Ride Wit Me

Album: Country Grammar (2000)
Charted: 3 3
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This hedonistic party jam from Nelly's debut album finds him rapping about his glitzy lifestyle. Along for the ride, we hear about him smoking pot in his Mercedes, picking up a lovely lady at the club, and flying first class next to Wheel of Fortune hostess Vanna White.
  • Nelly tells his rags-to-riches story in this song, recounting his rise from a teenage drug dealer to rap star. He's still the same person, but now he has the means to enjoy the finer things in life.
  • A big hook in this song is the "Hey! Must be the money!" group vocal after Nelly asks, "Oh, why do I live this way?" Nelly owes a debt to the football star Deion Sanders, who in 1994 released a song called "Must Be The Money" that helped popularize the phrase. (Sanders' musical talents are inversely proportional to his football abilities.)

    In later years, many pop songs featured groups of guys yelling "hey!" as part of the soundscape. A good example is "Fancy" by Iggy Azalea.
  • City Spud (real name: Lavell Webb), Nelly's brother and a member of his St. Lunatics crew, raps the third verse. In 1999, before the album was released, he went to jail, where he served eight years for armed robbery. Nelly, who felt Spud was innocent, took to wearing a Band-Aid on his cheek in honor of Spud.
  • The "I like the way you brush your hair" section is lifted from the 1982 DeBarge song "I Like It," where they sing:

    I like the way you comb your hair
    I like those stylish clothes you wear


    This earned that song's writers, Randy, Bunny and El DeBarge, writing credits on "Ride Wit Me." Wreckx-N-Effect borrowed this same "I Like It" on their 1992 hit "Rump Shaker."
  • Along with the DeBarge clan, Nelly and City Spud are the credited writers on this song along with the track's producer, Jay Eperson. It was released as the third single from Nelly's debut album, Country Grammar, following the title track and "E.I." The album was a dazzling debut, selling over 10 million copies in America.
  • In the video, directed by Marc Klasfeld, members of the St. Lunatics enter a cowboy bar to find an older white woman singing a treacherous rendition of this song. They summon Nelly, who is somewhere in the desert lounging in a hammock, and he brings a convoy to the town to show them how it's done. The video is an homage to '70s trucker films like Smokey and the Bandit.
  • At the 2001 MTV Video Music Awards, this won for Best Rap Video.
  • Nelly takes a shot at his former classmates at Florissant Missouri Community College in St. Louis in the bridge:

    You won't believe how many people straight down at the Flo-Mo
    Said that I was a failure
    But now the same motherf--kers asking me for dough
    And I'm yelling, "I can't help ya"


    Nelly took some business classes at the school before launching his music career.
  • Nelly took a lot of liberties with the spelling of his song titles, which goes along with the "country grammar" theme of the album. That's why it's "Ride Wit Me." Other tracks on the album include "Utha Side" and "Tho Dem Wrappas."
  • This was used on the 2001 Friends episode "The One With Chandler's Dad," and was included on Friends: The Ultimate Soundtrack (2005). It plays when Rachel drives Monica's Porsche on the highway.

    It was also used on these TV series:

    Atlanta ("The Jacket" - 2016)
    Glee ("Throwdown" - 2009)
    Degrassi: The Next Generation ("Foolin'" - 2005)
    Scrubs ("My Fruit Cups" - 2002)
    King Of The Hill ("Kidney Boy And Hamster Girl: A Love Story" - 2001)

    And in these movies:

    Ted 2 (2015)
    Are We There Yet? (2005)
    Scary Movie 2 (2001)

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Incongruent Opening Acts

Incongruent Opening ActsSong Writing

Here's what happens when an opening act is really out of place with the headliner, like when Beastie Boys opened for Madonna.

Motley Crue

Motley CrueFact or Fiction

Was Dr. Feelgood a dentist? Did the "Crüecifixion" really happen?

Bands Named After Real People (Who Aren't In The Band)

Bands Named After Real People (Who Aren't In The Band)Song Writing

How a gym teacher, a janitor, and a junkie became part of some very famous band names.

Charlotte Caffey of The Go-Go's

Charlotte Caffey of The Go-Go'sSongwriter Interviews

Charlotte was established in the LA punk scene when a freaky girl named Belinda approached her wearing a garbage bag.

Art Alexakis of Everclear

Art Alexakis of EverclearSongwriter Interviews

The lead singer of Everclear, Art is also their primary songwriter.

Neal Smith - "I'm Eighteen"

Neal Smith - "I'm Eighteen"They're Playing My Song

With the band in danger of being dropped from their label, Alice Cooper drummer Neal Smith co-wrote the song that started their trek from horror show curiosity to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.