Who's Real

"Who's Real"
Single by Jadakiss featuring Swizz Beatz & OJ Da Juiceman
from the album The Last Kiss
Released June 16, 2009
Format CD single, Digital download
Genre Hip hop
Length 3:12
Label D-Block, Ruff Ryders, Roc-A-Fella, Def Jam
Writer(s) J. Phillips, K. Dean, O. Williams, D. Levy
Producer(s) Swizz Beatz
Jadakiss singles chronology
"Respect My Conglomerate"
(2009)
"Who's Real"
(2009)
"Pride N Joy"
(2012)
Swizz Beatz singles chronology
"Blow Ya Mind"
(2007)
"Who's Real"
(2009)
"Million Bucks"
(2009)
OJ Da Juiceman singles chronology
"Ridiculous"
(2009)
"Who's Real"
(2009)

"Who's Real" is a song by American hip hop recording artist Jadakiss, released June 16, 2009 as the fourth single from his third studio album The Last Kiss. The song features guest appearances from fellow American rappers OJ Da Juiceman and Swizz Beatz, the latter of whom produced the track.[1] The single was officially released on June 16, 2009.

Background

The original version had a longer second verse: after Juiceman's lines follow the lines by Jusmula (beginning with "It's real funny when a nigga play a C.L.,/ O.S.E., I be trippin' like G.L." and so on). It also contained the word "bastards" in Jada's line "Couple of flips and then stash it, bastards", which got blocked out in the final version, so it would be totally without profanities.

Music video

A music video was directed by Taj and shot on May 13, 2009.[2] There are cameo appearances from Ja Rule, Clipse, Clyde Carson, DJ Webstar, Grafh, and Styles P.[3] There are also various Ruff Ryders Lifestyles members with their motorbikes featured in the video.[4] The music video was released as the New Joint of the Day on 106 & Park on June 10, 2009.

Remix

On June 9 DMX's verse from the remix leaked onto the internet.[5] The whole remix was released on June 10. It features his fellow D-Block members Sheek Louch and Styles P along with Eve, Drag-On, DMX and Swizz Beatz.[6] This is known as the Ruff Ryders remix, sparking a long-awaited unification of the Ruff Ryder Entertainment. The single's instrumental was used for a Powerade commercial, and for the Wake Up Calls on the Rickey Smiley Morning Show.

Chart positions

Chart (2009) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles[7] 25
U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs[8] 39
U.S. Billboard Hot Rap Tracks[9] 18

References

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