"Come Close" | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Single by Common featuring Mary J. Blige | ||||||||||||||||||||
from the album Electric Circus | ||||||||||||||||||||
Released | November 5, 2002 | |||||||||||||||||||
Format | 12-inch single, CD, Digital download, Vinyl | |||||||||||||||||||
Genre | Hip hop, R&B, neo soul | |||||||||||||||||||
Length | 4:35 | |||||||||||||||||||
Label | MCA Records | |||||||||||||||||||
Writer(s) | Lonnie Rashid Lynn, Mary Jane Blige, Pharrell Williams, Chad Hugo | |||||||||||||||||||
Producer(s) | The Neptunes | |||||||||||||||||||
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"Come Close" is a single by rapper Common featuring guest vocals by Mary J. Blige. The song is produced by Chad Hugo and Pharrell's production team, The Neptunes. Peaking at #65 on the Billboard Hot 100, "Come Close" is the only song from Common's 2002 album Electric Circus to make an appearance on the national music chart. It was released in conjunction with a promo video directed by Sanaa Hamri and Questlove of The Roots. The song's lyrics are a loving marriage proposition to Common's then girlfriend Erykah Badu. Jack LV Isles of Allmusic describes it as a "slow-paced dialogue [...] that borders on typical," but will inevitably be a commercial success. Mark Anthony Neal of Pop Matters comments on its mainstream sound saying that it's not a "sell-out" track, just a "fly love song" in which The Neptunes "brought their A-game."
In the video for the song, Common visits his girlfriend, a deaf-mute woman (although this is not mentioned in the song itself). As she looks outside of her window, Common raps the verses to the song, while using cardboard signs to communicate the meanings of the words to her. After the second verse, he eventually proposes with the lines "I'm tired of the fast lane, I want you to have my last name." His girlfriend gladly accepts and they then drive off.
In the woman's room, behind her bed, there is a poster written in sign language. If one looks closely, it spells out "COMMON".
This video was nominated at the MTV Video Music Awards 2003 for the MTV2 Award, but it lost to AFI's "Girl's Not Grey."