Where I Wanna Be (Shade Sheist song)

"Where I Wanna Be" is the debut single by American songwriter and recording artist Shade Sheist. The song features Nate Dogg and Kurupt on additional vocals. "Where I Wanna Be" found chart success domestically and internationally, peaking at #1 on Billboard's Hot Rap Singles chart and #14 on the UK Singles chart.

"Where I Wanna Be"
Single by Shade Sheist featuring Nate Dogg and Kurupt
from the album Informal Introduction
ReleasedDecember 12, 2000 (2000-12-12)
RecordedJune 2000
Genre
Length4:25
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Eddie Berkeley, Kay Gee
Shade Sheist singles chronology
"Leaving You Again"
(1998)
"Where I Wanna Be"
(2000)
"Money Owners"
(2002)
Nate Dogg singles chronology
"The Next Episode"
(2000)
"Where I Wanna Be"
(2000)
"Lay Low"
(2001)
Music video
"Where I Wanna Be" on YouTube

Conception and release

"Where I Wanna Be" was first featured on the Where I Wanna Be compilation that Shade Sheist and local producer Damizza executive produced. After writing and recording tracks for other artists, television, film and video game soundtracks, Shade Sheist released his debut studio album Informal Introduction in 2002 under MCA Records. "Where I Wanna Be" was the first single from the album.

"Where I Wanna Be" was written by Tramayne Thompson (Shade Sheist), Edward Berkeley, Ricardo Brown (Kurupt), Derek Bush, Keir Lamont Gist (Kay Gee), Nathaniel Hale (Nate Dogg) and Robert L. Huggar, with production by Berkeley and Kay Gee. The song contains a sample of Toto's "Waiting for Your Love".[1] It was released in the U.S. in December 2000, with a summer release in the UK in 2001.

Critical reception

Dean Carlson of Allmusic gave "Where I Wanna Be" a mixed review stating "Shade Sheist's Where I Wanna Be hoped to resurrect the forgotten art of summer hip-hop. It failed, of course, but in a gallant sort of way... It was from there, with Nate Dogg and Kurupt chasing each other's slow rhymes at the wayside, that "Where I Wanna Be" eventually became a sort of heat-induced muscle relaxant this side of De La Soul's "A Roller Skating Jam Named 'Saturdays'" or Black Eyed Peas' "Magic," if only substituting their pleasantries for suspiciously placed arrogance. It was an unworkable contradiction when it came down to it, but Where I Wanna Be became the number one rap single for four months in America and went on to crack the British Top 20 the following summer."[2]

Chart performance

The single peaked at #1 on the U.S. Billboard's Hot Rap Singles chart and was a success in the UK, where it peaked inside of the UK Top 75 at number 14. It remains Shade Sheist's most commercially successful hit to date.[3]

Formats and track listings

CD single[4]
  1. "Where I Wanna Be" (Clean Radio Version) - 3:47
  2. "Where I Wanna Be" (Original LP Version) - 4:25
  3. "Where I Wanna Be" (Dub-a-holics R&B Switch Mix - Clean) - 5:01
  4. "Where I Wanna Be" (Video - UK Edit) - 3:47
12" vinyl

Side A

  1. "Where I Wanna Be" (Extended Original Version) - 4:51
  2. "Where I Wanna Be" (Clean Radio Version) - 3:47

Side B

  1. "Where I Wanna Be" (Dub-a-holics R&B Switch Mix - Explicit Version) - 5:01

Release history

Region Date Format Label
U.S. December 12, 2000[2] 12" vinyl Sire Records
UK August 21, 2001[4] CD, 12" vinyl, cassette London Records

Charts

Chart (2000–01) Peak
position
UK Singles Chart[3] 14
U.S. Hot Rap Singles[5] 1
Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs[6] 49
Billboard Hot 100[7] 95

References

  1. Shade Sheist feat. Nate Dogg and Kurupt's Where I Wanna Be sample of Toto's Waiting for Your Love | WhoSampled
  2. AllMusic - Where I Wanna Be - Shade Sheist - Review
  3. "Shade Sheist – Where I Wanna Be – UK Singles Chart". The Official Charts Company. TheOfficialCharts. Retrieved 2011-01-02.
  4. Where I Wanna Be: Shade Sheist: Amazon.co.uk: Music
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-03-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  6. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-08. Retrieved 2011-03-16.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  7. "Top 100 Music Hits, Top 100 Music Charts, Top 100 Songs & The Hot 100". Billboard.com. 2000-11-11. Retrieved 2012-03-14.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.