Oops I Did It Again Wiki

2000 studio anthology by Britney Spears

2000 studio album past Britney Spears

Oops!... I Did It Again
Britney Spears - Oops!... I Did It Again.png
Studio album past

Britney Spears

Released May three, 2000 (2000-05-03)
Recorded 1999–2000
Studio
  • 3rd Floor
  • Avatar Studios
  • Bombardment Studios
  • Electric Lady Studios, New York Urban center
  • E Bay Recording, Tarrytown
  • Pacifique Recording Studios, Hollywood
  • Rarc Studios, Orlando
  • Cheiron Studios, Stockholm
  • La Tour-de-Peilz, Switzerland
Genre
  • Pop
  • trip the light fantastic-pop
  • teen popular
Length 44:37
Label Jive
Producer
  • Timmy Allen
  • Larry "Rock" Campbell
  • Barry J. Eastmond
  • Jake
  • Robert "Esmail" Jazayeri
  • Rodney Jerkins
  • David Kreuger
  • Robert John "Mutt" Lange
  • Kristian Lundin
  • Steve Lunt
  • Per Magnusson
  • Max Martin
  • Rami
  • Paul Umbach
  • Eric Foster White
Britney Spears chronology
...Infant One More Time
(1999)
Oops!... I Did It Again
(2000)
Britney
(2001)
Singles from Oops!... I Did It Once again
  1. "Oops!... I Did It Again"
    Released: Apr eleven, 2000
  2. "Lucky"
    Released: July 24, 2000
  3. "Stronger"
    Released: Oct 30, 2000
  4. "Don't Allow Me Be the Last to Know"
    Released: March v, 2001

Oops!... I Did Information technology Again is the second studio album by American vocalizer Britney Spears released on May iii, 2000, through Jive Records. Though much in the vein of her debut album ...Baby 1 More Time (1999), it is a pop, dance-pop, and teen pop record, the anthology incorporates a more funkier and R&B sounds. [1] Contributions to the album's production came from a broad range of producers, including Max Martin, Rami Yacoub, Per Magnusson, David Kreuger, Kristian Lundin, Jake Schulze, Darkchild, and Robert John "Mutt" Lange.[2]

Upon its release, Oops!... I Did It Again received positive reviews from music critics, who praised its product, sonic quality and Spears' vocal operation. The album became a massive commercial success, debuting at number 1 in over xx countries while peaking inside the top five in diverse other. In the United states of america, information technology debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, with beginning-week sales of 1.39 million copies, becoming the fastest selling album past a female artist since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking signal-of-auction music purchases in 1991.[three] This record was broken fifteen years afterwards by Adele'south 25, which sold over iii.38 one thousand thousand copies in its kickoff week of release.[four] It became Spears' second consecutive anthology to be certified Diamond by the Recording Manufacture Association of America, denoting sales of over x million copies in the United States, making Spears at age 18 the youngest creative person to have multiple diamond albums.[5] With worldwide sales of over 20 million copies,[6] Oops!... I Did It Once more is i of the best-selling albums of all-time.

4 singles were released to promote the album. Its title track was commercially successful in a number of territories, reaching number one in fifteen countries and peaking at number nine on the US Billboard Hot 100. Its second single, "Lucky", peaked at number 1 in Republic of austria, Frg, Sweden and Switzerland, inside the elevation ten in Australia, Kingdom of belgium, Canada, Denmark, Ireland, Italy, the netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Romania and the United Kingdom, and at number twenty-iii on the U.s.a. Billboard Hot 100. Its 3rd single, "Stronger", reached the top ten in Republic of austria, Finland, Deutschland, Poland, Romania, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom, and peaked at number xi on the US Billboard Hot 100. "Stronger" became the highest-selling single off the album, receiving a Gilded certification in Commonwealth of australia, Denmark, Germany, New Zealand, Sweden, and the U.s.a.. Its final single, "Don't Permit Me Be the Last to Know", was moderately successful on the charts, peaking at number one in Romania, and inside the top 10 in Republic of austria, Poland, and Switzerland, but failed to chart on the US Billboard Hot 100. To promote the anthology, Spears performed on several telly shows and award ceremonies, including a controversial performance at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. She also was the host and musical guest for the first time on Saturday Dark Alive. Furthermore, Spears embarked on a concert tour, entitled the Oops!... I Did It Again Tour, starting on June twenty, 2000 and ending at the Rock in Rio festival on January xviii, 2001.

Recording and production [edit]

"When I did the showtime album, I had just turned sixteen. I mean, when I await at the album cover, I'thou similar, 'Oh, my lordy.' I know this next anthology'due south going to be totally different--peculiarly the material. I just got finished recording the first six tracks in Sweden ii months ago, and the material is and then much more than funkier and edgier. And, of course, it'southward more than mature because I've grown as a person too."

—Spears on the progression of her textile for the anthology.[7]

After vacationing for six days following the completion of the ...Baby I More Time Tour in September 1999,[8] Spears returned to New York City to begin recording songs for her adjacent album; the majority of the recording took identify in November. It featured contributions from Max Martin, Eric Foster White, Diane Warren, Robert Lange, Steve Lunt, and Babyface.[9] The songs "Oops!... I Did Information technology Again", "Walk on By" (afterwards covered by Gareth Gates), "What U See (Is What U Get)", and "Don't Go Knockin' on My Door" were the first to exist recorded at Martin'due south Cheiron Studios in the outset week of November; followed by "Stronger" and "Lucky", which were finalized (along with the championship track) in January 2000. Spears recorded "Don't Allow Me Be the Terminal to Know" at Robert Lange'due south villa in Switzerland in December 1999; Lange produced the song.[x] "Where Are You Now" was an outtake from ...Baby One More Fourth dimension. "Daughter in the Mirror" and "Tin't Brand You Love Me"'southward instrumental rail and melody were recorded in the fall of 1999 in Sweden, with Spears recording the vocals in mid-Jan at Parc Studios in Orlando, Florida.[11] [12] Spears returned to New York, linking up with producer Steve Lunt to record Diane Warren's "When Your Eyes Say It" at Bombardment Studios on Friday, January 28, 2000, which preceded her TRL advent that twenty-four hour period. "One Kiss from You" was too recorded at Battery Studios but was afterward finished at 3rd Floor in New York Urban center. Spears too recorded the final track for the album "Dearest Diary" which would afterward exist completed at Due east Bay Recording in Tarrytown, New York and at Avatar Studios in New York Metropolis. Some other song recorded during these sessions was "Center". Her cover of "(I Tin't Get No) Satisfaction" was recorded with Rodney Jerkins at Pacifique Recording Studios in Hollywood, California during February 24–26, 2000 after attending the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards.[13] [14]

By January, the then-untitled album was halfway to completion; Spears had worked on information technology primarily in the Us and Sweden, and finalized material in New York City.[9] She was heavily pressured after ...Babe One More Time 's huge commercial success, stating: "It's kind of hard following x million, I have to say. But after listening to the new textile and recording it, I'm really confident with it."[xv] Upon the release of Oops!...I Did It Once more, Spears said: "I mean, of course in that location's some pressure", and added: "Just in my opinion, [Oops!] is a lot better than the first album. It's edgier – it has more of an attitude. It'due south more than me, and I call back teenagers will chronicle to information technology more than." Geoff Mayfield, managing director of Billboard charts, added that the decision to release Oops!... I Did It Again less than a year and a half later on Spears' debut amounts to "very smart timing. My philosophy is when yous have a young fan base, get 'em while they're hot."[sixteen]

Music and lyrics [edit]

Oops!... I Did It Again was considered every bit a sequel to Spears' debut album, ...Baby One More than Fourth dimension (1999),[1] percolating with a carefully measured blend of familiar pop, funk, R&B and power balladry.[17] Spears said during an interview that the album has a more mature, R&B-flavored pop sound. "It'southward not something I changed purposefully", Spears said of the album's audio and added: "It's only something that kind of changed on itself with me being older. My vocalism has changed a little scrap and I'k more confident, and I call up that comes across on the cloth."[seven] One of its producers, Rodney "Darkchild" Jerkins talked nigh working with Spears on a Rolling Stones comprehend, stating: "It'southward going to shock everybody", calculation: "It has flavors of the original, merely it'due south a straight 2000 version — new to the ear. Which I think is absurd, because people who appreciate that song are going to love it. And I fabricated it so new and young that the young kids that dear Britney are going to love it. It'south going to grab both a mature and young audience."[18] Spears worked with Robert "Mutt" Lange on "Don't Allow Me Be the Final to Know", telling MTV News: "When yous hear the vocal, it's and so pure and delicate. Information technology's merely one of those songs that pull yous in", and added: "I recollect they wrote it 'specially for me, because the lyrics of the song, if you really listen … they're more of what I can relate to, 'cause they're kind of young lyrics, I recall. I don't call up Shania would probably sing some of the words that I'thou saying."[18]

The championship track and opening song, "Oops!... I Did It Again", was compared to her debut single, "...Baby One More than Time" (1998), featuring a slap-and-popular bassline, synthesizer chord stabs and a mechanized beat. Lyrically, the song sees Spears warning to an overeager prospective lover: "Oops, you think I'm in love/That I'm sent from above — I'one thousand not that innocent."[19] The vocal also breaks down for a spoken-word interlude, involving a line from the pic Titanic (1997).[19] The second track "Stronger" is a synthpop[20] and R&B-infused rail,[eighteen] which is lyrically a declaration of independence, where Spears leaves a partner who treats her similar property.[21] The line "my loneliness ain't killing me no more" makes reference to the verse "my loneliness is killing me" from her vocal "...Babe One More than Time".[18] Another R&B-infused track, which as well adds a bit more than funk to the mix,[eighteen] "Don't Go Knocking on My Door" finds Spears confidently forging ahead after a breakup.[21] The fourth rails, a cover of the Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction", begins with mushy guitar plucking and breathy coos, until a dry, crackling lockstep is thrown downwards, turning the song into an urban stomp.[22] The dance-popular version likewise jettisons the song's last verse and adds some new lyrics[18] ("how white my shirts could be" becomes "how tight my skirt should be").[23] "[It] was my idea [to tape the song]", Spears said. "I was just similar, 'I like this song,' and I call up it volition be a really cool combination working with [hip-hop producer] Rodney [Jerkins] and doing a actually funky song like that."[24] The 5th rails, "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know", was co-written by country-pop singer-songwriter Shania Twain and her and so-hubby, producer Robert "Mutt" Lange, who also produced the track.[18] The carol, which boasts a slinky keyboard riff and Lange'south characteristically lavish production, finds Spears assuasive a fleck of country twang into her vocals as she begs a lover to reveal his feelings: "My friends say you're into me ... just I demand to hear it directly from you", she sings.[18]

The sixth track "What U See (Is What U Become)" demands respect by rebuking a jealous partner,[21] while the 7th track, "Lucky", is a middle-rending tale of a Hollywood starlet'due south loneliness, proving that fame tin exist empty.[21] "If there's nothing missing in my life/Then why practise these tears come up at night?", she asks.[xx] "School beat out" is the theme of "1 Kiss from You",[21] a track that has a reggae-mode trounce and lyrics nearly the feelings of falling in dearest, and the quickness of information technology,[25] with Spears cooing that after only one kiss she sees her entire futurity with her lover.[26] The ballad "Where Are Y'all Now" talks near wanting to know where a previous love is, and what that person is up to, and so that she can finally allow them become and notice closure.[ commendation needed ] Lines on "Can't Brand Y'all Dearest Me", a Europop song,[22] state that fancy cars and money pale in comparing to truthful honey,[21] with Spears singing: "I'm just a daughter with a crush on y'all."[22] The mid-tempo, synth-backed "When Your Eyes Say It", written past songwriter Diane Warren, combines a string section with a loping hip hop beat,[xviii] while Spears makes her own songwriting debut on the small, keyboard-driven carol "Dear Diary", which she said is autobiographical. On the runway, she sings of wanting to get "so much more than friends" with a boy.[18]

Release and promotion [edit]

In tardily 1999, Spears promoted her upcoming album in Europe with live performances of her by songs. She appeared on Smash Hits in the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland.[27] In Italy, she did a short interview on the tv set evidence TRL Italy in early 2000.[27] and gave a surprise operation in Paris in May 2000.[28] In Australia, Spears appeared on The House of Hits and Russell Gilbert Live on May 13.[27] In Spain, she gave an interview with El Rayo on September eight and October 24.[27] Spears performed at large venues in the United Kingdom, including Birmingham, the Wembley Arena in London, and the Manchester Evening News Arena. She was accompanied by NSYNC, who toured with her during a curt United kingdom outing in October 2000.[28]

Oops!... I Did Information technology Again was first released in Japan on May 3, 2000, and was later released in the United States on May 16. In the Us, Spears appeared on Saturday Night Alive on May thirteen, The Rosie O'Donnell Show on May 15, and Teen People's 25 Under 25 on May 26.[29] On May ten, she was interviewed on Late Night with Conan O'Brien.[27] On May 13, Spears was both the host and musical guest on NBC's Saturday Nighttime Live. She also performed on NBC'south The Tonight Prove with Jay Leno on May 23.[30] Spears' held her post-TRL listening party, "Britney's First Listen", on May 16, and was toast the arrival of her album on next Tuesday's installment of TRL that started at 3:30 p.m. (ET).[31] On May 14, she was at Times Square studios for two hours of "Britney Live" that started at noon.[31] Spears performed "Oops!... I Did It Once more" on MTV's All Access: Backstage with Britney that was circulate on July 19, 2000.[27] On September 7, at the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards in New York City at the Radio City Music Hall, Spears gave a memorable live functioning.[32] which included a embrace of the Rolling Stones's hit single "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" (1965) and her own hit "Oops!... I Did It Again", released earlier that yr. While she began her segment in a black adapt, she shocked the audition and the media while, at merely the age of 18, ripped it off to display a revealing, flesh-colored stage outfit with hundreds of strategically placed Swarovski crystals.[33] One month before the release of the anthology, Spears headed to Hawaii on Easter Sunday so she could tape a Fox television special titled Britney Spears in Hawaii. The free concert was held on the embankment in front of the Hilton Hawaiian Village lagoon in Honolulu, Hawaii.[34] The Play tricks concert issue was intended to serve as a preview of Spears' Oops!... I Did It Again album that features her twelve new songs.[34] Spears had on a month-long international promotional bout in support of Oops!... I Did It Again, and on May 2, she had a printing event at Kokusai Forum Hall in Tokyo, and fabricated stops in both London and Hawaii.[35] Spears was besides amongst the scheduled performers on the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards, which aired on CBS at 8 p.m. (ET/PT).[36] She was also expected to announced on a Grammy-24-hour interval TRL.[36]

The anthology'southward supporting tour, the Oops!... I Did Information technology Again Tour, visited North America, Europe, and Brazil as office of Stone in Rio. On the Crazy 2k Tour, Spears introduced the songs "Oops!... I Did It Again" and "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know". On June 24, 2000, Spears was featured in a print and idiot box advertizing campaign for Clairol's Herbal Essences shampoo line. In a special coup for Clairol, Spears recorded her own vocal for the brand called "I've Got the Urge to Herbal" that was featured in threescore-second radio spots and was role of a pre-concert video presentation for Spears's fifty-urban center summer concert bout, in which Herbal Essences was the tour sponsor.

Singles [edit]

"Oops!... I Did Information technology Again" was released equally the lead single from the anthology and achieved worldwide popularity. It became Spears's third pinnacle-10 hit unmarried on the US Billboard Hot 100, peaking at number nine; however, in comparing to the huge success of her debut single "...Baby I More Time", Jive Records considered "Oops!... I Did It Once again" a minor disappointment.[38] The song peaked at number one on the US Mainstream Meridian forty,[39] property the record for the most radio additions in 1 day. "Oops!... I Did It Over again" peaked atop the charts in Australia, Kingdom of belgium, Canada, Italy, the netherlands, New Zealand, Kingdom of norway, Poland, Romania, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland and the Uk.[40] An accompanying music video for "Oops!... I Did It Again" saw Spears on Mars in now-iconic crimson shiny catsuit, while she is visited past an American astronaut who hands her the fictional Heart of the Ocean jewel which Rose threw into the ocean at the end of Titanic.[41]

The anthology's second single, "Lucky", was released on July 24, 2000 and received positive response from the music critics, who considered one of her best offerings from the anthology. Commercially, "Lucky" topped the charts in Austria, Germany, Sweden and Switzerland, while reaching number five on the UK Singles Chart.[42] In the United States, "Lucky" only managed to acme at number twenty-three on the Billboard Hot 100 nautical chart and at number nine on the Mainstream Top forty.[38] The "glittery" music video sees Spears as the narrator and an actress named Lucky, who is a melancholy moving-picture show star and shows her conflicted relationship to fame.[43]

The third single, "Stronger", was released on October thirty, 2000 and became the anthology'due south second highest-charting single in the Us, peaking at number xi on the Billboard Hot 100 and number one on the Hot Unmarried Sales.[38] Information technology reached number vii on the United kingdom Singles Chart.[44] Its music video sees Spears catching her boyfriend adulterous on her at a futuristic turntable nightclub, driving off, getting in a wreck and singing in the pelting,[43] while the chair sequence in the video was inspired past Janet Jackson'southward video for "The Pleasure Principle".[45]

The fourth and concluding single, "Don't Let Me Be the Terminal to Know", was released on March v, 2001 and is one of Spears' favorite tracks of her career. In the Us, the song performed well beneath expectations, declining to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 nor the Mainstream Top twoscore. However, the song attained success in Europe, topping the Romanian Top 100 and peaking within the height 10 in Austria, Poland and Switzerland, while just missing the meridian ten in Germany, Ireland, Sweden and the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, peaking at number twelve in all of them.[46] The music video was considered too racy at the time, portraying Spears in love scenes with her fictional boyfriend, played by French model Brice Durand.[47]

"You Got It All" received a promotional release in France in May 2000. A promotional CD single for "When Your Eyes Say It" was released in the United Kingdom in January 2001.[ citation needed ]

Disquisitional reception [edit]

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 72/100[49]
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [i]
Billboard favorable[17]
Christgau'southward Consumer Guide (choice cut) [50]
Entertainment Weekly B[22]
Los Angeles Daily News [51]
MTV Asia 8/10[52]
NME 8/10[20]
Rolling Stone [23]
Salon favorable[53]
Sonic.net [54]

Oops!... I Did It Once again received favorable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Oops!... I Did It Again received an average score of 72, based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[55] Giving the album four out of v stars, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic noted that the album "has the same combination of sweetly sentimental ballads and endearingly gaudy trip the light fantastic-pop that made 'One More Time'," but remarked that, "Fortunately, she and her production team not only accept a stronger overall set of songs this fourth dimension, but they also occasionally get carried away with the same bewildering magpie artful, [...] giv[ing] the album character apart from the well-crafted dance-pop and ballads that serve as its center. In the terminate, information technology'southward what makes this an entertaining, satisfying heed."[1] Billboard magazine wrote that "'Oops!...' indicates that she's developing a soulful edge and emotional depth that tin't be conjured with a glass-shattering note," praising the album for consistently cast[ing] Spears every bit a young woman coming to terms with her inner ability—and that's a darn good message to offering an impressionable audience."[17] Entertainment Weekly'south David Browne gave the anthology a B-rating, writing that the anthology "reminds u.s.a. once once again that the best new pop tin be a smash of absurd air in a stifling room."[22]

Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone gave the album a 3-and-a-half out of five stars rating, calling the album "fantastic pop cheese, with much better song-factory hooks than 'N Sync or BSB get", also noting that "the slap-up thing about Oops!, under the cheese surface, is complex, fierce and downright scary, making her a true child of rock & roll tradition."[23] A writer of NME reported that "she'south modern-day pop perfection realised in a nearly, human being form", commenting that "she's washed it again."[twenty] Lennat Mak of MTV Asia named information technology "a brilliant second album", writing that Spears "is armed with a more mature and seasoned pop star await, stronger and poppier songs, and of grade, extensive media exposure."[52] Andy Battaglia of Salon chosen the anthology "a masterpiece of sorts not for its message but for the manner it applies the conventions of the pop-musical medium."[53] Website The A.5. Club was more mixed, calling it "a joyless fleck of redundant, obvious, competent cheese, recycling itself at every turn and soliciting songwriting from such soulless hacks equally Diane Warren and assorted Swedes."[56]

Accolades [edit]

Commercial operation [edit]

In the U.s.a., Oops!... I Did It Again reportedly sold 500,000 copies in its kickoff day of release.[62] Information technology debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of ane,319,193 copies.[63] [64] [65] With its success, Spears held the record for the highest offset-week sales past a female person artist.[66] This record was held for 15 years, only to be surpassed in November 2015 past the album 25 by Adele, which sold over 3.38 million albums in the United states of america in its first week.[4] The album fell to number two in its 2d calendar week, with additional sales of 612,000 copies.[67] It held this position for xv consecutive weeks.[68] [69] By its fifth week of availability, Oops!... I Did It Once more had sold over three million copies and had passed five million copies past Baronial.[seventy] On its seventeenth week on the chart,[71] it was certified septuple Platinum past the Recording Manufacture Association of America (RIAA) for shipments of seven one thousand thousand units.[72] [73] The album spent eighty-four weeks on the Billboard 200, thirty-1 weeks on the Canadian Albums Nautical chart, and ii weeks on the US Catalog Albums.[74] Oops!... I Did It Once again debuted at number eighty-two on the European Top 100 Albums, and quickly peaked at number i;[75] it sold over four million copies inside the continent, being certified four-times Platinum by the International Federation of the Phonographic Manufacture.[76] Oops!... I Did It Again reached number ii on the UK Albums Chart,[40] selling 88,000 copies in the kickoff week of release; it remained in the height five for iv weeks. The anthology debuted at number one in Canada, selling 95,275 copies in its showtime week.[77]

Information technology topped the French Albums Nautical chart[78] and the German Offizielle Top 100, too being certified triple Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI),[79] double Gold by the Syndicat National de 50'Édition Phonographique (SNEP)[80] and triple Platinum past Bundesverband Musikindustrie (BVMI),[81] denoting shipments to retailers of 900,000 units, 200,000 copies sold and 900,000 units shipped, respectively. Additionally, the album debuted at number two on the Australian Albums Nautical chart, and spent ten weeks in the top twenty;[82] information technology became the fourteenth highest-selling of 2000 in the country and was certified double Platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Clan (ARIA) the following year after shipping 140,000 copies to retailers.[83] [84] Oops!... I Did Information technology Once again opened at number 3 on the New Zealand Albums Chart and was certified Gold after only one week on the chart.[85] The Recording Manufacture Association of New Zealand (RIANZ) ultimately certified it double Platinum.[86] Oops!... I Did It Over again became the third all-time-selling album of 2000 in the United States, selling seven,893,544 albums according to Nielsen SoundScan[87] and 4th acknowledged album according to Billboard Year-End of 2000.[88] On January 24, 2005, the album was certified decuple Platinum (Diamond) by the Recording Manufacture Association of America (RIAA).[89] [ninety] Also, the anthology landed at number xx-seven on BMG Music Gild all-time best-sellers list with 1.21 million units, behind Shania Twain'south The Woman in Me (1.24 meg) and Nirvana'due south Nevermind (ane.24 million).[91] Every bit of July 2009, the album has sold 9,184,000 copies in the United States, excluded copies sold through clubs, such as the BMG Music Service.[92] Worldwide, Oops!... I Did It Once more sold 2.5 meg copies in its first week (2nd highest first week sales by a female creative person worldwide) and sold xv million copies past the end of the year. It was the best-selling female anthology and tertiary best selling album of 2000. The album has sold 20 1000000 copies worldwide.[six]

Controversy [edit]

Musicians Michael Cottril and Lawrence Wnukowski filed a copyright example confronting Spears, Zomba Recording Corporation, Jive Records, Wright Entertainment Grouping and BMG Music Publishing, claiming Spears' "What U Encounter (Is What U Get)" and "Can't Make You Love Me" are "virtually identical" to one of their songs. Cottrill and Wnukowski claimed that they authored, recorded and copyrighted a song called "What You See Is What You Get" in 1999 to i of Spears' representatives for consideration on a futurity album, though it was rejected.[93] The case was later on dismissed after it was ruled that they lacked sufficient evidence and that there "weren't enough similarities betwixt the two songs to evidence copyright infringement."[94]

Track listing [edit]

Oops!... I Did Information technology Once again  – North American edition[95]
No. Title Author(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "Oops!... I Did Information technology Once again"
  • Max Martin
  • Rami Yacoub
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
iii:31
2. "Stronger"
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
three:23
3. "Don't Get Knockin' on My Door"
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
  • Jake Schulze
  • Alexander Kronlund
  • Jake
  • Yacoub
iii:43
4. "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction"
  • Mick Jagger
  • Keith Richards
Rodney Jerkins 4:23
v. "Don't Allow Me Be the Last to Know"
  • Robert John "Mutt" Lange
  • Shania Twain
  • Keith Scott
Lange iii:50
6. "What U Run into (Is What U Get)"
  • Per Magnusson
  • David Kreuger
  • Jörgen Elofsson
  • Yacoub
  • Magnusson
  • Kreuger
  • Yacoub
3:36
seven. "Lucky"
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
  • Kronlund
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
3:26
8. "One Kiss from You" Steve Lunt
  • Lunt
  • Larry "Rock" Campbell
3:23
9. "Where Are You Now"
  • Martin
  • Andreas Carlsson
  • Martin
  • Yacoub
four:39
10. "Tin't Make Y'all Beloved Me"
  • Kristian Lundin
  • Carlsson
  • Martin
  • Lundin
  • Jake
3:17
11. "When Your Eyes Say It" Diane Warren
  • Lunt
  • Robert "Esmail" Jazayeri
  • Paul Umbach[a]
iv:29
12. "Dear Diary"
  • Britney Spears
  • Jason Blume
  • Eugene Wilde
  • Timmy Allen
  • Barry J. Eastmond
2:46
Total length: 44:37
Oops!... I Did It Once again  – International edition[96]
No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
12. "Girl in the Mirror" Elofsson
  • Magnusson
  • Kreuger
4:06
13. "Dear Diary"
  • Spears
  • Blume
  • Wilde
  • Allen
  • Eastmond
2:46
Total length: 48:24
Oops!... I Did Information technology Again  – Asian edition[97]
No. Title Writer(s) Producer(south) Length
11. "When Your Eyes Say It" Warren
  • Lunt
  • Jazayeri
  • Umbach[a]
iv:06
12. "Girl in the Mirror" Elofsson
  • Magnusson
  • Kreuger
3:36
13. "You Got Information technology All" Rupert Holmes Eric Foster White 4:43
fourteen. "Dear Diary"
  • Spears
  • Blume
  • Wilde
  • Allen
  • Eastmond
2:46
Total length: 52:33
Oops!... I Did Information technology Over again  – Japanese, Australian, Mexican, Asian and U.k. special edition[98] [99]
No. Title Writer(south) Producer(s) Length
11. "When Your Eyes Say It" Warren
  • Lunt
  • Jazayeri
  • Umbach[a]
4:06
12. "Girl in the Mirror" Elofsson
  • Magnusson
  • Kreuger
3:36
13. "You Got Information technology All" Holmes White 4:10
14. "Heart"
  • George Teren
  • Wilde
  • Lunt
  • Campbell
3:31
15. "Beloved Diary"
  • Spears
  • Blume
  • Wilde
  • Allen
  • Eastmond
2:46
Full length: 55:34
Oops!... I Did It Again  – Australian special edition (bonus disc)[100]
No. Title Length
1. "Don't Let Me Exist the Last to Know" (Album version) three:50
2. "Don't Permit Me Exist the Last to Know" (Hex Hector Radio Mix) iv:01
3. "Don't Let Me Exist the Final to Know" (Hex Hector Club Mix) x:12
4. "Stronger" (MacQuayle Mix Evidence Edit) 5:21
5. "Stronger" (Pablo La Rosa'due south Tranceformation) 7:21
vi. "Oops!... I Did It Over again" (Music video) 4:11
vii. "Lucky" (Music video) 4:07
8. "Stronger" (Music video) 3:37
9. "Don't Let Me Be the Last to Know" (Music video) 3:51
Total length: 30:52
Oops!... I Did It Once more  – Asian special edition (bonus disc)[101]
No. Title Length
1. "Oops!... I Did It Over again" (Music video) 4:xx
2. "Lucky" (Music video) four:14
iii. "Stronger" (Music video) 3:47
4. "Oops!... I Did It Again" (Karaoke) four:17
5. "Lucky" (Karaoke) four:eighteen
6. "Stronger" (Karaoke) 3:46
Total length: 25:25

Notes

  • Track 4, "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" is a embrace of the 1965 Rolling Stones unmarried.
  • ^a signifies a vocal producer

Personnel [edit]

Credits adjusted from AllMusic.[102]

  • Britney Spears – vocals, groundwork vocals, spoken words, concept
  • Steve Lunt - A&R, composer, producer, string arrangements
  • Jeanne LeBlanc – cello
  • Jesse Levy – cello
  • Kermit Moore – cello
  • Eugene J. Moye – cello
  • Harvey Bricklayer, Sr. – editing
  • Bobby Chocolate-brown – assistant engineer
  • Flip Osman – assistant engineer
  • Clayton Wood – banana engineer
  • Anthony Ruotolo – assistant engineer
  • Alfred Bosco – assistant engineer
  • Shane Stoneback – assistant engineer
  • Charles McCrorey – engineer, assistant engineer
  • Michel Gallone – engineer, mixing engineer
  • Chris Trevett – engineer, vocal engineer, mixing engineer
  • Eric Gast – engineer
  • Tim Donovan – engineer
  • Harvey Mason, Jr. – engineer
  • Dan Gellert – engineer
  • John Amatiello – engineer
  • Stephen George – mixing engineer
  • Dexter Simmons – mixing engineer
  • Chris Tergesen – string engineer
  • Michael Tucker – vocal engineer
  • Jackie Murphy – art direction, blueprint
  • Mark Seliger – dorsum cover, comprehend photograph
  • Larry "Rock" Campbell – bass, guitar, producer, pulsate programming
  • Marji Danilow, Judith Sugarman, Thomas Lindberg – bass
  • Esbjörn Öhrwall – guitar
  • Johan Carlberg – guitar
  • Michael Thompson – guitar
  • Kali – hair stylist
  • Gloria Agostini – harp
  • Max Martin – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer, spoken discussion
  • Robert "Esmail" Jazayeri – keyboards, producer, drum programming
  • Per Magnusson – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer
  • Jake – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer
  • Kristian Lundin – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer
  • Rami – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer
  • David Kreuger – keyboards, programming, producer, mixing engineer
  • Kent Wood – keyboards
  • Elan Bongiorno – make-upwardly
  • Johnny Wright – management
  • Tom Coyne – mastering
  • Nigel Green – mixing
  • Jon Ragel – photography
  • Barry Eastmond – piano, conductor, keyboards, producer, engineer, orchestral arrangements
  • Rodney Jerkins – producer, engineer, vocal organisation, mixing engineer
  • Robert John – producer
  • Timmy Allen – producer
  • Richard Meyer aka Swayd – programming
  • Cory Churko – programming
  • Kevin Churko – programming
  • William Meade – cord coordinator
  • Hayley Hill – stylist
  • Alfred Five. Dark-brown – viola, orchestra contractor
  • Julien Hairdresser – viola
  • Olivia Koppell – viola
  • Harry Zaratzian – viola
  • Maxine Roach – viola
  • Stephanie Baer – viola
  • Richard Henrickson – violin, concertmaster
  • Sanford Allen – violin
  • Belinda Whitney-Barratt – violin
  • Sandra Billingslea – violin
  • Winterton Garvey – violin
  • Gerald Tarack – violin
  • Joyce Hammann – violin
  • Stanley Hunte – violin
  • Regis Iandiorio – violin
  • Cistron Orloff – violin
  • Marion Pinhiero – violin
  • Marti Sweet – violin
  • Amahid Ajemian – violin
  • Xin Zhao – violin
  • Margaret Magill – violin
  • Ashley Horne – violin
  • Nikki Gregoroff – groundwork vocals
  • Audrey Martells – background vocals
  • Nana Hedin – groundwork vocals
  • Darryl Anthony – background vocals
  • Nora Payne – groundwork vocals
  • Jeanette Söderholm – groundwork vocals
  • Therese Ancker – groundwork vocals
  • Charlotte Björkman – background vocals
  • Andres Von Hofsten – groundwork vocals
  • Nina Woodford – background vocals
  • Mona Yacoub – groundwork vocals
  • Jeanette Olsson – background vocals
  • Stephanie Baer – background vocals

Charts [edit]

Certifications and sales [edit]

Release history [edit]

See also [edit]

  • List of best-selling albums
  • Listing of best-selling albums by women
  • Listing of best-selling albums in the Us
  • List of fastest-selling albums

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Every bit of December 2010, Oops!...I Did Information technology Again has sold 9,201,000 copies in the United States according to Nielsen SoundScan,[185] with additional 1,210,000 copies sold at BMG Music Clubs.[91] Nielsen SoundScan does not count copies sold through clubs similar the BMG Music Service, which were significantly popular in the 1990s.[92]

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Bibliography [edit]

  • Salaverri, Fernando (2005). Sólo éxitos. Año a año. 1959-2002 [But Hits. Year by year. 1959-2002] (in Castilian). Madrid, Espana: Iberautor Promociones Culturales. p. 943. ISBN9788480486392.

External links [edit]

  • Official website

greenanding.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oops%21..._I_Did_It_Again_%28album%29

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