Futuristic Love (Elroy)

"Futuristic Love (Elroy)" is a song by American hip hop recording artist Yung L.A.. It was released as a single on April 7, 2009, by Grand Hustle Records and Interscope Records. The song, which was produced by Grand Hustle in-house production team Nard & B, features vocals from his then-Grand Hustle label-mate, Ricco Barrino. The song was originally released as the second single from Yung L.A.'s debut album Futuristic Leland, however the album would later be shelved. Since its release, the song has reached number 55 on the US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.

"Futuristic Love (Elroy)"
Single by Yung L.A. featuring Ricco Barrino
ReleasedApril 7, 2009
Recorded2009
GenreHip hop, R&B
Length4:08
LabelGrand Hustle Records, Interscope Records
Songwriter(s)Leland Austin, Brandon Rackley, Ricco Barrino, James Bernard Rosser Jr.
Producer(s)Nard & B
Yung L.A. singles chronology
"Take Off"
(2009)
"Futuristic Love (Elroy)"
(2009)
"36 O's"
(2009)

Music video

The music video for the song was directed by Va$htie and filmed in Atlanta, Georgia. A behind the scenes video was released on May 18, 2009.[1] The video features cameo appearances from Killer Mike, Lil Duval and Big Kuntry King.[2] The music video premiered on June 10, 2009.[3] In the video, Yung L.A. is seen driving a car (spoofing the 1985 science fiction film Back to the Future), which takes Yung L.A. back in time to the 1990s and allows him to meet an attractive girl. After spending time with her, he then takes her back to the present.

Charts

Chart (2009) Peak
position
scope="row"US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs (Billboard)[4] 55
gollark: On what? There are devices without real time clocks.
gollark: You could easily make it so that some tiny community runs it on their toasters, but if there's ever an actual financial incentive someone *will* fix it.
gollark: Someone could just fix that, and I don't know *how* you would manage to introduce those in a mining algorithm.
gollark: Interesting. Toasters aren't fast, though. So anyone doing it seriously would just port the code to an actual high power computer.
gollark: Only mineable *fast* on some hardware, sure, but I don't think the PS1 has any sort of unique dedicated hardware acceleration features.

References

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