during the
25 Live tour in 2006 Scottish
Aberdeen Press and Journal commented, "George obviously having a go at trying to get into the dance scene with this too-funky number which rings of
Bobby Brown and
Michael Jackson."
Larry Flick from
Billboard magazine felt the singer "works up an impressive sweat amid a swirling array of
funk-driven guitars and keyboards, adding, "This bears all the marks of a well-deserved multiformat smash." A reviewer from
Cash Box declared the song as a "simple, funky dance send-up". Amy Linden from
Entertainment Weekly called it a "slinky,
disco-fever-redux hit". Irish
Evening Herald found that the "steamy" single is about a "big build-up to a seduction", "but it's got a depressing end. Some things never change, but we can definitely tell you that although George's hair is shorter these days, he's still got the same beard." Dave Sholin from the
Gavin Report stated that Michael "delivers just the type of sound a lot of longtime fans were hoping for. He rides this groove with a sexy undercurrent reinforced by sampling the voice of Anne Bancroft seducing
Dustin Hoffman in
The Graduate. Dennis Hunt from the
Los Angeles Times viewed it as a "sizzling" new dance track, stating that "Too Funky" "ranks with his best and is an indication that he should focus on dance music". The Stud Brothers of
Melody Maker said it's "George doing a rumbustuous Karaoke
Prince, the extravagant minimalist backing coming courtesy of many of the world's highest-paid session musicians. Which is all weirdly endearing." Pan-European magazine
Music & Media described it as a "funky and catchy number, underpinned by a persistent keyboard pattern". Alan Jones from
Music Week named it Pick of the Week, writing, "Released 10 years to the week after George made his recording debut with the instantly successful '
Wham Rap', it's a muscular, mid-tempo urban dance contender bass-based with some nice piano fills. George groupies, dance fans and casual record buyers alike will warm to it, with obvious chart results."
David Quantick from
New Musical Express called it "a plonking,
KC and the Sunshine Band pastiche with a few hooks but nothing else". Victoria Segal from
NME said, "A consummate narcissist—"''I'd love to see you naked, baby... maybe tonight, if that's alright''", he intones coolly on the staccato seduction of 'Too Funky'." Bunny Sawyer from
Smash Hits gave the song a score of four out of five, praising it as "a fab stomp-along beat...a triumphant return to form". ==Commercial performance==