When Anitta dropped âWill I See Youâ in September 2017, it felt like everything stopped for a moment. Gone was the slick choreography, the fierce attitude, the bright colors and bold visuals. In their place came something soft, intimate, and totally unexpected: an acoustic ballad, entirely in English, paired with a music video that felt more like a daydream than a performance.
This was the first release from her CheckMate projectâa series of monthly singles that would eventually show off her ability to jump between languages, genres, and markets. But before all of that came this: a quiet, golden-lit moment of vulnerability that turned heads and made people look at Anitta differently.

If youâd only known Anitta from tracks like âBangâ or âSim ou NĂŁo,â âWill I See Youâ mightâve felt like it came out of nowhere. No dancing. No hooks designed for TikTok. No punchy production. Instead, itâs just her voice, a guitar, and the kind of lyrics that feel like theyâre meant for one person, not a stadium.
There are no elaborate sets, dancing, or storylines. Instead, itâs about capturing the emotion of the song through Anittaâs natural presence. You see her in casual styling, with natural makeup and hair, making the whole feel intimate and personal.
The camera stays tight on Anitta, shifting between close-ups of her face and medium shots that show just enough of the surroundings to keep the focus squarely on her. The lighting is warm but understated, giving the video a gentle, almost contemplative mood.
âWill I See Youâ was written and produced by Poo Bearâyes, the same guy behind hits for Justin Bieber. And if you listen closely, you can hear that kind of stripped-back R&B influence. But it still feels like something else.
Itâs not a power ballad. Itâs not a radio single. Itâs more like a love letter left open on the table.
Anittaâs vocals are soft but steady, and for once, theyâre right up front. Thereâs no vocal stacking or heavy processing. Just her voice and the guitar. Itâs the kind of production that leaves no room to hide, and she doesnât need to.
âWill I See Youâ was the first release in what turned out to be one of the most daring moves of Anittaâs career. The CheckMate project dropped four singles in four months, each one wildly different from the last. After this quiet English-language ballad came âIs That For Meâ with Alesso (an EDM banger shot in the Amazon), then the sultry reggaeton âDowntownâ with J Balvin, and finally âVai Malandra,â her return to Rio funk with a raw, viral video filmed in Vidigal.
But it all started hereâwith a whisper, not a bang.
And in a way, thatâs what made âWill I See Youâ so powerful. She didnât come out swinging. She came out vulnerable. And it showed a different kind of confidence.
Fans were a little more divided. Some missed the high-energy choreography and club-ready vibes. But others loved seeing this softer version of her. On YouTube, many comments pointed out how âpureâ and ârealâ the video felt.
For international audiencesâespecially those unfamiliar with Anittaâs funk-pop backgroundâthis mightâve been the first time they really noticed her. Not just as a performer, but as a vocalist.
This was a love song, sureâbut more than that, it was a song about uncertainty. The lyrics arenât full of declarations. Theyâre full of questions. And the video matches that energy. You can feel the waiting, the wondering, the ache of not knowing what comes next.
Years later, âWill I See Youâ still doesnât get talked about as much as it should. It didnât go viral. It didnât climb the charts like âVai Malandra.â But if you watch it now, it holds up.
Itâs not flashy. Itâs not loud. But itâs honest. And sometimes, that lands harder than any choreographed spectacle.
âWill I See Youâ is one of those music videos that sneaks up on you. You donât realize how much itâs doing until itâs overâand then you find yourself thinking about it hours later.
Itâs a snapshot of a moment when Anitta chose to do something unexpected. When she trusted the music to speak for itself. And when she proved, maybe more than ever, that she didnât need to play by anyoneâs rules to make an impact.
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