Gil Robertson IV from
Cash Box named 'Brown Sugar' a standout track of the album, saying, "It blends the right mix of down home slow groove
funk with a caressing
jazz texture that's bound to get folks out on the dance floor. Produced by
Ali from
A Tribe Called Quest, this track is loaded with a classic old school led and provides a great introduction for this promising young talent." Pan-European magazine
Music & Media wrote, "Don't expect a
Stones cover, D'Angelo provides us with original material in a jazzy
hip hop vein. Bass and drums are lazy, while the
Georgie Fame-like organ adds a touch of class."
Dele Fadele from
NME commented, "On this occasion, he relaxes over a mid-tempo late-nite groove with an ode to a mysterious 'Brown Sugar' who doesn't mind being caught up in a
ménage-à-trois. Which is the same thing as saying D'Angelo rates
Marvin Gaye's perverse period highly, if not
Prince, who he self-consciously tries to stay away from. Soon to be darling of the chi-chi set."
Ann Powers from
Spin described it as "softcore", remarking that songs like 'Brown Sugar' "get serious with soul's erotic undercurrents, reaching for the exquisite tension of early Prince and late Marvin Gaye." ==Credits==