"Go Deep" is a song by American singer Janet Jackson from her sixth studio album, The Velvet Rope (1997). It was written and produced by Jackson, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, with additional writing by René Elizondo Jr. The song was released as the fourth single from the album on June 15, 1998, by Virgin Records. A song with funk elements, "Go Deep" lyrically talks about Jackson's desire to cruise a club, get a man and take him home to make the man "scream and moan". Official remixes for the song were released, featuring Missy Elliott, Teddy Riley and Timbaland.
"Go Deep" | ||||
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Single by Janet Jackson | ||||
from the album The Velvet Rope | ||||
Released | June 15, 1998 (1998-06-15) | |||
Genre | Pop | |||
Length | 4:42 | |||
Label | Virgin | |||
Songwriter(s) |
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Janet Jackson singles chronology | ||||
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Music video | ||||
"Go Deep" on YouTube | ||||
"Go Deep" received mostly positive reviews from music critics and commercially, it fared well worldwide, reaching number two in Canada, charting within the top 20 in Iceland, New Zealand and the United Kingdom, and topping the US Billboard Hot Dance Club Play chart. A music video directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris depicts a boy having a daydream with Jackson giving a party in his house after his parents had left town for the weekend. The singer performed the song on The Velvet Rope Tour (1998), Number Ones, Up Close and Personal tour (2011), as well as on the Janet Jackson: Metamorphosis residency (2019).
"Dancing is therapy. I love writing and singing songs that make you move, lift your mood and take you out of yourself. There are times when I call up my friends and say, 'Hey, we gotta go dancing tonight.' We Go Deep is about getting ready and getting down. Tripping out on pure fun".
—Jackson about "Go Deep".[1]
Before recording her sixth album, Jackson became subject to an industry bidding war between several recording companies. She ultimately renewed her contract with Virgin for $80 million—the largest recording contract in history at that time and a breakthrough she achieved for the second time in her career.[2][3] This led her to record The Velvet Rope, which chronicled her emotional breakdown, stemming from self-hatred, childhood humiliation, physical abuse, and distorted body image.[4] Its lead single, "Got 'til It's Gone", peaked at number three on Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay.[5] The following singles "Together Again" and "I Get Lonely" were commercial successes, with the former reaching the top and the latter peaking within the top three in the United States.[6] "Go Deep" was released on June 15, 1998, as the fourth international single from The Velvet Rope, through Virgin Records.[7] In the United States, the song was originally scheduled for a physical release on September 15, 1998, but was canceled, leaving "Go Deep" as a radio-only single.[8]
"Go Deep" was written and produced by Jackson, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, with additional writing by René Elizondo Jr. According to the sheet music published at Musicnotes.com by EMI Music Publishing, the song is set in time signature of common time with a tempo of 100 beats per minute. It is composed in the key of G-flat major, with Jackson's vocals spanning from Gb3 to Gb5.[9] Musically, it is a pop song with funk elements.[10] "Go Deep" was described by Billboard as a "danceable track with deep, syncopated beats" with a "pulsive erotic groover", with her vocals performed in a "girlish breathiness".[11][12][13] Lyrically, the song talks about Jackson's desire to cruise a club, get a man, drag him home and do him, with her asserting, "Gotta take him home/When I get him alone/I'll make him scream and moan".[14][15] Official remixes for the song were released, featuring rappers Missy Elliott and Timbaland and musician Teddy Riley.[10]
"Go Deep" received positive reviews from music critics. Billboard called the song "infectious" and "irresistible", while praising the singer's choice for the artists featured on the remix, saying that she deserved "props for having good taste in friends", also noting that it was "a risky move that could alienate longtime mainstream listeners".[10] Sarah Davis from Dotmusic website noted that "Go Deep" was a "finely-tuned piece designed for late-night dancefloor business – and classic radio. What more can I say? Brilliant!".[16] Andrew Watson of We Plug Good Music described the song as "Moody, deep, thick and head-noddingly funky", elaborating that its "hook really furthers that sense of a nonstop party. An almost scintillating nod into another direction then brings you back gloriously to whence you came. Almost to teach you not to take the groove for granted".[17] Daryl Easlea from the BBC found the song "sleek, slippery".[18] According to New York Daily News' Jim Farber, "In 'Go Deep,' she's a special effect, a gimmick that clicks".[19]
Andrew Le from Renowned for Sound was also positive, describing it as "the album's Escapade, possibly even a prequel to Janet's 'single life' follow-up All For You". He went on the say that "it is a welcome distraction from the personal issues explored on the album and a infectiously catchy, slinky soundtrack for going out. The rhymes (e.g. 'get him all alone, make him scream and moan') couldn't be better. Pharell, THIS is how you tribute Marvin Gaye".[20] Chuck Arnold of Entertainment Weekly agreed, commenting that "bringing some levity to the heavier themes of the album, "Go Deep" is the only real party song on The Velvet Rope", and it also "captures the fun spirit of camaraderie Jackson has always shared with her dancers".[21] J.D. Considine, writing for the same magazine, stated that "However much 'Go Deep' may read like a hymn to hedonism, what it sounds like is a song of pride in which Jackson and crew celebrate not sex but the confidence that allows them to act sexual when they feel the urge".[22] The Daily Vault gave a negative review for the song, calling it "tedious" and further commenting that it "doesn't have that drive to make it a good club number it's supposed to be".[23]
Although "Go Deep" was released on physical formats only in international markets, it received moderate success in the US through radio airplay, and had success as a club single, peaking at number one on Billboard's Hot Dance Club Songs chart in early August 1998. The single entered and peaked at number 13 on the UK Singles Chart in June 1998 and spent five weeks on the chart. It also charted inside the top forty in most other European countries and Australia, but fared better in the US and Canada.
An accompanying music video for "Go Deep" was directed by Jonathan Dayton and Valerie Faris, who would later direct the film Little Miss Sunshine (2006).[24] Among the cameo appearances are American actor Ty Hodges as a teen boy whose parents have left town for the weekend and future Japanese-American singer Ai as a backup dancer. The doorbell suddenly rings and it turns out to be Jackson and her dancers, who are asked to be let in. Jackson and company invite more friends over and a large house party ensues. The video ends with the young boy realizing it was all an elaborate daydream with Jackson, woken up by a pizza guy ringing the doorbell. The video was ranked number 50 on Complex magazine's "The 50 Best R&B Videos of the '90s"; journalist Ernest Baker wrote that the video's plot was "still a model example of how to have a good time in the '90s".[25] According to Entertainment Tonight Canada, it "ranks as one of Janet's least labour-intensive videos. (Good for her! She's earned a break.)".[26] It also appears on the DVD edition of 2001's All for You as well as the 2004 video compilation From Janet to Damita Jo: The Videos.[27][28]
Jackson sang the song during the encore of her The Velvet Rope Tour in 1998, with the stage decorated with chandeliers, while she wore sensible clothes.[29] The performance of the song at the October 11, 1998 show in New York City, at the Madison Square Garden, was broadcast during a special titled The Velvet Rope: Live in Madison Square Garden by HBO. It was also added to the setlist at its DVD release, The Velvet Rope Tour – Live in Concert in 1999.[30] During her 2011 Number Ones, Up Close and Personal tour, Jackson dedicated the song to her fans in Manila, stating on her website, "I dedicate 'Go Deep' to all my fans in Manila. It was a dream for me to start my Number Ones—Up Close and Personal tour in your magical city and country. There is a truth in the Philippines that enchants people all over the world. I can't wait to get there and be with you".[31] Jackson included the Timbaland remix on her 2019 Janet Jackson: Metamorphosis Las Vegas residency.[32]
CD single
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12-inch single
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Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref. |
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United States | June 9, 1998 (1998-06-09) |
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Virgin | [59] |
United Kingdom | June 15, 1998 (1998-06-15) |
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[7] | |
United States | June 30, 1998 (1998-06-30) | Contemporary hit radio | [60] |
Janet's 'Go Deep' (Virgin), which was originally scheduled for release on Tuesday (15), will now bypass retail.
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