| extra1 = {{hlist|Fred Jerkins III|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length1 = 3:37
| title2 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note2 = Album Version
| writer2 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra2 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche}}
| length2 = 3:39
| title3 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note3 = Pull Club Radio Edit
| writer3 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra3 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length3 = 4:15
| title4 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note4 = DJ Premier Remix
| writer4 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra4 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|DJ Premier{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length4 = 3:47
| title5 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note5 = Pull Club Extended Mix
| writer5 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra5 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length5 = 8:21
}}
{{Track listing
| headline = Japan CD single
| extra_column = Producer(s)
| title1 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note1 = Album Version
| writer1 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra1 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche}}
| length1 = 3:39
| title2 = Have You Ever?
| note2 = Soul Skank Remix
| writer2 = Diane Warren
| extra2 = {{hlist|David Foster|Soul Inside Productions 98{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length2 = 5:40
| title3 = The Boy Is Mine
| note3 = duet with Monica) (Club Remix
| writer3 = {{hlist|LaShawn Daniels|Rodney Jerkins|Fred Jerkins III|Japhe Tejeda|Brandy Norwood}}
| extra3 = {{hlist|Darkchild|Brandy|Dallas Austin{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length3 = 7:42
| title4 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note4 = DJ Premier Remix
| writer4 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra4 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|DJ Premier{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length4 = 3:47
| title5 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note5 = Club Remix
| writer5 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra5 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length5 = 4:37
}}
{{Track listing
| headline = UK CD single I
| extra_column = Producer(s)
| title1 = Almost Doesn't Count
| writer1 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| note1 = Radio Remix
| extra1 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length1 = 3:37
| title2 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note2 = Album Version
| writer2 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra2 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche}}
| length2 = 3:39
| title3 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note3 = DJ Premier Remix
| writer3 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra3 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|DJ Premier{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length3 = 3:47
}}
{{Track listing
| headline = UK CD single II
| extra_column = Producer(s)
| title1 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note1 = Pull Club Radio Edit
| writer1 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra1 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length1 = 4:15
| title2 = Almost Doesn't Count
| note2 = Club Remix
| writer2 = {{hlist|Peiken|Roche}}
| extra2 = {{hlist|Jerkins|Roche|Pull{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length2 = 4:37
| title3 = Have You Ever?
| note3 = Soul Skank Remix
| writer3 = Warren
| extra3 = {{hlist|Foster|Soul Inside Productions 98{{ref|a|[a]}}}}
| length3 = 5:40
}}
Notes
- {{sup|{{note|a|a}}}} denotes additional producer
Credits and personnel
Credits lifted from the album's liner notes.{{cite AV media notes|title=Never Say Never|others=Brandy|year=1998|publisher=Atlantic Records|type=booklet}}
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
- Anas Allaf – guitar
- Gerry Brown – mixing
- Fred Jerkins III – engineering, mixing, producer
- Mario Luccy – engineering
{{col-2}}
- Brandy Norwood – vocals
- Shelly Peiken – background vocals, writer
- Moana Suchard – engineering
- Guy Roche – producer, writer
{{col-end}}
Charts
{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
=Weekly charts=
class="wikitable sortable plainrowheaders" style="text-align:center" |
scope="col"| Chart (1998–1999)
! scope="col"| Peak |
---|
{{single chart|Canadaadultcontemporary|24|chartid=8453|rowheader=true|accessdate=November 20, 2019}} |
{{single chart|Canadatopsingles|34|chartid=8404|rowheader=true|accessdate=November 20, 2019}} |
scope="row"|Canada CHR/Top 40 (BDS){{cite book|last=Lwin|first=Nanda|author-link=Nanda Lwin|date=2000|title=Top 40 Hits: The Essential Chart Guide|publisher=Music Data Canada|page=50|isbn=1-896594-13-1}}
| 27 |
scope="row"|Europe (European Hot 100 Singles){{cite magazine|url=https://worldradiohistory.com/UK/Music-and-Media/90s/1999/MM-1999-06-26.pdf|title=Eurochart Hot 100 Singles|magazine=Music & Media|volume=16|issue=26|page=8|date=June 26, 1999|accessdate=January 7, 2018}}
| 61 |
{{single chart|Germany|88|artist=Brandy|song=Almost Doesn't Count|songid=17997|rowheader=true|accessdate=October 30, 2018}} |
{{single chart|New Zealand|13|artist=Brandy|song=Almost Doesn't Count|rowheader=true|accessdate=May 23, 2011}} |
{{single chart|Scotland|40|rowheader=true|date=19990711}} |
{{single chart|UKsinglesbyname|15|artist=Brandy|song=Almost Doesn't Count|artistid=19412|rowheader=true|accessdate=May 23, 2011}} |
{{single chart|UKrandb|2|date=19990613|rowheader=true|accessdate=November 26, 2017}} |
{{single chart|Billboardhot100|16|artist=Brandy|song=Almost Doesn't Count|artistid=119457|rowheader=true|accessdate=May 23, 2011}} |
{{single chart|Billboardrandbhiphop|16|artist=Brandy|song=Almost Doesn't Count|artistid=119457|rowheader=true|accessdate=May 23, 2011}} |
{{single chart|Billboardpopsongs|15|artist=Brandy|rowheader=true|accessdate=November 30, 2017}} |
{{single chart|Billboardrhythmic|8|artist=Brandy|rowheader=true|accessdate=November 30, 2017}} |
{{col-2}}
=Year-end charts=
{{col-end}}
Release history
class="wikitable plainrowheaders"
! scope="col"| Region ! scope="col"| Date ! scope="col"| Format(s) ! scope="col"| Label(s) ! scope="col"| {{abbr|Ref.|Reference}} |
scope="row" rowspan="2"| United States
| March 23, 1999 | {{hlist|Rhythmic contemporary|urban radio}} | rowspan="4"| Atlantic | {{cite magazine|title=New Releases / AddVance Notice|magazine=Radio & Records|issue=1291|pages=44, 49|date=March 19, 1999}} |
---|
April 13, 1999
| {{cite magazine|title=New Releases|magazine=Radio & Records|issue=1294|page=106|date=April 9, 1999}} |
scope="row"| United Kingdom
| June 7, 1999 | {{hlist|CD|cassette}} | {{cite magazine|title=New Releases – For Week Starting 7 June, 1999: Singles|magazine=Music Week|page=31|date=June 5, 1999}} |
scope="row"| Japan
| June 9, 1999 | CD | {{cite web|url=https://www.oricon.co.jp/prof/145089/products/39482/1/|title=オールモスト・ダズント・カウント {{!}} ブランディー|trans-title=Almost Doesn't Count {{!}} Brandy|publisher=Oricon|language=ja|access-date=August 31, 2023}} |
Mark Wills version
{{Infobox song
| name = Almost Doesn't Count
| cover =
| alt =
| type = single
| artist = Mark Wills
| album = Permanently
| B-side = "Permanently"{{cite book|last=Whitburn|first=Joel|title=Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008|publisher=Record Research, Inc|year=2008|pages=470–471|isbn=978-0-89820-177-2}}
| released = March 2000
| recorded =
| studio =
| venue =
| genre = Country
| length = 3:37
| label = Mercury Nashville
| writer =
- Shelly Peiken
- Guy Roche
| producer = Carson Chamberlain
| prev_title = Back at One
| prev_year = 1999
| next_title = I Want to Know (Everything There Is to Know About You)
| next_year = 2000
}}
In March 2000, American country music artist Mark Wills released a cover of the song as the second single from his third studio album, Permanently. His version reached number 19 on Billboard{{'}}s US Hot Country Singles & Tracks chart. Wills's cover marked his second R&B cover following his late-1999 cover of Brian McKnight's "Back at One" (1998). An accompanying music video was directed by Michael Salomon and premiered in March 2000. It was filmed in Atlanta, Georgia. There are two different videos, both with the same concept but with different scenes.
=Charts=
==Weekly charts==
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |
scope="col"| Chart (2000)
! scope="col"| Peak |
---|
{{single chart|Billboardcountrysongs|19|artist=Mark Wills|song=Almost Doesn't Count|artistid=155244|rowheader=true|access-date=May 23, 2011}} |
==Year-end charts==
class="wikitable plainrowheaders" |
scope="col"| Chart (2000)
! scope="col"| Position |
---|
scope="row"|US Hot Country Singles & Tracks (Billboard){{Cite magazine | url=http://www.billboard.com/charts/year-end/2000/hot-country-songs| title=Best of 2000: Country Songs | magazine=Billboard | publisher=Prometheus Global Media |year=2000 | access-date=August 16, 2012}}
| align="center" | 72 |
Other cover versions
- In 2007, the song was sampled by Ali & Gipp in the single "Almost Made Ya," featuring vocals by LeToya Luckett and production by Jermaine Dupri.
- In 2023, singer Alex Vaughn covered "Almost Doesn't Count" as part of Spotify's Black Music Month. Her version was produced by Bryan-Michael Cox.{{Cite web|last=Abraham|first=Mya|date=June 11, 2023|title=Alex Vaughn Remakes Brandy's "Almost Doesn't Count" For 25th Anniversary Of 'Never Say Never'|url=https://www.vibe.com/music/music-news/alex-vaughn-pays-tribute-to-brandy-never-say-never-1234764027/|website=Vibe.com|access-date=June 17, 2023}}
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
- [http://www.discogs.com/Brandy-Almost-Doesnt-Count/release/243618 Brandy CD Maxi release info (US)] Discogs
{{Brandy Norwood singles}}
{{Mark Wills}}
{{authority control}}
Category:Songs written by Shelly Peiken
Category:Songs written by Guy Roche
Category:Song recordings produced by DJ Premier
Category:Music videos directed by Michael Salomon
Category:Contemporary R&B ballads
Category:Atlantic Records singles
Category:Mercury Records singles