"Bring It All to Me" (remix instrumental) – 4:12."Bring It All to Me" (main version) – 3:46.The video is often noted for its influence and included as an example by fashion blogs and magazines for its Afro-futuristic, Y2K aesthetic. The alternative version also features additional ad-libs from Natina Reed. This version replaced Chasez vocals with Brandi Williams and Shamari DeVoe.
įor the music video, an alternative version of the song was used in place of the album version featuring vocals from JC Chasez. BET and The Box soon followed and began airing the week ending October 17, 1999. The video premiered on music video stations during autumn of 1999, starting off with MTV the week ending October 10, 1999. In this second setting, each member of Blaque is shown in a room with a different color: pink for Natina, green for Brandi, and orange for Shamari. Male onlookers find a mysterious box and are transported to a futuristic world where they interact with the women.
The video shows Blaque as alien girls with superpowers who descend on an downtown Los Angeles street. The music video features a futuristic, sci-fi inspired feel. The music video was directed by Bille Woodruff. revealed it was Justin Timberlake who was originally intended to sing on the song, but due to him filming Model Behavior at the time, JC Chasez sang instead. The album version with *NSYNC came about due to both groups sharing the same manager at the time and opening for *NSYNC on tour. It also contains a sample of Shalamar’s 1980s single “I Don’t Want to Be the Last to Know”. It moves at a tempo of 89 beats per minute in the key of F major. The song was described by music journalist Chuck Taylor of Billboard as sounding "distinctive and like an old-school anthem" and "refreshing" in terms of the track's lyrical content amidst the "male-bashing" anthems from the time. Musically, "Bring It All to Me" is a silky, slow-and-easy youth-leaning R&B track with a bouncing beat underneath "classy" piano keys.