Banks says it was 50’s idea to change the original beat for the official remix so that it could be differentiated from the various remixes
and freestyles that other artists put out prior to its release. He
breaks down the features for us:
The-Dream: “I had spoke to couple of different R&B artists. That’s an element that I think helps. Everybody wants to be a part of that record. I don’t think it has
to be kept to one lane. I’ve heard Spanish versions to [the original],
Jamaican versions to it, Haitian versions to it. I got a feel of what
the melodic feel would bring to the record. The-Dream, he was already
doing [his own version]. Once I caught wind of it, I was like, ‘Yo, let
me get that. Don’t put that out.’ “
Yo Gotti: “Yo Gotti, I had spoke to him directly. I spoke to him a couple times, told him I wanted to get something done with him. Before that opportunity presented
itself, the [song] bubbled all down south in Memphis. I was like,
‘Let’s get Gotti on it.’ He has the street in a chokehold. We’ll
probably have more records come in the future also. He definitely has a
lane, man, and I wish him luck.”
Ludacris: “Luda, that’s the homie, man. Just through that, [it] wasn’t really nothing [difficult]. Luda is out there bubbling, platinum plaques and all that,
#1 records, where I’m trying to take it. Shout-out to Luda and shout-out
to [Disturbing Tha Peace co-founder] Chaka [Zulu] for making that
happen.
Jadakiss: “That wasn’t nothing. That wasn’t nothing but a phone call. I spoke to him a few times about the record. I had his verse for a minute. I had his verse
while I was overseas and everyone was leaking their versions. We built
the beat around his verse. He adds that extra, that lyrical element,
that New York City vibe to it. I didn’t want to stand alone on that
joint.”
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