Daydreamin' (Lupe Fiasco song)


"Daydreamin'" is the third single taken from Lupe Fiasco's album Lupe Fiasco's Food & Liquor and features soul singer Jill Scott.

Background

The single is based on a sample of "Daydream in Blue" by I Monster, a song that samples "Daydream" by Gunter Kallmann Choir. The song's lyrics depict an adventure being experienced through the eyes of a robot. The song's lyrics are also a critique of pop culture, especially of the current state of hip hop music.
The song was released in the UK and US on September 11, 2006; however, a download-only version was available one week earlier and charted at #46.
In 2008 "Daydreamin'" won the Grammy Award for Best Urban/Alternative Performance. It was ranked the best rap song of 2006 by many publications.
This song was also featured in an AT&T commercial during May 2008 for a Samsung phone.

Music video

A music video was created for the song; it shows Lupe Fiasco at a record store, where he meets and befriends a robot. Jill Scott is shown in a video projected on the wall, singing with a flower in her hair in a manner reminiscent of Billie Holiday.

Remixes

Young Buck did a freestyle remix over the instrumental to this song, and is the first track, featured on G-Unit Radio Pt. 24: The Clean Up Man.
Chamillionaire made a remix on his Mixtape Messiah 7.

Track listings

  1. "Daydreamin'"
  2. "Kick, Push"
  1. "Daydreamin'"
  2. "Kick, Push"
  3. "Daydreamin'"
  1. "Daydreamin'"
  2. "Daydreamin'"
  3. "Daydreamin'"
  4. "Theme Music to a Drive-By"

    Charts

The song was not a major success on the Billboard charts, but it did begin to pick up steam on the digital download charts, peaking at #26 on the iTunes hip-hop/rap charts and #32 on the Amazon hip-hop/rap charts as of May 1, 2008.
Chart Peak
position
Australian Singles Chart40

In popular culture

A further remixed version of I Monster's work is used in the 2016 episode "eps2.0_unm4sk-pt1.tc" in Season 2 of the series Mr. Robot, which is often mistaken for the Lupe Fiasco version. The music that appears in the show uses parts that only appear in the 1998 song, and no vocals or changes from the Fiasco version are present.