Home | Songs By Year | Songs from 2005


Tell Me When to Go

Buy Tell Me When to Go now from Amazon

First, read the Wikipedia article. Then, scroll down to see what other TopShelfReviews readers thought about the song. And once you've experienced the song, tell everyone what you thought about it.

Wikipedia article




{{Infobox song

| name = Tell Me When to Go

| cover = Tell Me When To Go - E-40.jpg

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = E-40 featuring Keak da Sneak

| album = My Ghetto Report Card

| released = February 1, 2006

| recorded = 2005

| studio =

| venue =

| genre =

| length = 3:57

| label = BME, Sick Wid It, Warner Bros.

| writer = Earl Stevens, Joseph Simmons, Darryl McDaniels

| producer = Lil Jon

| chronology = E-40

| prev_title = Snap Yo Fingers

| prev_year = 2006

| next_title = U and Dat

| next_year = 2006

| misc =

}}

"'Tell Me When to Go'" is the first single from E-40's BME/Warner Bros. debut, 'My Ghetto Report Card'. Keak da Sneak is also featured on the track. It was produced by Lil Jon, and one of the first singles to kick off the hyphy movement on a national level and popularized the phrase "ghost ride the whip".[http://www.newsobserver.com/105/story/529966.html Ghost-riding: Another bad idea from California] . Paul Farhi, Washington Post. January 8, 2007. Last accessed January 10, 2007. The song reached number 35 in the U.S. and eventually was certified Gold by the RIAA. The song premiered online first on the MySpace.com homepage & was the first hip hop single to premiere online before being released. Over 200M people around the world were exposed to the song that was featured on the homepage.

The song samples "Dumb Girl" by Run-DMC.

The song is featured in the 2007 Xbox 360/PlayStation 3 video game 'Def Jam: Icon'. E-40 is a playable character in the video game and provides his own voice and likeness. It also appeared in The Fugitive, a season 4 episode of the scripted comedy series 'Brooklyn Nine-Nine'.

Music video



The black and white music video, produced through production company Immigrant Films, was directed and edited by Bernard Gourley and lensed by cinematographer David Claessen. Filmed at the abandoned 16th Street station in West Oakland, it features cameo appearances from D-Shot, Dem Hoodstarz, Haji Springer, Too Short, Lil Jon, Rick Rock, The Federation, Battle Loco, Lil Scrappy, J. Valentine, Mistah F.A.B., Big Rich, Turf Talk, The Crest Creepaz, Frank D. and the Architeckz turf dancing crew with choreography by Jeriel Bey.

In 2016, director Dante Ariola and cinematographer Chris Soos recreated the music video for a Beats Studio Wireless headphones commercial, also titled and set to "Tell Me When to Go", starring Golden State Warriors' power forward Draymond Green and featuring E-40 and cameos by Green's then Warriors teammates Ian Clark, Brandon Rush, and Shaun Livingston as well as Oakland natives Gary Payton and Brian Shaw. The 90-seconds version also features Keak da Sneak. The spot is one of three that earned Ariola a DGA best commercial director nomination in 2017.https://www.shootonline.com/news/dga-spot-nominees-reflect-their-work-recognition-peers

Live performances



"Tell Me When to Go" was performed live, the day before the 2006 MTV Video Music Awards in a club in New York City. This performance featured E-40 and Lil Jon rapping, while a rock instrumental was played by Metal Skool. The event was held at Snitch, a rock-themed club.

Charts



Remixes



The official remix features a new verse from E-40 and features Kanye West, Ice Cube, and The Game.

The "Bay Area Remix" includes the entire Hyphy roster. It features Too Short, B-Legit, Clyde Carson, Turf Talk, Richie Rich, San Quinn, The Federation, Hoodstarz, Messy Marv, Mistah F.A.B., Yukmouth, Big Rich, PSD, J-Diggs and rap group Balance. At the start of the song, E-40 proclaims "RIP Mac Dre, Dre you supposed to be on this one baby", referring to rapper Mac Dre, who is considered the originator of the Hyphy Movement.

Another remix was done by Chingo Bling entitled "Tell Me When to Go (Remix)" from the album "They All Want Him, But who Can Afford Him"

Another popular remix was done by producer Trackademicks entitled "Tell Me When To Go" (Trackademicks Remix), released in February 2006 on his independently released compilation, 'The Spring Progress Report'.

Cultural impact



In March 2022 a music documentary about the Hyphy movement We Were Hyphy, was released. It explored the part Tell Me When to Go played in the Hyphy movement as well as interviewing many of the well-known artists of the time, including Keak da Sneak, and Rick Rock. It also featured contemporaneous musicians, including G-Eazy, Kamaiyah and P-Lo talking about the Hyphy movement.https://sfstandard.com/arts-culture/we-were-hyphy-revisits-the-glory-days-of-mid-2000s-bay-area-hip-hop%ef%bf%bc/

Certifications



References



Category:2005 songs

Category:2006 singles

Category:E-40 songs

Category:Keak da Sneak songs

Category:Black-and-white music videos

Category:Asylum Records singles

Category:Song recordings produced by Lil Jon

Category:Songs written by Darryl McDaniels

Category:Songs written by Joseph Simmons

Category:Songs written by E-40

Buy Tell Me When to Go now from Amazon

<-- Return to songs from 2005



This work is released under CC-BY-SA. Some or all of this content attributed to http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?oldid=1109411400.