Bump n' Grind (R. Kelly song)


"Bump n' Grind" is a song written, produced, and performed by American singer-songwriter R. Kelly. It was released on January 28, 1994 by Jive Records, as the second single from his debut solo studio album, 12 Play. The track became a number one single on the US Billboard Hot 100, and it also spent twelve weeks at number one on the US Hot R&B Songs chart as Kelly's third number-one R&B hit, becoming the longest-running number-one of 1994 in the US, and the longest-running R&B single at that time. The song also reached number eight on the UK Singles Chart, following the massive success of his previous single, "She's Got That Vibe".
Kelly released three versions of "Bump n' Grind": the original album version and two remixes. The original LP version was made available for airplay on urban and Top 40 pop radio stations alike at first, but eventually the "Old School" remix was issued shortly and gained massive airplay on urban, adult R&B/soul and rhythmic radio stations. Kelly also released the "Bump n' Grind ", which was used in the original video for the song. This version received major play on urban radio as well. Some stations still played the original version until Kelly's music largely vanished from playlists leading up to and following his conviction. The song was nominated in the categories for Male R&B/soul single and R&B/soul song at the 1995 Soul Train Music Awards. It won an award for Male R&B/soul single.

Critical reception

Martin Johnson from Chicago Reader wrote, "On the album's second single, 'Bump n' Grind', which caught everyone but Kelly off guard by becoming one of the biggest R&B hits of all time, he sings mostly about lust; his idea of subtlety is anguished longing, and he cradles his earthy melismata in soft, billowy backgrounds. It's as if he sought to combine the tormented craving of Marvin Gaye's 'Let's Get It On' with the sultry cool of Sade's 'Nothing Can Come Between Us'." In his weekly UK chart commentary, James Masterton felt it's "a rather slower track but certain to be boosted by his imminent arrival on these shores for a series of concerts in career boosting move that echoes the rise of Bobby Brown here in 1989." Pan-European magazine Music & Media wrote, "Tune in for Radio Erotica. On this US number 2 hit Kelly slows down his swingbeat to sex up his female fans, which he continued to do when he was live on air on Kiss 100 FM/London's breakfast show." Head of music Lindsay Wesker recalled, "The guy is absolutely wonderful, and he definitely makes no secret about his sex life. The other singles 'Sex Me' and 'Your Body's Callin'' are equally doing well here."
Music Week gave it a score of four out of five, stating that it "shows R Kelly at his slow, X-rated best. An anthem in soul circles for the past year, 'Bump and Grind' will nevertheless need strong radio support to match 'Vibe's success." John Mulvey from NME noted, "My mind's telling me no/But my body's telling me yes, claims R Kelly, rather passionately, before sloping into a syrupy and bogus justification of his lurrrve." Ralph Tee from the Record Mirror Dance Update commented, "Less instant than 'Sex Me' but now a firm favourite from the album, R Kelly and associates beef up this raunchy ballad with extra bass drum and snare kick for a superb slow jam. Kelly also gives himself an opportunity to stretch out vocally on the tune, showcasing some impressive technique atop the infectious background harmonies. Already large in R&B circles and from an album that sounds better with every spin." In his weekly Record Mirror dance column, James Hamilton described it as a "moaning I don't see nothin' wrong 65bpm groin grinder".

Music video

The accompanying music video for "Bump n' Grind" did not feature the famous intro. It was filmed like a live concert performance and was directed by Kim Watson.

Live performances

Kelly always performed the intro of the song at almost all events he performed in; he usually performed the "Bump N' Grind " instead of the original at concert, despite the original single's huge success. Kelly performed the remix versions of the song on various shows in 1994, on The Arsenio Hall Show, Billboard Music Award and Soul Train.

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart Peak
position
UK Singles 92

Legacy

Uses in popular culture

Later samples

"Bump & Grind 2014"

British house duo Waze & Odyssey produced a bootleg of the track in 2012, sampling "Push the Feeling On" by Nightcrawlers. The remix was officially released on October 19, 2014, peaking at #3 on the UK Singles Chart, and would be R. Kelly's last UK Top 40 hit prior to his criminal convictions.

Background

"Bump & Grind 2014" was produced by the duo Serge Santiágo and Firas Waez, also known as Waze & Odyssey. The record started as an underground hit in 2012, more DJs were playing the song at clubs as time went on. But it was not until 2014 it got a major release from their label RCA and started getting airplay. At the time it was an underground favorite among famous British DJs like Skream, DJ EZ, Duke Dumont, Rudimental were playing it at clubs.

Music video

The music video was released two months before the actual official release of the song. The video features Hok from the American hip hop group Quest Crew as the main person.

Formats and track listings

Digital download
  1. "Bump & Grind 2014" – 3:00Digital remixes EP
  2. "Bump & Grind 2014" – 7:23
  3. "Bump & Grind 2014" – 8:34
  4. "Bump & Grind 2014" – 4:01