Released September 11, 2006 Genre Alternative hip hop | Recorded 2006 Length 3:55 | |
Format CD single, digital download |
"Daydreamin'" is the third single taken from Lupe Fiasco's album Lupe Fiasco's Food & Liquor (2006) and features soul singer Jill Scott. The single is based on a sample of "Daydream in Blue" by I Monster, a song that samples "Daydream" by Gunter Kallman Choir (which in itself is a cover, the original being written by The Wallace Collection). The song's lyrics are a critique of pop culture, especially of the current state of hip hop music.
Contents
The song was released in the UK and US on September 11, 2006; however, a download-only version was available one week earlier and charted at #46 (without any physical sales).
In 2008 "Daydreamin'" won the Grammy Award for Best Urban/Alternative Performance. It was ranked the best rap song of 2006 by many publications.
This song was also featured in an AT&T commercial during May 2008 for a Samsung phone.
Music video
A music video was created for the song; it shows Lupe Fiasco at a record store, where he meets and befriends a robot. Jill Scott is shown in a video projected on the wall, singing with a flower in her hair in a manner reminiscent of Billie Holiday.
Remixes
Young Buck did a freestyle remix over the instrumental to this song, and is the first track, featured on G-Unit Radio Pt. 24: The Clean Up Man.
Chamillionaire made a remix on his Mixtape Messiah 7.
Track listings
- "Daydreamin'" (featuring Jill Scott)
- "Kick, Push" (remix) (featuring Pharrell)
- "Daydreamin'" (featuring Jill Scott)
- "Kick, Push" (remix) (featuring Pharrell)
- "Daydreamin'" (Video)
- "Daydreamin'" (radio edit) (featuring Jill Scott)
- "Daydreamin'" (instrumental)
- "Daydreamin'" (album version) (featuring Jill Scott)
- "Theme Music to a Drive-By"
Charts
The song was not a major success on the Billboard charts, but it did begin to pick up steam on the digital download charts, peaking at #26 on the iTunes hip-hop/rap charts and #32 on the Amazon hip-hop/rap charts as of May 1, 2008.
In popular culture
The song was featured on the first episode of the second season of the USA Network series Mr. Robot.