| Cena: | 
| Želi ovaj predmet: | 2 | 
| Stanje: | Nekorišćen | 
| Garancija: | Ne | 
| Isporuka: | Pošta  Post Express Lično preuzimanje  | 
                            
| Plaćanje: | Ostalo (pre slanja)  Lično  | 
                            
| Grad: | 
                                    Novi Sad,  Novi Sad  | 
                            
                                                                                        Izdavač: Ostalo
                                                                                                                        Žanr: Fank i Soul, Pop
                                                                                                                        Poreklo: Strani izvođač
                                                                                
                        Original, made in EU 
Novo, u celofanu 
 
Track listing 
I`m Your Baby Tonight – Standard edition 
No.	Title	Writer(s)	Producer(s)	Length 
1.	`I`m Your Baby Tonight`	 
L.A. ReidBabyface 
ReidBabyface 
4:59 
2.	`My Name Is Not Susan`	Eric Foster White	 
ReidBabyface 
4:39 
3.	`All the Man That I Need`	 
Dean PitchfordMichael Gore 
Narada Michael Walden	4:11 
4.	`Lover for Life`	Sam Dees	Walden	4:49 
5.	`Anymore`	 
ReidBabyface 
ReidBabyface 
4:23 
6.	`Miracle`	 
ReidBabyface 
ReidBabyface 
5:42 
7.	`I Belong to You`	 
Derek BrambleFranne Golde 
Walden	5:30 
8.	`Who Do You Love`	 
Luther VandrossHubert Eaves III 
Vandross	3:57 
9.	`We Didn`t Know` (duet with Stevie Wonder)	Stevie Wonder	Wonder	5:30 
10.	`After We Make Love`	 
Michael MasserGerry Goffin 
Masser	5:07 
11.	`I`m Knockin"	 
Rhett LawrenceRicky MinorBenjamin Winans 
MinorWhitney Houston 
4:58 
 
I`m Your Baby Tonight is the third studio album of American singer Whitney Houston released on November 6, 1990, by Arista Records. The album has been certified quadruple platinum in the US by the RIAA 
Background 
Houston`s previous efforts featured material mostly chosen by the label. With this project, however, she had more control over the album`s content. In addition to working with the previous producers of Narada Michael Walden and Michael Masser, she also worked with the production team of L.A. Reid and Babyface, as well as singer Luther Vandross on `Who Do You Love`, and did a collaboration with Stevie Wonder on `We Didn`t Know`. Houston would also produce the song `I`m Knockin", with tour music director Ricky Minor and co-write with singer BeBe Winans on `Takin` a Chance`. 
 
Music 
I`m Your Baby Tonight`s Walden-produced songs are divided by contemporary dance-pop tracks and ornate ballads, while Reid and Babyface`s productions reappropriate 1970s black pop and danceable funk with aggressive 1980s dance rhythms.[5] According to AllMusic`s Ashley S. Battel, Houston `attempts to make a larger foray into dance music` with this album,[3] while David Browne observed light synthesizer flourishes, thumping drum beats, and `dance-fever settings` throughout.[4] James Hunter of Rolling Stone described the album as `a case study in how much [Houston] can get out of her luscious and straightforward vocal gifts within a dancepop framework.`[5] J. D. Considine wrote that Houston`s singing on the album features `sultry moans, note-bending asides, [and] window-rattling gospel shouts`.[8] Rolling Stone magazine`s Jim Macnie said that the album `displayed a slick R&B edge` and features `funk-and-dance-driven pop`.[1] 
 
Commercial performance 
In the United States, I`m Your Baby Tonight debuted at number 22 on the Billboard 200 chart, the issue dated November 24, 1990. In its second week, it leaped to number five and the following week reached its peak position at number three. The album spent 22 weeks in the top ten and was on the chart for a total of 51 weeks.[11] It also debuted at number 10 on the Billboard Top R&B Albums chart, the issue date of December 1, 1990, and reached the number one in three weeks later.[12][13] It stayed on the top of the chart for eight non-consecutive weeks and was present on the chart for a total of 53 weeks.[13][14] Due to its great performance on the chart, it became the #1 R&B album on the Billboard year-end charts for 1991.[15][16] The album was certified 4× platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America on April 5, 1995, and since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking sales data in May 1991, it sold, as of 2009, 1,728,000 copies in the United States, an amount which does not include copies sold in the first months of release and sales through BMG Music Club.[17][18] It is not its sales total, as the biggest part of the sales occurred between November, 1990, before there was Nielsen SoundScan. 
 
The album was a hit internationally though its sales didn`t reach the level as high as the previous two albums, boosting Houston to global super-stardom. In the U.K., it entered the UK Albums Chart at number 6 on November 17, 1990, and peaked at number 4 nine weeks later.[19][20] The British Phonographic Industry certified it Platinum for shipments of 300,000 units on November 1, 1990. In Germany, the album peaked at number three on the Media Control Albums Chart, receiving Platinum certification for shipments of 500,000 copies by the Bundesverband Musikindustrie in 1991. It also reached the top five in other countries such as Austria,[21] Norway,[22] Sweden,[23] and Switzerland.[24] To date the album has sold approximately 10 million copies worldwide.[25] 
 
Singles 
I`m Your Baby Tonight yielded four top-twenty singles on the Hot 100 Singles chart, and six top-twenty singles on the Hot R&B Singles chart between 1990 and 1992. `I`m Your Baby Tonight` and `All the Man That I Need` both reached number 1. This success earned Houston a ranking of number 3 Pop singles artist and number 1 R&B singles artist on the 1991 Billboard year-end charts.[15][26] 
 
The title track, `I`m Your Baby Tonight`, was released as the first single from the album in October 1990. While the L.A. Reid/Babyface mix version was released in the United States, an alternate Yvonne Turner mix, labeled the international version or European version, was released in other countries. The single debuted at number forty-two on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart in the week ending October 20, 1990. Six weeks later, in the issue dated December 1, 1990, it reached number one and stayed there for a week, becoming Houston`s eighth number-one single on the chart.[27] It also peaked at number one in the same week on the Hot R&B Singles chart and remained on the top for two weeks, making it her fourth R&B chart topper.[28] In addition, the song peaked at number seven on the Hot Adult Contemporary chart, spending a total of twenty-eight weeks on the chart.[29] The single was certified Gold for shipments of 500,000 copies by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) on November 27, 1990.[30] Worldwide it was a big hit during her European promotion in November–December 1990. In Italy, it reached number one on the Musica e dischi singles chart in November 1990 and remained atop for five weeks, becoming her second number-one song on the chart, after 1987`s `I Wanna Dance with Somebody (Who Loves Me)`.[citation needed] In the United Kingdom, the single entered the UK Singles Chart at number sixteen on October 20, 1990, and peaked at number five two weeks later, becoming her eighth top ten hit.[31][32] It also reached the top five in many countries such as Austria,[33] Belgium,[34] France,[35] Germany,[36] the Netherlands,[37] Norway,[38] Sweden,[39] and Switzerland.[40] It also went top ten in Australia and Ireland.[41][42] Houston was nominated for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female with this track at the 33rd Grammy Awards of 1991.[43] 
 
Houston`s remake of a ballad, `All the Man That I Need` was the album`s second single, released in December 1990. The single achieved great success on the Billboard charts. It debuted at number fifty-three on the Hot 100 on December 22, 1990, and topped the chart nine weeks later, in the issue dated February 23, 1991.[44] On March 2, 1991, when it reached the number one on the Hot R&B Singles chart, the single enjoyed its second and third week at the top of the Hot 100 and Hot Adult Contemporary chart, respectively.[45][46][47] As a result, it became her first single to top the Hot 100, Hot R&B, and Hot Adult Contemporary chart simultaneously—which `I Will Always Love You` also achieved for five weeks in 1992/93—and overall her third triple-crown hit, after 1985`s `Saving All My Love for You` and 1986`s `How Will I Know` both reached the top spot on those three charts in different weeks. The RIAA certified it Gold on March 21, 1991.[48] Unlike the United States, it was a modest hit globally. It peaked at number one on the Canadian RPM Top 100 Singles chart for one week and number ten on Belgian VRT Top 30 chart.[49][50] However, it only reached the top twenty in Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom.[42][51][52] With this song, Houston received a nomination for Best Pop Vocal Performance, Female at the 34th Grammy Awards in 1992, which was her fifth nomination in that category.[43] 
 
After the release of `The Star Spangled Banner` single, `Miracle` was released as the third single from the album in April 1991. It peaked at number nine on the Billboard Hot 100 on June 8, 1991, becoming her thirteenth top ten hit on the chart.[53] It also reached number two and number four, on the Hot R&B Singles and Adult Contemporary chart, respectively.[54][55] 
 
The album`s fourth single `My Name Is Not Susan` was released in July 1991. In September, the song peaked at number twenty on the Hot 100 and number eight on the Hot R&B, becoming her fifteenth R&B top ten hit.[56] 
 
A fifth single, `I Belong to You`, became a top ten R&B single and garnered Houston a Grammy nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance at the 35th Grammy Awards.[57][58] 
 
`We Didn`t Know`, a duet with Stevie Wonder, was the sixth and final single from the album, released exclusively for R&B airplay in April 1992. It peaked at number twenty on the Hot R&B Singles chart in the issue dated July 4, 1992.[59] Included on the tracklisting of the album`s Japanese edition is a cover of Steve Winwood`s `Higher Love`, which was resurrected by Norwegian DJ Kygo in 2019, and `Takin` a Chance`; the latter became a success in the country. 
 
Personnel 
Whitney Houston – vocals, background vocals, vocal arrangements 
Walter Afanasieff – keyboards, Moog bass, synthesizers 
Tawatha Agee – background vocals 
Gerald Albright – saxophone 
Skip Anderson – drums, keyboards 
Babyface – keyboards, Memorymoog bass, vocals, background vocals 
Kitty Beethoven – background vocals 
Louis Biancaniello – synthesizer, keyboards 
Gary Bias – alto saxophone 
Vernon `Ice` Black – guitar 
Kimberly Brewer – background vocals 
Ray Brown – trumpet 
Chris Camozzi – guitar 
Francisco Centeno – bass 
Paulinho Da Costa – percussion 
Hubert Eaves III – synthesizer, drums, keyboards 
Steve Ferrone – drums 
Lynn Fiddmont – background vocals 
Kenny G – saxophone 
Jerry Hey – strings 
Dorian Holley – background vocals 
Cissy Houston – background vocals 
Paul Jackson Jr. – guitar 
Skyler Jett – background vocals 
Keith John – background vocals 
Melisa Kary – background vocals 
Kayo – Fender bass, Moog bass 
Randy Kerber – strings, keyboards 
Ren Klyce – Fairlight synthesizer 
Robbie Kondor – strings, keyboards, rhythm 
Neil Larsen – Hammond organ 
Ricky Lawson – synthesizer, percussion, drums 
Wayne Linsey – piano 
Frank Martin – piano, keyboards, vibraphone 
Paulette McWilliams – background vocals 
Jason Miles – synthesizer 
Ricky Minor – synthesizer, bass, horn, background vocals, rhythm, synthesized bass 
Billy Myers – horn 
Rafael Padilla – percussion 
Donald Parks – Fairlight synthesizer 
L.A. Reid – percussion, drums 
Claytoven Richardson – background vocals 
Tom Scott – saxophone 
Michael `Patches` Stewart – trumpet 
Annie Stocking – background vocals 
Steve Tavaglione – horn, tenor saxophone 
Jeanie Tracy – background vocals 
Luther Vandross – vocals 
Narada Michael Walden – synthesized bass, percussion 
David Ward II – synthesizer 
Bill Washer – guitar 
Kirk Whalum – saxophone, tenor saxophone 
Brenda White-King – background vocals 
BeBe Winans – background vocals 
CeCe Winans – background vocals 
Stevie Wonder – vocals, multiple instruments, performer 
Reggie C. Young – trombone 
Production 
L.A. Reid - producer (tracks: `I`m Your Baby Tonight`, `My Name Is Not Susan`, `Anymore` and `Miracle`), arranger 
Babyface - producer (tracks: `I`m Your Baby Tonight`, `My Name Is Not Susan`, `Anymore` and `Miracle`), arranger 
Jon Gass - recording 
Barney Perkins - recording 
Donnell Sullivan - engineer 
Ryan Dorn - engineer 
Jim Zumpano - engineer 
Cynthia Ahiloh - production coordination 
Marsha Burns - production coordination 
Susanne Edgren - production coordination 
Janice Lee - production coordination 
Cynthia Shiloh - production coordination 
Kevin Walden - production coordination 
Gar Wood - production coordination 
Stephanie Andrews - project coordinator 
Robert A. Arbittier - sound design 
Louis Biancaniello - drum programming, additional programming 
Walter Afanasieff - drum programming 
Ren Klyce - programming 
Ricky Lawson - programming 
Jason Miles - programming 
David Ward II - programming 
Hubert Eaves III - drum programming 
Skip Anderson - keyboard programming 
Donald Parks - keyboard programming 
John Anderson - arranger 
Hubert Eaves III - keyboard programming, arranger 
Whitney Houston - arranger, vocal arrangement 
Randy Kerber - arranger 
Robbie Kondor - arranger 
Ricky Minor - arranger, horn arrangements 
Billy Myers - arranger, horn arrangements 
Steve Tavaglione - arranger, horn arrangements 
Luther Vandross - arranger 
Narada Michael Walden - arranger 
BeBe Winans - arranger 
CeCe Winans - arranger 
Stevie Wonder - arranger 
Jerry Hey - string arrangements 
Susan Mendola - art direction 
Andrea Blanch - photography 
Tim White - photography 
Bernard Maisner - lettering 
Kevyn Aucoin - make-u 
Patrick Poussard - make-up 
Barbara Dente - stylist 
Ellen La Var - hair stylist 
George Marino - mastering