Tyrone (song)

"Tyrone" is a song by singer Erykah Badu. It was released as the lead single in support of her album Live and does not feature on her debut album Baduizm. The song was recorded professionally during a Badu concert and is the version sent to radio. The song has been referenced in other media, most notably in the film Next Friday (1999), when Tyrone (Deebo's accomplice/younger sibling) is making a fake call at a restaurant. The song title is also referenced by Beyoncé in the song "Kitty Kat" off her second album B'Day and in the rap of 3LW's hit single "No More (Baby I'ma Do Right)," as well as R. Kelly in the song "When a Woman's Fed Up" from its 1998 double album R.

"Tyrone"
Single by Erykah Badu
from the album Live
ReleasedOctober 1997
Recorded1997
Genre
Length3:56
LabelKedar Records/Universal
Songwriter(s)Erykah Badu, Norman "Keys" Hurt
Producer(s)Erykah Badu
Norman "Keys" Hurt
Erykah Badu singles chronology
"Otherside of the Game"
(1997)
"Tyrone"
(1997)
"Appletree"
(1998)

Release and reception

Tyrone was played in heavy rotation on radio, although the song failed to chart on either Billboard's R&B or pop singles chart. The song reached #1 on R&B's airplay chart.[1]

Music video

The music video for "Tyrone" was of Badu performing the tune in concert.

Credits

All credits adapted from All Music.[2]

  • Erykah Badu - Creation, Mixing, Primary Artist, Producer, Vocals
  • Poogie Bell - Drums
  • Karen Bernod - Vocals (Background)
  • Tom Coyne - Mastering
  • Hubert Eaves IV - Bass
  • Norman "Keys" Hurt - Creation, Keyboards, Mixing, Producer
  • Gorden Mack - Mixing
  • Kedar Massenburg - Executive Producer
  • N'Dambi - Vocals (Background)
  • Kenny Ortíz - Engineer, Mixing
  • Joyce M. Strong - Vocals (Background)
gollark: Also also, why a binary format?
gollark: Also, XTMF can do runtime update, you just need to allocate, say, 4KB at the start of the tape, and write metadata to that. The offsets might be fiddly, though.
gollark: You should probably not do that.
gollark: <@458991393160036354> No idea if there's an actual *limit*, but probably try to avoid using more than a few megabytes.
gollark: 6000.

References

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