Dance With Me

Album: The Romantic (2026)
Charted: 42
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Songfacts®:

  • "Dance With Me" is Bruno Mars' plea for one last chance at intimacy. He asks a partner to slow dance with him one more time, hoping the act of dancing together will reignite what they've lost. The song ends without confirming whether the plan works. The music fades while the invitation is still hanging in the air.
  • "Dance With Me" closes Mars' fourth album, The Romantic, which charts the emotional geography of a relationship from infatuation through turbulence and uncertainty. The finale arrives with something far quieter: an outstretched hand.
  • Fans connected the song's delicate crossroads to Mars' personal life. In early 2025 he split from longtime partner Jessica Caban after 13 years together. The "Risk It All" music video added further fuel, with fans noting the bride's similarity to Caban. The reaction went viral and was covered by Perez Hilton, who asked: "Would you be mad if your ex did this?
  • Mars wrote "Dance With Me" with his frequent collaborators Dernst "D'Mile" Emile II and James Fauntleroy. Mars has been working with Fauntleroy since 24K Magic (2016), where they co-wrote seven of the album's nine tracks, including "That's What I Like," "Versace on the Floor" and "Finesse," three of the record's defining moments. The album swept the Grammy Awards, and thanks to a rule change by the Recording Academy, Fauntleroy became the first songwriter to receive a Grammy for Album of the Year alongside the main artist.

    Fauntleroy is also the direct link between Mars and D'Mile; it was his text in 2019 that brought D'Mile into the fold, making him the architect of the core creative trio that has defined Mars' output from Silk Sonic through The Romantic. The three of them also co-wrote "Die With A Smile," a song Mars first developed with D'Mile and Fauntleroy in 2021 and held for three years before recording as a duet with Lady Gaga.
  • On The Romantic, Fauntleroy appears as co-writer on six of the nine songs. His absence from the album's most stripped-back moments; "Why You Wanna Fight?," "Something Serious," and "Nothing Left" hints at an interesting creative pattern: The emotionally raw material was handled by a smaller writing circle, while Fauntleroy's presence coincides with the album's more fully arranged pieces. Meanwhile, D'Mile served as Mars' sole production partner across the record, making The Romantic the first album in Mars' solo career produced entirely by the two of them.
  • "Dance With Me" is built on sweet close harmonies, gently lilting Larry Gold strings, and a straightforward lyrical urgency that recalls the earnest simplicity of "Talking to the Moon" and "Just The Way You Are" rather than the Philly soul and funk of earlier The Romantic tracks.

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