Weekends (Black Eyed Peas song)

"Weekends" is the first single taken from American hip hop group the Black Eyed Peas' second studio album, Bridging the Gap. The song features vocals from Esthero.[1]

"Weekends"
Single by Black Eyed Peas featuring Esthero
from the album Bridging the Gap
B-side"Empire Strikes Black", "Magic"
ReleasedOctober 3, 2000
Recorded2000
Genre
Length4:47
LabelInterscope
Songwriter(s)Will Adams, Allan Pineda. Jaime Gomez, Tony Butler, Sylvester Stewart
Producer(s)will.i.am
The Black Eyed Peas singles chronology
"BEP Empire/Get Original"
(2000)
"Weekends"
(2000)
"Request + Line"
(2001)
Esthero singles chronology
"That Girl"
(1999)
"Weekends"
(2000)
"Balmes (A Better Life)"
(2001)

Background

A remix of the song was featured on the deluxe edition of the group's fifth studio album, The E.N.D. The song samples the intro of "Family Affair" by Sly & the Family Stone, while the intro samples "Lord of the Golden Baboon" by Mandrill. The song's chorus is an interpolation of the chorus to Debbie Deb's "Lookout Weekend". This was the last single they released before Kim Hill left the group.

Music video

The video starts with members of the band at a work place. and continues by showing the band leaving. Arriving home, they start planning what they are going to do at the weekend. This is later followed by scenes of the band at a party. Cameos in the video include Esthero, Blood of Abraham and Kim Hill.

Track listings

Australia
  1. "Weekends" - 4:47
  2. "Empire Strikes Black" - 3:53
  3. "Magic" - 3:58
  4. "Joints & Jam" (The Billion Mix) - 3:23
  5. "Weekends" (Live Version) - 5:43
  6. "BEP Empire" (Music Video)
Europe
  1. "Weekends" - 4:47
  2. "Empire Strikes Black" - 3:53
  3. "Magic" - 3:58
  4. "BEP Empire" (Music Video)

Charts

Chart (2000) Peak
position
ARIA Singles Chart 93[2]
German Singles Chart 100
US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs 73
gollark: Isn't the personhood thing about being able to sue them? It's not like they're meaningfully people in that they can directly vote or whatever.
gollark: Mostly by, as far as I can tell, just doing socially-accepted-as-being-environmentally-friendly things, not exactly effective things.
gollark: Are consumers just meant to avoid environment-destroying companies? If they act rationally and selfinterestedly they don't really have a good incentive to.
gollark: What about externalities, e.g. some company destroying the environment?
gollark: I see.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.