Sweet Dreams (Beyoncé song)

"Sweet Dreams"
The black and white portrait of a woman. She is squatting and looking to her left side. She wears a suit, gloves and black shoes. Below her image, the word "Beyoncé" is written in silver capital letters. In front of her, the words "Sweet Dreams" are written in golden capital letters.
Single by Beyoncé
from the album I Am... Sasha Fierce
Released June 2, 2009 (2009-06-02)
Format
Recorded March 2008; South Beat Studios
(Miami Beach, Florida)
Genre Electropop, dance-pop
Length 3:28
Label Columbia
Writer(s)
Producer(s)
  • James Scheffer
  • Wayne Wilkins
  • Rico Love
  • Beyoncé Knowles
Beyoncé singles chronology
"Ego"
(2009)
"Sweet Dreams"
(2009)
"Broken-Hearted Girl"
(2009)

"Sweet Dreams" is a song by American singer Beyoncé from her third studio album I Am... Sasha Fierce (2008). Originally titled "Beautiful Nightmare", it leaked online in March 2008. The song was written and produced by Beyoncé, James Scheffer, Wayne Wilkins, and Rico Love. Columbia Records released "Sweet Dreams", the album's sixth single, to mainstream radio and rhythmic contemporary radio playlists in the United States on June 2, 2009, and elsewhere on July 13. It is an electropop song whose instrumentation includes synthesizers, a keyboard, and snare drums. Knowles employs slinky vocals to sing the haunting lyrics, which describe a romantic relationship that the female protagonist believes could be a dream.

"Sweet Dreams" was critically acclaimed by contemporary music critics, who praised its beats, synthpop sound and Knowles' vocals. Some critics noted that the sliding bassline gave the song a dark quality and resembles the one used in some of Michael Jackson's songs on Thriller (1982). "Sweet Dreams" gained popularity for its electro music style, which contrasts Knowles' earlier R&B, urban, and funk-tinged releases. The song was nominated for the Viewers Choice Award at the 2010 BET Awards. It topped the New Zealand Singles Chart, peaked at number ten on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart, and reached the top five on singles charts in Australia, the Czech Republic, Ireland, Slovakia, and the United Kingdom among others. "Sweet Dreams" was certified platinum in Australia, New Zealand and the US.

The song's accompanying music video was directed by Adria Petty, and was filmed in Brooklyn, New York. It mainly uses a green screen and computer-generated effects, making the clip minimal and performance-based. The video sees Knowles wearing a golden robot suit designed by French fashion designer Thierry Mugler. The video received favorable reviews from critics, who described it as high-fashion and noted that Knowles reprised part of the choreography from her 2008 video for "Single Ladies". Knowles promoted the song by performing it live at the 2009 MTV Europe Music Awards and occasionally during the I Am... World Tour (2009–10). "Sweet Dreams" was recognized as one of the most performed songs of 2009 at the 27th American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Pop Music Awards. It was used in a Cryster Geyser Water Japanese advertisement that featured Knowles.

Production and recording

Initially titled "Beautiful Nightmare", "Sweet Dreams" became one of the first songs composed for the 2008 double album I Am... Sasha Fierce.[1] Record producer Rico Love regards writing "Sweet Dreams" with Knowles as "the experience of a lifetime".[2] When Knowles went to the South Beat Studios in Miami Beach, Florida,[3] she was not prepared to record and had to attend the opening concert of her husband Jay-Z's tour.[2] However, when she heard a demo of "Sweet Dreams", she was impressed and wanted to record the song immediately.[2][4]

Knowles, Wayne Wilkins and Jim Jonsin did some additional writing and produced the song alongside Love at the same studio.[3] Knowles and Love worked on the vocal arrangements; Knowles appreciated Love's background vocals in the hook and retained them.[2] Jim Caruana assisted in recording the music.[3] Love then recorded Knowles' vocals; the recording session lasted for an hour.[2][3] Lastly, Wilkins mixed the track.[3] "Sweet Dreams" appears on the Sasha Fierce disc of I Am... Sasha Fierce as it allows Knowles to portray her alter ego Sasha Fierce, whom Knowles described as "[her] fun, more sensual, more aggressive, more outspoken side and more glamorous side".[5]

Leak and release

"Sweet Dreams" was leaked under its original title the day after it was recorded in March 2008, eight months before the album's release.[2][6] It was the first time that a single by Knowles was leaked before its inclusion on an upcoming album.[2] She responded to the leak on her official website, thanking her fans for the positive response towards the song, before clarifying that it was just a work in progress and that she did not intend to release new material in the near future.[6] About the leak, Love told MTV News:

I was more concerned that [Beyoncé] would feel that we did it. A lot of times producers or songwriters leak records because they feel if you put the song out there it would go [on to become a hit]. Usually a leak that far in advance of an album release puts the song in serious jeopardy of being excluded from the final track list. It was frustrating. I felt like you work hard to get in the studio to work with Beyoncé. [But] I was blessed ... that song turned out [to] have nine lives.[2]

Under the song's original title "Beautiful Nightmare", "Sweet Dreams" gained some attention in the United States, where it amassed enough airplay to chart at number forty-five on Hot Dance Club Songs chart and at number fifty-seven on Pop 100 Airplay chart.[7] "Broken-Hearted Girl" was initially intended as the sixth US and fourth international single alongside the stateside-only single "Ego" (2009).[8] However, its release was scrapped at the last minute, and replaced by "Sweet Dreams",[9] which Knowles selected for a summer single release because she wanted an uptempo song that would keep people dancing.[10] She added, "It's very rare to find an uptempo song that means something ... that's not just about going to a club or partying or being a sexy girl."[11]

"Sweet Dreams" was added to US contemporary hit radio[12] and rhythmic contemporary radio playlists on June 2, 2009.[13] Dance remixes of the song alongside the album version of "Ego" and its remixes were later released on the same digital EP on August 17, 2009, in the US.[14] In Germany, the album version of "Sweet Dreams" and a radio edit of a remix produced by Steve Pitron and Max Sanna were made available as a digital download and as a CD single on July 13, and July 17, 2009.[15][16] A different digital EP containing remixes and the music video of the song was released in the same country on July 31, 2011.[17] On July 16, 2009, the album version and the radio edit of "Sweet Dreams" was serviced as a two-track digital single in Oceania and Europe,[18][19][20] excluding France, where it was made available on the same format the following day.[21] In the UK, the song was released on CD and as a stand-alone digital single on August 10, 2009.[22][23] A different digital EP containing four remixes and the album version of "Sweet Dreams" was also released.[24] On the same date, the song was released as a two-sided digital EP in mainland Europe; it contained ten remixes of "Sweet Dreams".[25][26]

Composition and lyrical interpretation

"Sweet Dreams"
A 20-second sample of the refrain of "Sweet Dreams", which is largely keyboard-propelled. Knowles ornaments her slinky vocals with a gliding tone to settle herself back to a less tense state after moments of heightened agitation.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

"Sweet Dreams" is a dance pop and electropop[27] song that incorporates elements of rock and old school funk music.[28][29] The song is built on undulating electro rhythms[30] and a thumping beat;[31] its groove fits into hip hop phrasing.[32] It is essentially driven by a keyboard[33] and also has guitar, piano,[34] synthesizer,[30] snare drum[1] and bass instrumentation.[35] Many music critics noted that several components of "Sweet Dreams" are reminiscent of the songs on Michael Jackson's 1982 album Thriller. James Montgomery of MTV News said that the "gnarly low end" sounds like Jackson's song "Beat It" (1983).[1] Nick Levine of Digital Spy noted that the electronic bassline is similar to those used in Jackson's songs "Thriller" (1983) and "Bad" (1987).[27] Arielle Castillo of Miami New Times noted that Jackson could use the beat of "Sweet Dreams" to bring up to date his Thriller-era style.[33]

The lyrics of "Sweet Dreams" are about a female protagonist who has some insecurities about her new romantic relationship;[31] she is confused about whether her relationship with her partner is a "sweet dream or a beautiful nightmare".[36] The song starts with a bassline, which is occasionally interrupted by spare snare kicks, drum fills and Knowles' chanting, "Turn the lights on".[34][35] She then adopts slinky vocals to begin the first verse.[28] The "expansive-yet-molecular" chorus[1] then starts with the line, "You can be a sweet dream or a beautiful nightmare / Either way, I don't wanna wake up from you."[35] The song is written in the key of D minor with a tempo of 122 beats per minute. Beyoncé's vocals span from C4 to E5 in the song.[37]

Critical reception

Reviews

"Sweet Dreams" was acclaimed by critics, some of whom praised its dark tone and electropop sound that is different from Knowles' previous work. James Montgomery of MTV News wrote that Knowles' vocals, which he called, "icy and cool, slippery like mercury [and] nothing to scoff at either", help make the song an "undeniable smash" that is unique compared to the work of other artists.[1] Jennifer Vineyard of the same publication argued that the rock elements and smooth vocals contribute to Knowles' "fierce" alter ego, who "dares the listener to dream of her, warning that it might be a 'beautiful nightmare'."[28] Arielle Castillo of Miami New Times noted that "Sweet Dreams" is another one of Jim Jonsin's productions with a keyboard-propelled arrangement, but unlike the material Jonsin crafted for Soulja Boy, the song is "swirling, and darker".[33] Joey Guerra of the Houston Chronicle and Gary Trust of Billboard magazine agreed that the song is one of Knowles' purest dance songs and is "an irresistible call to the dance floor".[38][39] Describing "Sweet Dreams" as a "cool dance track", Dennis Amith of J!-ENT complimented its arrangement, calling it "experimental" with "cool transitions".[40]

Adam Mazmanian of The Washington Times described the song as "a gritty slow grind with a salacious bassline" and noted that Knowles "delivers a near parody of a good-girl voice" while singing the chorus.[35] Ryan Dombal of Pitchfork Media wrote that "Sweet Dreams" sounds like a song Rihanna would sing.[41] Echoing Dombal's sentiments, Nick Levine of Digital Spy wrote that the best song on the Sasha Fierce disc is a "dark[ish] electropop track called 'Sweet Dreams', [which] actually sounds like the cousin of Rihanna's 'Disturbia'".[42] On a separate review for the single, Levine awarded "Sweet Dreams" a rating of four stars out of five, and commented that the song seduces listeners with its catchy chorus hook, and thereafter keeps them intrigued by "placing a hint of darkness just beneath the shiny, synthy surface".[27] Spence D. of IGN Music wrote that though "Sweet Dreams" is not a "stellar track", it is superior to other album tracks, including "Diva" and "Radio".[30] Similarly, Vicki Lutas of BBC Music wrote that even though "Sweet Dreams" appears to lack something, it is undeniably a good song overall.[36] She added that "Sweet Dreams" may not be Knowles' finest or most memorable work, but it remains her best offering since her 2003 song "Crazy in Love".[36] Lutas also commended Knowles' vocal delivery, which he described as "beautiful and soft, yet strong and powerful".[36] Talia Kraines of the same publication wrote that "Sweet Dreams" is one of the standout tracks on the Sasha Fierce disc though Knowles does not get as experimental as she did on her 2006 song "Ring the Alarm".[43]

Recognition and accolades

"Sweet Dreams" earned Knowles the Best Female Vocal accolade at the 2009 Music MP3 Awards.[44] It was nominated for Best R&B/Urban Dance Track at the 25th Annual International Dance Music Awards, but lost to The Black Eyed Peas's 2009 song "I Gotta Feeling".[45] It was also nominated for the Viewers Choice Award at the 2010 BET Awards.[46] The American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) recognized "Sweet Dreams" as one of the most performed songs of 2009 at the 27th ASCAP Pop Music Awards.[47] On the occasion of Knowles' thirtieth birthday, Erika Ramirez and Jason Lipshutz of Billboard magazine ranked the song at number 21 on their list of Knowles' 30 biggest Billboard hits, and noted that its electropop sound, which was in contrast to Knowles' previous singles, showcased her range of talent.[48] On The Village Voice's 2009 Pazz & Jop singles list, "Sweet Dreams" was ranked at number 114.[49] In 2013, John Boone and Jennifer Cady of E! Online placed the song at number five on their list of ten best Knowles' songs, writing that Knowles "stepped away from R&B roots with this surreal electropop tune, which features these standout lyrics: 'My guilty pleasure, I ain't going nowhere / As long as you're here, I'll be floating on air' (which, from Bey's mouth, sounds like the greatest threat ever)."[50]

Chart performance

"Sweet Dreams" debuted at number seventy-two on the US Billboard Hot 100 chart issue dated August 9, 2009.[51] It peaked at number ten for two non-consecutive weeks on the charts issued dated November 7, and November 21, 2009.[52][53] The song became Knowles' thirteenth top ten Hot 100 single as a solo artist during 2001–10, and tied her with Ludacris and T-Pain for second-most top tens on the chart since 2000; Knowles' husband Jay-Z leads with fourteen in that period.[54] Knowles' is the third song titled "Sweet Dreams" to reach the top ten of the Hot 100 chart, following "Sweet Dreams" by Air Supply in 1982 and "Sweet Dreams" by Eurythmics in 1983.[54]

"Sweet Dreams" peaked at number forty-eight on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, making I Am... Sasha Fierce the first album of the 21st century to have seven entries on that chart.[55] For the week ending September 12, 2009, it topped the US Hot Dance Club Songs chart; it became Knowles' eleventh number-one song, and was the fourth song from I Am... Sasha Fierce to top that chart.[56] "Sweet Dreams" tied Knowles with Kristine W for second-most number one songs on the Hot Dance Club Songs during 2001–10.[56] The song peaked at number five for three consecutive weeks on the US Pop Songs chart in November 2009.[57][58][59] "Sweet Dreams" was certified double platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), denoting sales of two million digital copies.[60] As of October 2012, it had sold 2,091,000 digital downloads in the US.[61]

"Sweet Dreams" also performed well outside the US. In the UK, the song initially entered the UK Singles Chart more than a month before its physical release, on July 5, 2009, at number one hundred and eighty-nine.[62] The following week, it rose to number fifty-two,[63] and thereafter continuously ascended the chart; it peaked at number five on August 9, 2009, and became Knowles' sixth top five single in the UK as a solo artist.[64] The song was last seen on the UK Singles Chart on January 17, 2010, after spending 26 weeks in the top 100.[63] On July 16, 2009, "Sweet Dreams" debuted at number seventeen on the Irish Singles Chart and climbed to its peak position at number four in its fourth charting week.[65] The single stayed in top ten for eight weeks and left the chart after spending nineteen consecutive weeks on it.[65]

For the week ending June 18, 2009, "Sweet Dreams" was the most added song on Australian radio stations.[66] On August 9, 2009, it peaked at number two on the Australian Singles Chart, and became the highest charting single from I Am... Sasha Fierce in Australia.[67] The song spent thirty-eight consecutive weeks in the top 100, where it last charted on March 1, 2010;[68] it was certified platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for shipping 70,000 copies.[69] In New Zealand, "Sweet Dreams" debuted at number thirty-nine, and peaked at number one for three consecutive weeks.[70] It was the most added song on New Zealand radios as from September 21, 2009 to November 2, 2009.[71][72][73][74] The song was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand (RIANZ), representing shipment of 15,000 copies.[75]

Music video

Background and concept

A woman wearing a golden metallic corset and a pair of sleeves of the same material, is standing and looking forward.
The outfit dress that Knowles wears in the music video was designed by Thierry Mugler.

The accompanying music video for "Sweet Dreams" was directed by Adria Petty,[76] whom Knowles chose because of her intelligence and beautiful visual references.[10] After Knowles learned the choreography in Los Angeles,[10] the video was shot in a studio in Brooklyn, New York City.[76] It was the seventh video released from I Am... Sasha Fierce,[77] and the second to have complete color throughout; "Halo" was the first.[10] Knowles described it as more "graphic" when compared to the previous six videos; its motive was to "take Sasha [Fierce] to the next level".[10] In the video, Knowles' alter ego is symbolized by the golden robot suit she wears;[1] it was designed by French fashion designer Thierry Mugler.[10]

A green-screen and computer-generated effects were used for the video to create a minimal and performance-based clip.[78] The computer-generated imagery (CGI) was employed to create a context-less void;[78] the CGI effects were used to delete the background and setting before creating a void-like digital canvas for the dance routine[78] that is executed by Knowles and her dancers Ebony Williams and Ashley Everett, who all sport numerous flashy and symmetrical costumes throughout the video.[1] Accordingly, there were no concerns of cutting; the images were easily merged into one another using computers.[78] A high number of camera lens glare effects was used in the video,[77] part of which was inspired by British designer Gareth Pugh's Autumn/Winter 2009 video presentation.[79] Knowles further explained that the fashion and choreography were the main elements of the music video:

The fashion was extremely important in this video because everything was so minimal ... With the choreography, we really focused on hitting all of the accents in the drum beat. What makes this choreography so interesting is that in one instance, it is very staccato and hard... And the next instance; the movement is very smooth and there are lots of melts with inter-kit movement in the fingers and hands.[10]

On June 12, 2009, a behind-the-scenes video, which Knowles' dance rehearsal, was released; Knowles was dressed in golden costumes and was performing some robotic movements[11] The music video of "Sweet Dreams" was not included on the remixes and video album Above and Beyoncé – Video Collection & Dance Mixes as it was not finished when the CD/DVD collection was made; instead, a Making of Sweet Dreams video was included.[80] A 30-second clip from the video was posted online on July 8, 2009; it showed Knowles alongside her two female back-up dancers in a virtual desert.[81] The following day, the full video was leaked online but was soon deleted after Knowles' label issued warnings to infringing websites.[82] The video for "Sweet Dreams" premiered on MTV later the same day.[83]

Synopsis and analysis

The video opens with Knowles tossing and turning in her bed; her idea was to make the opening shot look like "a dark fairy tale ".[10] As she tries to sleep, Brahms's Lullaby plays softly in the background.[36] She then levitates off her bed using her stomach muscles to move the top half of her body.[10] Knowles said that the levitation shot was the hardest one as she had difficulties making her neck look straight. She added that the scene represents the nightmare and the white bird flying above her takes her into her dream,[10] which unfolds after the screech of an electric guitar.[36] Knowles is transported to a desert and several clouds are present in the background. She wears a black Roberto Cavalli dress and boots;[10] as the music begins, her two backup dancers wearing Gareth Pugh pieces appear.[10] The scene changes into a computer-generated sci-fi landscape where Knowles is inscribed with a circle and square in a similar fashion to Leonardo da Vinci's Vitruvian Man.[78][79] The first chorus is brought in by a subtle glass-breaking sound effect as the sci-fi special effects disappear and Knowles appears in a silver one-shouldered mini dress on a white background.[78] Accompanied by her backup dancers, she performs sophisticated, street and hip-busting dance moves.[78][84]

The second chorus shows Knowles wearing a silver lined body suit while smashing mirrors. During the bridge, the video fades to black and white and Knowles appears wearing the gold robot suit, and gold and diamond nail rings valued at $36,000 and designed by Bijules designer Jules Kim.[85] She executes some robotic movements. As the chorus begins to play for the third and final time, digital doubling and mirroring are used to create a collection of dance moves and multiple images Knowles arching her back.[78] The gold outfit is then reused, this time in color. Knowles performs another dance routine with her two backup dancers, then says, "Turn the lights out", and the video ends.

Reception

James Montgomery of MTV News wrote that the video is "an eye-popping, herky-jerky, high-fashion" one. He praised the way Knowles "[pops] her pelvis in ways never imagined", and the wardrobe changes in the clip, before concluding: "She expands on her burgeoning robot fetish, flashes the crazy eyes and contorts her body in downright unsettling ways. All of which is to say that 'Sweet Dreams' is just like every amazingly crazy Beyoncé video from the past three years, which — to extend the point — also means that it's pretty great."[1] Olivia Smith of Daily News noted that in the video, Knowles references Jane Fonda in the movie Barbarella (1968), Tin Woodman and Pamela Anderson through the different costumes she wears.[82] Smith further compared the video with the one for "Single Ladies", writing that Knowles reprises some of the moves as she "can only swivel those hips in so many ways".[82] Brandon Soderberg of Slant Magazine described the introductory part of the video as a David Lynch-like mixture of eroticism and symbolism.[78] He wrote that the video was "one part Victoria's Secret commercial, another part dream logic anti-narrative, and a CGI-assisted freakout all around".[78] Soderberg commended the video for being "an excess of body and action, not filmic techniques", adding that the dancing in the video "blow[s] our minds anew".[78]

Rolling Stone found similarities between the video for "Sweet Dreams", Kanye West's video for "Paranoid" (2009) and the cover artworks of English rock band Yes.[77] Canadian magazine Dose also compared the video with "Paranoid" due to their similar dream sequences.[84] Nadia Mendoza of The Sun further compared Knowles' look in the video with Lady Gaga's.[86] Vicki Lutas of the BBC did not appreciate the first 30 seconds of the video, writing that "the dark, horror-type music, the pumping heartbeat, the equally spooky lullaby, the screech of an electric guitar", gave her the impression that she was watching "some [19]80s magician, with a Knowles soundtrack".[36] However, she complimented the rest of the video writing that "things (thankfully) move away from the Hallowe'en cheese and into familiar Beyoncé territory (right from the fact it's proper [19]80s pop through to the video essentially being 'Single Ladies' with Beyoncé and 2 dancers)".[36] Lutas concluded that the video might not be remembered for long or hailed as Beyoncé's finest and more memorable work, but it remains one of the best music videos from Knowles she has seen since "Crazy in Love".[36] Nick Levine of Digital Spy compared the dancing moves in the video with those in "Single Ladies".[87]

The video stayed at number one for several weeks on the UK TV Airplay Chart in August and September 2009.[88] It was ranked at number 13 on BET's Notarized: Top 100 Videos of 2009 countdown.[89] Tamar Anitai of MTV placed the video at number three on his list of the best five videos of 2009, wrote that it "isn't just another high-fashion look at Beyoncé ... " and continued, "It's the dark yin to the brighter, lighter fare of 'Single Ladies.' This is a 360-degree look at Beyoncé's life: Beyoncé the woman, Sasha Fierce the performer, and the powerful force that occupies the spaces in between.".[79] In 2013, John Boone and Jennifer Cady of E! Online placed the video at number ten on their list of Knowles' ten best music videos, praising Knowles' sexy robotic look.[90]

Promotion

Beyoncé performing "Sweet Dreams" during I Am... World Tour.

Knowles was due to perform "Sweet Dreams" at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards on September 13.[91] However, last minute changes were brought to her performance that night; wearing a leotard and a silver glove, Knowles sang a short drum-led remix of "Sweet Dreams" before switching to "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)", accompanied by two female backup dancers.[92] Wearing a red Agent Provocateur corset, stockings and long satin gloves, Knowles sang "Sweet Dreams" at the 2009 MTV Europe Music Awards on November 5.[93][94] She appeared on stage in a heart-shaped bed with satin sheets and later leapt up and performed a choreography to the song.[95] A Daily Mail reporter wrote that the live performance was "triumphant" and "much to the delight of the audience".[94] Charly Wilder of Spin magazine commented that Knowles overshadowed American singer Katy Perry's "tweaked-out pinup shtick with her mesmerizing, sexed-up rendition" of "Sweet Dreams".[96] Gordon Smart of The Sun commented that Knowles stole the show with the "iconic" performance of the song and "eye-popping" look.[95]

"Sweet Dreams" was not regularly performed on the I Am... World Tour, a 2009–10 world tour in support of I Am... Sasha Fierce, but a video interlude featuring the song was included.[97] Knowles sang an acoustic and downtempo rendition of the song live during the revue I Am... Yours that was held at the Encore Theater in Las Vegas on August 2, 2009.[4][98] She blended it into a romantic medley that also included her 2003 song "Dangerously in Love" and Anita Baker's 1986 song "Sweet Love".[99][100] The performance was subsequently included on her 2009 CD/DVD live album I Am... Yours: An Intimate Performance at Wynn Las Vegas.[101] Knowles performed "Sweet Dreams" live at the Glastonbury Festival on June 26, 2011; she mixed it with the 1983 song "Sweet Dreams", originally performed by the British pop music duo Eurythmics.[102] "Sweet Dreams" was used in a commercial for Crystal Geyser bottled water in which Knowles appeared; she dances and drinks water while the song is played in the background.[103][104]

Cover versions

An unofficial remix, featuring American rappers Lil Wayne and Nicki Minaj, was leaked on some websites on March 9, 2010, and was included on Wayne's 2009 mixtape No Ceilings.[105][106] The Big Pink, an English electro-rock duo consisting multi-instrumentalists Robbie Furze and Milo Cordell, covered "Sweet Dreams" in a live session for BBC Radio 1 on November 7, 2009.[107] They also performed the song live on at the 2010 Isle of Wight Festival on June 13, 2010.[108] The cover later became a B-side to their 2010 single "Tonight".[109] Jon Caramanica of The New York Times commented that The Big Pink's version of "Sweet Dreams" had a "disarmingly flat affect, delivering it as the ramble of a neurotic" when compared to the original recording sung by Knowles.[110] Likewise, Pitchfork Media's Ryan Dombal felt that their cover "obliterates the original's Hi-NRG pulse, turning it into something a lot moodier and creepier".[111] British soul and R&B singer Lemar covered "Sweet Dreams" in his Biz Session in January 2011.[112] On November 1, 2010, American professional basketball player, Shaquille O'Neal, dressed as his female alter ego Shaquita for Halloween, and gave a lip-synching performance of Knowles' "Sweet Dreams".[113] In September 2011, Jade Collins covered "Sweet Dreams" during an episode of the ninth series of The X Factor.[114] On October 27, 2012, boy band Union J covered the song during the same season of the show[115] and released the cover through the iTunes Store as a single the same day.[116]

Jessica Sanchez cover

On March 28, 2012, Jessica Sanchez, a contestant of the eleventh season of American Idol, covered "Sweet Dreams" performing a slow-tempo ballad version of the song accompanied at the beginning by harps.[117][118] Her performance received favorable comments and a standing ovation from the judges of the show.[119] Jennifer Lopez commented, "You did a beautiful job on it ... If I was Beyoncé and I was home and I heard that, I'd be like 'I got to do that in my next concert, slow that one down.'"[120] Steven Tyler described Sanchez's performance as "great" while Randy Jackson noted that it was "unbelievable, sensational".[120][121] James Montgomery of MTV News graded her performance with a B, and called the cover "a bit of an odd choice, and yet also a supremely confident one".[122] He added, "For once, she pulled things back, and maybe suffered a bit for doing so, but there were still plenty of subtly great moments, particularly in the verses. Might not have been her best—it definitely lacked in vocal fireworks ... And really, it was good enough".[122]

Mellisa Locker of Rolling Stone praised Sanchez's performance, calling it a "brilliant job" and adding that "it's risky, but Beyoncé has done it, and if anyone can pull off a dazzling repeat performance, it's Jessica".[118] She further compared the performance with the dream sequence from the 1945 film Spellbound but noted that it was "slightly weirder"[118] Jim Farber of the Daily News commented that "her take on a song by her clear role model, Beyoncé, showed too much similarity in their timbres and phrasing, making Sanchez's voice seem redundant ... despite the fact she switched up the arrangement of the bootylicious song she chose, 'Sweet Dreams.'"[123] Laura Schreffler of the Daily Mail described Sanchez' performance as "pared-down, show-stopping ... a floaty, dreamy, confection that wows the judges."[124] Amy Reiter of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "Sanchez gave yet another perfectly calibrated performance with Beyoncé's 'Sweet Dreams,' balancing restraint and power. Everything from her voice to her dress to the red door she walked through seemed polished and tour-ready."[125] The Arizona Republic's Randy Cordova praised the performance, saying that the slow-tempo version allowed Sanchez "to really delve into the song's emotional core".[126] The Hollywood Reporter's Erin Carlson praised the tonned-down theatrical stage during the performance and Sanchez's vibrato voice, further describing the performance as a "near-perfection".[127]

Formats and track listings

  • US Ego/Sweet Dreams Singles and Dance Mixes[14]
  1. "Ego" – 3:57
  2. "Ego" (DJ Escape & Johnny Vicious Club Remix)  – 8:22
  3. "Ego" (Slang "Big Ego" Club Remix) – 6:18
  4. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28
  5. "Sweet Dreams" (OK DAC Club Remix)  – 5:14
  6. "Sweet Dreams" (Karmatronic Club Remix)  – 6:36
  • Germany Digital EP[17]
  1. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28
  2. "Sweet Dreams" (Groove Police Remix – Radio Edit)  – 3:10
  3. "Ego" – 3:57
  4. "Ego" (Remix) feat. Kanye West – 4:43
  5. "Sweet Dreams" (Video) – 4:00
  6. "Ego" (Remix) feat. Kanye West (Video) – 4:52
  1. "Sweet Dreams" (Dave Spoon Remix)  – 7:07
  2. "Sweet Dreams" (Steve Pitron & Max Sanna Remix – Radio Edit)  – 3:37
  3. "Sweet Dreams" (Steve Pitron & Max Sanna Club Remix)  – 7:38
  4. "Sweet Dreams" (Oli Collins & Fred Portelli Remix)  – 5:38
  5. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28

  • Europe Single EP 1[25]
  1. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28
  2. "Sweet Dreams" (Medicin Club Remix)  – 6:18
  3. "Sweet Dreams" (Groove Police Club Remix)  – 7:05
  4. "Sweet Dreams" (Ok Dac Club Remix)  – 5:11
  5. "Sweet Dreams" (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Club Remix)  – 8:39
  6. "Sweet Dreams" (Maurice's NuSoul Club Remix)  – 7:09
  • Europe Single EP 2[26]
  1. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28
  2. "Sweet Dreams" (Dave Spoon Remix)  – 7:07
  3. "Sweet Dreams" (Steve Pitron & Max Sanna Remix – Radio Edit)  – 3:37
  4. "Sweet Dreams" (Steve Pitron & Max Sanna Club Remix)  – 7:38
  5. "Sweet Dreams" (Oli Collins & Fred Portelli Remix)  – 5:38
  1. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28
  2. "Sweet Dreams" (Steve Pitron & Max Sanna Remix) [Radio Edit] – 3:35
  • UK Download Single[23]
  1. "Sweet Dreams" – 3:28

Credits and personnel

Credits are taken from I Am... Sasha Fierce liner notes.[3]

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2009–10) Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart[128] 2
Australian Urban Chart[129] 1
Austrian Singles Chart[128] 17
Belgian Singles Chart (Flanders)[128] 24
Belgian Tip Chart (Wallonia)[128] 4
Brazilian Hot 100 Airplay[130] 2
Canadian Hot 100[131] 17
Czech Airplay Chart[132] 5
Danish Singles Chart[128] 16
Dutch Top 40[133] 26
European Hot 100 Singles[134] 7
French Digital Singles Chart[135] 30
France Radio Chart (SNEP)[136] 2
German Singles Chart[137] 8
Hungarian Airplay Chart[138] 4
Hungarian Singles Chart[139] 7
Irish Singles Chart[65] 4
Israeli Airplay Chart[140] 3
Japan Hot 100[141] 30
New Zealand Singles Chart[128] 1
Norway Singles Chart[128] 6
Slovak Airplay Chart[142] 5
Spanish Singles Chart[128] 9
Swedish Singles Chart[128] 14
Swiss Singles Chart[128] 16
UK Singles Chart[63] 5
UK R&B Chart[143] 3
US Billboard Hot 100[144] 10
US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs[145] 48
US Hot Dance Club Play[146] 1
US Pop Songs[147] 5
US Adult Pop Songs (Billboard)[148] 29
US Adult Contemporary (Billboard)[148] 25
US Rhythmic Top 40 (Billboard)[7] 1
Charts (2010) Peak
position
Spanish Airplay Chart[149] 16

Year-end charts

Chart (2009) Position
Australian Singles Chart[150] 23
Australian Urban Singles Chart[151] 7
Austrian Singles Chart[152] 64
Canadian Hot 100[153] 82
European Hot 100 Singles[154] 86
German Singles Chart[155] 40
Hungarian Airplay Chart[156] 46
Irish Singles Chart[157] 45
New Zealand Singles Chart[158] 9
Norwegian Singles Chart[159] 33
Swedish Singles Chart[160] 65
Swiss Singles Chart[161] 90
UK Singles Chart[162] 39
US Billboard Hot 100[163] 66
US Hot 100 Airplay[164] 53
US Hot Dance Club Play Songs[165] 11
Chart (2010) Position
Hungarian Airplay Chart[166] 21
Spanish Singles Chart[167] 49
US Billboard Hot 100[168] 86
US Hot 100 Airplay[169] 64
US Rhythmic Songs[170] 43

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/Sales
Australia (ARIA)[69] Platinum 70,000^
Denmark (IFPI Denmark)[171] Gold 15,000^
New Zealand (RMNZ)[75] Platinum 15,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[172] Gold 400,000
United States (RIAA)[60] Platinum 1,691,000[61]

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

Country Date Format
United States[12][13][14] June 2, 2009 Top 40 and rhythmic contemporary
August 17, 2009 Dance remixes
Germany[15][16][17] July 13, 2009 CD single
July 17, 2009 Digital download
July 31, 2009 Digital EP
Oceania[18][19] July 16, 2009 Digital download
Europe[20] July 16, 2009 Digital download
France[21] July 17, 2009 Digital download
United Kingdom[22][23][24] August 10, 2009 CD single, digital download, digital EP
Europe[25][26] Two-sided digital EP

See also

References

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