Janet Jackson has been blessed by Tiktok’s miracle and his 2001 ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ has viralized on the social network, firing his listening to Spotify. ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ has become Jackson’s most popular song on the platform, when he was not even among the five most popular.
A chronology published by Vulture details each stage of the viral phenomenon of ‘Sumone To Call My Lover’. The origin of the viral seems to be a remix of ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ published in Soundcloud that began to circulate on Tiktok last December. A person with the alias of @MINGA57 signed this remix hardcore and accelerated left by the original unrecognizable piece.
Then, during the months of January and February and, above all, during the current month of March about to end, the use of the original version of ‘Sub Call My Lover’ has spread. For example, ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ has sounded in the background in adorable animals videos and also in videos of African -American women who have been recorded dancing the song and have claimed it for being a “Quirky Black Black Girl Bop”, identifying with the peculiar R&B sound of the song, so summery.
The viral of ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ has become transverse and has reached the figure of 70,000 videos on Tiktok that use the original song in various ways, to which another 32,000 that use the remix are added. The doechii rapper has detected the viral in X and has ended up interacting with Janet Jackson herself exchanging with her captures of the video clip. According to Luminate data, the streamings of ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ have increased by more than 600% over the last four weeks.
Although the success of ‘Subeone To Call My Lover’ has not yet crossed the official lists, in the way of ‘Murder on The Dancefloor’ or ‘Bloody Mary’, this old Janet hit already appears in the 21st position of the most viral themes in Spotify USA and, above all, it is a resounding success in Tiktok that has been discovered by a new generation and revitalized.
‘Subalone To Call My Lover’ was the second single of ‘All for You’ (2001) and had the peculiarity of Samplear ‘Ventura Highway’ (1972) of America and using an interpolation of ‘Gymnopépédie No. 1’ by Erik Satie. In the United States he reached the 3rd position of Billboard Hot 100, in the sweet years prior to the Super Bowl hecatombe.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jwd9igpkta4