Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)

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"Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)"
Single by R. Kelly & Ronald Isley
from the album R. Kelly
Released 1996
Format CD single, Cassette single
Recorded 1995
Genre R&B
Label Jive Records
Writer R. Kelly
Producer R. Kelly
R. Kelly & Ronald Isley singles chronology
"You Remind Me of Something"
(1994)
"Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)"
(1995)
"I Can't Sleep Baby (If I)"
(1996)

"Down Low (Nobody Has to Know)" is an R&B song about infidelity, released as a single by R. Kelly and featuring The Isley Brothers, on his self-titled album, in 1996.

The song was a tongue-in-cheek song that had the narrator fooling around with another man's woman and telling the woman to keep their relationship as a closely-guarded secret (hence the chorus: keep it on the down low/nobody has to know). While Kelly sings along, the "other man", Ronald Isley, sings in his trademark falsetto exclaiming "how could you go so low?"

The music video to the song was as equally as popular as the song, which was one of Kelly's first self-directed videos and was the first big video Kelly had done. Including Isley as the character Mr. Frank Biggs, Kelly played out the lyrics to the song by having Mr. Biggs go out of town on business while Kelly and Biggs' woman, named Lila Heart, played by Garcelle Beauvais, went out on town. During one time together, Kelly and Lila made love in spite of the warning Mr. Biggs have gave Kelly about not getting physically involved with her.

Because of this, later on that night, an altercation occurred between Kelly and Mr. Biggs' bodyguards who then confronted Lila after injuring Kelly. Dropping him off of in a desert location bloodied, Mr. Biggs angrily stated I did this to you! and after one hit from a sledgehammer left Kelly stranded out. Later taken to an ambulance where he rested in a wheelchair, he discovered Lila had accompanied a room and went in to see a sedated Lila in intensive care. After Kelly tearfully exclaimed I love you, Lila succumbed to her injuries ending the video.

This song, along with TLC's Creep and Brian McKnight's "On The Down Low" incorporates the Down Low situation in regard to men sleeping with other women.

The success of the video shown on both MTV and BET helped sent the song to number-four pop and number-one R&B, given the Isley Brothers their first Top 40 pop record since 1980's "Don't Say Goodnight (It's Time For Love)", reviving the career of the group's front man Ronald Isley, who later used "Mr. Biggs" as his moniker and was Kelly's third top 10 pop record.

Preceded by
"Not Gon' Cry" by Mary J. Blige
Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs number one single
March 9, 1996
Succeeded by
"You're the One" by SWV
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