Description
“99 Problems” | |
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Single by Jay-Z | |
from the album The Black Album | |
Released | April 27, 2004 |
Recorded | July 2003 |
Studio |
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Genre | |
Length | 3:54 |
Label | |
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Rick Rubin |
“99 Problems” is the third single released by American rapper Jay-Z from The Black Album. It was released on April 27, 2004. The chorus hook “I got 99 problems, but a bitch ain’t one” is taken from the Ice-T single “99 Problems” from the album Home Invasion (1993). The hook was coined during a conversation between Ice-T and Brother Marquis of Miami-based 2 Live Crew.[4] Marquis used the phrase in the 1996 2 Live Crew song “Table Dance”.
In the song, Jay-Z tells a story about dealing with rap critics, racial profiling from a police officer who wants to search his car, and an aggressor. The song reached number 30 on the Billboard Hot 100.
Production
The track was produced by Rick Rubin, his first hip hop production in many years. Rubin provided Jay-Z with a guitar riff and stripped-down beat that were once his trademarks. In creating the track, Rubin used some classic 1980’s sample staples such as “The Big Beat” by Billy Squier, “Long Red” by Mountain, and “Get Me Back On Time” by Wilson Pickett. Featuring the same Billy Squier drum beat sample, Dizzee Rascal released “Fix Up, Look Sharp” in August 2003 prior to The Black Album’s release.
The title and chorus are derived from Ice-T‘s “99 Problems” from his 1993 album Home Invasion. The song featured Brother Marquis. The original song was more profane and describes a wide range of sexual conquests. Ice-T would re-record his version of the song with the Rubin/Jay-Z guitar riff for Body Count‘s 2014 album Manslaughter in order to “reclaim” the hook from being mis-attributed to Jay-Z. Portions of Ice-T’s original lyrics were similarly quoted in a song by fellow rapper Trick Daddy on a track also titled “99 Problems” from his 2001 album Thugs Are Us. Jay-Z begins his third verse directly quoting lines from Bun B‘s opening verse off the track “Touched” from the UGK album Ridin’ Dirty.
Analysis
The second verse, describing Jay-Z’s traffic stop, has received much more attention than the rest of the song.
The second verse was based on an actual experience of Jay-Z in the 1990s in New Jersey. He wrote that in 1994 he was pulled over by police while carrying cocaine in a secret compartment in his sunroof. He refused to let the police search the car and the police called for drug-sniffing dogs. However, the dogs never showed up and the police had to let him go. Moments after he drove away, he saw a police car with the dogs drive by. In a discussion at the Celeste Bartos Forum at the New York Public Library, Jay-Z described the second verse of the song as representing “a contest of wills” between the car’s driver who is “all the way in the wrong” for carrying illegal drugs, and a racist police officer who pulls over the driver not for any infraction but for being African-American. “Both guys are used to getting their way” and thus reluctant to back down, Jay-Z notes, and the driver “knows a bit about the law because he’s used to breaking it” and asserts his legal rights.
In 2011 Southwestern Law School Professor Caleb Mason wrote an article with a line-by-line analysis of the second verse of the song from a legal perspective referencing the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, citing it as a useful tool for teaching law students search and seizure law involving search warrants, Terry stops, racial profiling, the exclusionary rule, and the motor vehicle exception.[7] Mason writes that some of Jay-Z’s lyrics are legally accurate and describe prudent behavior (e.g., identifying when police ask for consent to search, specifically asking if one is under arrest, and complying with the police order to stop rather than fleeing which would certainly result in a search of the car and might authorize police to use lethal force to stop a high speed chase). However, Mason also notes the song lyrics are legally incorrect in indicating that a driver can refuse an order to exit the car and that police would need a warrant to search a locked glove compartment or trunk—in fact, police would only need probable cause to search a car. In 2012, Professor Emir Crowne of the University of Windsor Faculty of Law wrote an article concluding that Jay-Z’s lyrics may be legally correct under Canadian law.
While the song’s meaning is widely debated, the chorus “If you’re having girl problems, I feel bad for you son/I’ve got 99 problems but a bitch ain’t one” was defined in Jay-Z’s book, Decoded, as referring to something different in each verse. In verse two, it refers to a police dog.