"I Got The..." | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Single by Labi Siffre | ||||
from the album Remember My Song | ||||
B-side | "The Vulture" | |||
Released | 2003 (as single) 1975 (as album track) | |||
Genre | ||||
Length |
| |||
Label | Pye (album release) Stateside (single release) | |||
Songwriter(s) | Labi Siffre | |||
Producer(s) | ||||
Labi Siffre singles chronology | ||||
|
"I Got The..." is a 1975 song by British musician Labi Siffre. It was the opening track of his fifth album, Remember My Song.
The song gained a resurgence in popularity in 1999 when it was sampled by American rapper Eminem on his breakthrough hit "My Name Is". This newfound interest led to "I Got The..." finally being released as a single in 2003.
The track, along with the rest of the album, was produced by Big Jim Sullivan with Derek Lawrence and written by Siffre.[1]
The recording also featured session musicians Chas Hodges on guitar and Dave Peacock on bass, who would later become notable in their own right as the duo Chas & Dave.[2][3]
The song and the album lingered in obscurity for many years until 1999 when it was sampled by the American rappers Eminem and Dr. Dre for Eminem's first top 40 hit "My Name Is".[3] The guitar riff played by Hodges and Peacock was heavily featured during the single in a replayed sample.[2]
Siffre, who is openly gay, said in an interview that he turned down the offer to approve the song at first until the original sexist and homophobic lyrics were removed:
"Dissing the victims of bigotry – women as bitches, homosexuals as faggots – is lazy writing. Diss the bigots not their victims."[4]
Siffre eventually allowed its usage when he was sent a censored "clean" version, not realising that he was also allowing the riffs use on the alternative "dirty" versions with the original lyrics.[5]
"I Got The..." was also used on Jay-Z's track "Streets Is Watching," from his 1997 album In My Lifetime, Vol. 1, although Jay-Z used a different part of the song than Eminem.[5]
The track appeared in the episode "Bagman" from the American television show Better Call Saul.[6]
According to Somehow Jazz:[1]