Honey Bee (song) explained

Honey Bee
Cover:Blake Shelton - Honey Bee Lyrics.jpg
Type:single
Artist:Blake Shelton
Album:Red River Blue
Recorded:2010
Genre:Country
Label:Reprise Nashville
Producer:Scott Hendricks
Prev Title:Who Are You When I'm Not Looking
Prev Year:2010
Next Title:God Gave Me You
Next Year:2011

"Honey Bee" is a song written by Rhett Akins and Ben Hayslip and recorded by American country music artist Blake Shelton. It was released in April 2011 as the first single from Shelton's 2011 album Red River Blue. The song reached number one on the US Billboard Hot Country Songs chart in July 2011. On November 30, the song received a Grammy Award nomination for Best Country Solo Performance, but it lost to Taylor Swift's "Mean".

History

Blake Shelton debuted "Honey Bee" at the Academy of Country Music awards telecast on April 3, 2011, where he also sang "Who Are You When I'm Not Looking". "Honey Bee" was released to digital retailers immediately after the broadcast.[1]

Content

Rhett Akins and Ben Hayslip, two-thirds of the "Peach Pickers" writing ensemble, wrote the song. Akins said that he first thought of writing a song called "Huckleberry" after seeing an article in Billboard magazine about former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee. Misreading the name as "Huckleberry" made Akins think of a line from the film Tombstone. He then changed the word to "honeysuckle", and came up with the line "You be my honeysuckle, and I'll be your honey bee." Akins said that he thought that "it was a different way for the guy to say, 'we should date, I love you.'"[2] [3]

The lines "You'll be my Louisiana, I'll be your Mississippi / You'll be my Little Loretta, I'll be your Conway Twitty" refers to the Conway Twitty and Loretta Lynn duet "Louisiana Woman, Mississippi Man" on the album of the same name.

Explaining that "Honey Bee" was written specifically for Shelton, Akins said of the song, "We didn't even think we'd demo it because we figured nobody on earth would cut it but Blake. We thought it was a little too quirky for anyone else."[4]

Music video

The music video premiered on NBC.com on May 10, 2011.[5] It was filmed in California, and directed by Trey Fanjoy.[6]

The video features Shelton stopping at a roadside stand, where a sweetly-attractive young woman (portrayed by Amra Silajdžić) is selling honey and other related products. Totally smitten with the lady's lovely "innocent country girl" features and warm pleasant manner, Shelton purchases a jar of "Tupelo Honey" from the seller. Shelton then frequently returns to the stand over the next few days, buying more and more products (which, as the video changes scenes from the stand to Shelton's living room, the room becomes more and more filled with products from the stand) from the lady in order to ingratiate himself with her, until one day he passes the stand and sees an "out of business" sign. The seller approaches with another sign ("Sorry, out of honey") and Shelton finally invites her to come with him for a ride in his pickup truck, which she readily accepts; the idea is that he has thus scored the ultimate "honey", in that he views the smilingly-gentle and kindly-natured damsel as being infinitely "sweeter" than all of the honey she'd been selling could ever possibly be.

Reception

Critical

Matt Bjorke of Roughstock rated the single four stars out of five. His review praised the "charisma" in Shelton's voice and thought that the song had a "timeless" feel to it.[7] Slant Magazine reviewer Jonathan Keefe criticized the lyrics, but praised Shelton's vocals. C. M. Wilcox of The 9513 gave the song a thumbs down, saying that the lyrics were written in a "repetitive, fill-in-the-blank structure," and criticized Shelton for recording "ear catching but substantively bankrupt country boy hokum."[8]

Commercial performance

The song sold 138,000 digital downloads in its first week, setting a record for the most first-week downloads by a male country singer.[9] As a result of the downloads, the song debuted at number thirteen on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated for the week ending April 23, 2011. This entry makes him the highest-debuting male country artist on the Hot 100 since Garth Brooks (recording as Chris Gaines) debuted at number five in September 1999 with "Lost in You".[10] "Honey Bee" also debuted at number 31 on the Hot Country Songs charts and number 58 on the Canadian Hot 100. By its seventh week, the song had gone digital gold, making it the fastest rising single ever to sell over 500,000 digital copies by a male country soloist.[11] It became Shelton's fourth consecutive and ninth Number One single on the country chart dated June 25, 2011. It has sold 2,372,000 copies in the US as of September 2013.[12]

Chart performance

Year-end charts

Chart (2011)Position
US Billboard Hot 100[13] 67
US Country Songs (Billboard)[14] 8

Decade-end charts

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Blake Shelton Debuts New Song, 'Honey Bee'. Stromblad. Cory. April 4, 2011. The Boot. April 14, 2011.
  2. Web site: Blake Shelton — "Honey Bee" Lyrics Uncovered. Conaway. Alanna. 9 April 2011. Taste of Country. April 14, 2011.
  3. Story Behind the Song: Blake Shelton's 'Honey Bee. Rhett Akins. Ben Hayslip. Dave Paulson. video. The Tennessean. April 20, 2021. February 29, 2024.
  4. Web site: Hackett . Vernell . 2014-09-17 . Blake Shelton, 'Honey Bee' -- Story Behind the Song . 2024-02-29 . The Boot . en.
  5. Blake Shelton premieres new video link
  6. Web site: CMT : Videos : Blake Shelton : Honey Bee. https://web.archive.org/web/20110515023602/http://www.cmt.com/videos/blake-shelton/651603/honey-bee.jhtml. dead. May 15, 2011. Country Music Television. June 17, 2011.
  7. Web site: Blake Shelton — "Honey Bee" . https://web.archive.org/web/20110409154730/http://www.roughstock.com/blog/blake-shelton-honey-bee-single-review . dead . 9 April 2011 . Bjorke . Matt . 21 April 2011 . Roughstock . 31 May 2011 .
  8. Web site: Blake Shelton — "Honey Bee". Wilcox. C.M.. April 11, 2011. The 9513. April 14, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110415003710/http://www.the9513.com/blake-shelton-honey-bee. April 15, 2011.
  9. Web site: Blake Shelton Has A Record-Breaking Week. 13 April 2011. All Access. April 14, 2011.
  10. Katy Perry Takes Third Week Atop Hot 100 with Airplay Boost. Trust. Gary. 13 April 2011. Billboard. April 14, 2011.
  11. BLAKE SHELTON'S "HONEY BEE" GOES DIGITAL GOLD AND MAKES CHART HISTORY. Trust. Gary. 25 May 2011. Billboard. May 25, 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20131012012122/http://www.blakeshelton.com/news/blake-shelton%E2%80%99s-%E2%80%9Choney-bee%E2%80%9D-goes-digital-gold-and-makes-chart-history. 12 October 2013. dead.
  12. News: Week Ending Sept. 22, 2013. Songs: The Brit Is Back . Paul Grein . Chart Watch . Yahoo . September 25, 2013 .
  13. Best of 2011: Hot 100 Songs . . . 2011 . December 9, 2011.
  14. Best of 2011: Country Songs . . . 2011 . December 10, 2011.
  15. Decade-End Charts: Hot Country Songs. Billboard. January 23, 2020.