![who wrote bye bye by mariah carey who wrote bye bye by mariah carey](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/r1agQYbVWIA/0.jpg)
![who wrote bye bye by mariah carey who wrote bye bye by mariah carey](https://i5.walmartimages.com/asr/401ae02a-a66c-4ca5-9f29-89b5054b817b.d59c41a9482918735db0e7e0425ebaa2.jpeg)
In her many televised performances of the single, which spent fourteen weeks at number one, the workout that begins in the rising last line of the penultimate chorus ends with Carey holding the last note for as long as she can. By conceit, she is still holding that note. On the studio recording, Carey holds the song’s final syllable-the “-ther” of the song’s eponymous refrain- for at least four extra bars, before her lead vocal fades out. 1One especially significant early example of these best Mariah Carey performances is the cover of the Jackson 5’s “I’ll Be There” from her 1992 MTV Unplugged television special, which was accompanied by the visual spectacle of Carey working to hit the unfathomably high highest notes that close out the song.Īrguably the last truly great Mariah Carey vocal workout of this kind was “We Belong Together,” from her 2005 album The Emancipation of Mimi.
![who wrote bye bye by mariah carey who wrote bye bye by mariah carey](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/C3Q61gEyU7o/maxresdefault.jpg)
From her early G-rated ballads to her self-reinvention as a hip-hop-influenced R&B singer beginning with the alternate Bad Boy mix of “Fantasy” in 1995, these improvised leads usually weave in and around the songs’ choruses, which are usually recited by her backup singers, taking the uneasy position of simultaneously embellishing the chorus, while also suggesting a transcendence of its repetition. There is a trademark of Mariah Carey’s best songs where at around the three-quarter mark she pitches her vocal performance up, sometimes as high as an octave, and inverts the melody.