Friday

Album: Friday soundtrack (1995)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • This is the title track to Ice Cube's movie Friday, a comedy where he plays a layabout who spends a Friday trying to survive when he and his friend (played by Chris Tucker) are threatened by the local drug dealer. It takes place in South Central Los Angeles, the setting for many of Ice Cube's songs.
  • The song "Friday" describes a big ole party where folks from all over the neighborhood come together for some fun. Nothing like that happens in the film, but the song plays under the end credits, providing a uplifting coda after the main characters spend most of the movie running for their lives.
  • Friday the movie did well at the box office, earning far more than it cost to make. The soundtrack was also very successful, going to #1 and selling over 2 million copies. Along with this title track, the soundtrack also features contributions from Dr. Dre, The Isley Brothers, Rick James and several others.

    The film became a franchise, with Next Friday released in 2000 and Friday After Next in 2002.
  • Cypress Hill contributed a song to the Friday soundtrack called "Roll It Up, Light It Up, Smoke It Up," but they also accused Ice Cube of jackin' their beats for the song "Friday." According to B-Real of Cypress Hill, when Ice Cube came by the studio to hear "Roll It Up, Light It Up, Smoke It Up," they also played him another song they were working on called "Throw Your Set In The Air." Ice Cube asked to use that song in Friday as well, but they turned him down because they wanted it for their upcoming album, Cypress Hill III: Temples of Boom. The Friday soundtrack was released first, with the song "Friday" sporting a chorus similar to "Throw Your Set In The Air." Cube swapped out "set" for "neighborhood" and used the same flow.

    This ignited a longstanding beef between Ice Cube and Cypress Hill, who flamed him with the song "No Rest For The Wicked."
  • The main groove is sampled from "Darkest Light," a 1972 song by Lafayette Afro Rock Band. That saxophone lick is the same on Wreckx-N-Effect used on "Rump Shaker" in 1992. Other songs sampled in "Friday" include "Atomic Dog" by George Clinton and "More Bounce To The Ounce" by Zapp.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Metallica

MetallicaFact or Fiction

Beef with Bon Jovi? An unfortunate Spandex period? See if you can spot the true stories in this Metallica version of Fact or Fiction.

Richard Butler of The Psychedelic Furs

Richard Butler of The Psychedelic FursSongwriter Interviews

Psychedelic Furs lead singer Richard Butler talks about their first album since 1991 and explains what's really going on in "Pretty In Pink."

Richard Marx

Richard MarxSongwriter Interviews

Richard explains how Joe Walsh kickstarted his career, and why he chose Hazard, Nebraska for a hit.

Trans Soul Rebels: Songs About Transgenderism

Trans Soul Rebels: Songs About TransgenderismSong Writing

A history of songs dealing with transgender issues, featuring Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Morrissey and Green Day.

How "A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss" Became Rock's Top Proverb

How "A Rolling Stone Gathers No Moss" Became Rock's Top ProverbSong Writing

How a country weeper and a blues number made "rolling stone" the most popular phrase in rock.

Rufus Wainwright

Rufus WainwrightSongwriter Interviews

Rufus Wainwright on "Hallelujah," his album Unfollow The Rules, and getting into his "lyric trance" on 12-hour walks.