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"Hey Ya!" is a song performed by American hip-hop duo Outkast, specifically group member André 3000, who wrote and produced the song. Along with "The Way You Move", recorded by Outkast's other member Big Boi, "Hey Ya!" was released by Arista Records as one of the two lead singles from the duo's fifth album, ''Speakerboxxx/The Love Below'', on August 25, 2003. The track became a commercial success, reaching number one in the United States, Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Norway, and Sweden. "Hey Ya!" received critical acclaim upon release, and is consistently ranked as one of the greatest songs of the 2000s.


Writing and recording

André 3000 wrote "Hey Ya!" in 2000 and began work on recording it in December 2002 at Stankonia Studios in Atlanta, Georgia. He used an acoustic guitar for accompaniment, inspired by bands such as the Ramones, the Buzzcocks, the Hives, and the Smiths. André recorded the introduction, the first verse, the hook (music), hook, and the vocals around the same time, using several dozen takes. He returned to work on the song several evenings later, with session musician Kevin Kendricks performing the bassline on the synthesizer. Months later, André 3000 worked with Pete Novak at the Larrabee Sound Studios in Los Angeles. They experimented with various sound effects, including singing through a vocoder, and did 30 to 40 takes for each line.


Composition

"Hey Ya!" is a song in G major. Each cadential six-bar (music), measure phrase (music), phrase is constructed using a change of meter (music), meter on the fourth measure (creating a song with 22 beats in each phrase) and uses a I–IV–V–V/ii chord progression. G major and C major chords are played for one and two measures, respectively. André 3000 then uses a deceptive cadence after a measure of the Dominant (music), dominant D major chord, leading into two measures of an E major chord (against a G note in the melody implying E minor). The song moves at a tempo of 159 beats per minute, and André's vocal range spans more than an octave and a half, from B3 to G5.Sheet music for "Hey Ya!" Hal Leonard Corporation. 2009. The song opens with four Pick-up notes, pick-up beats as André 3000 counts "one, two, three, oh" and then leads into the first verse. The lyrics begin to describe the protagonist's concerns and doubts about a romantic relationship. He wonders if they are staying together just "for tradition", as in the lines "But does she really wanna [mess around] / But can't stand to see me / Walk out the door?" André 3000 commented, "I think it's more important to be happy than to meet up to...the world's expectations of what a relationship should be. So this is a celebration of how men and women relate to each other in the 2000s". The song then leads into the refrain, chorus, which consists of the line "Hey ya!" repeated eight times, accompanied by a synthesizer performing the bassline. During the second verse, the protagonist gets cold feet and wonders what the purpose of continuing the relationship is, pondering the question, "If they say nothing is forever...then what makes love the exception?" After repeating the chorus, the song leads into a call and response (music), call and response section. André 3000 jokes, "What's cooler than being cool?", and the "fellas'" response, an overdubbed version of his vocals, is "Ice cold", a reference to one of André Benjamin's stage names. He then calls to the "ladies", whose response is overdubbed from vocals by Rabeka Tuinei, who was an assistant to the audio engineer. The song's Break (music), breakdown coined the phrase "shake it like a Polaroid picture", a reference to a technique used by some photographers to expedite drying of damp instant film photos taken with film made by the Polaroid Corporation. Photos taken with early versions of the film needed to be dried, and shaking the picture helped it to dry faster. The breakdown also namechecks singer Beyoncé and actress Lucy Liu. The song closes by repeating the chorus and then gradually fading out.


Critical reception

"Hey Ya!" received universal acclaim from music critics and fans alike. ''PopMatters'' described the track as "brilliantly rousing" and "spazzy with electrifying multiplicity". ''Entertainment Weekly'' highlighted it as the catchiest song on the double album, and ''Stylus Magazine'' identified it as one of the best songs in OutKast's history. "Hey Ya!" topped the 2003 Pazz & Jop list, a survey of several hundred music critics conducted by Robert Christgau, with 322 mentions, beating runner-up Beyoncé Knowles' "Crazy in Love (Beyoncé Knowles song), Crazy in Love" by 119. It was listed at number 15 on ''Blender (magazine), Blender''s 2005 list of "The 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born", and ''Pitchfork Media, Pitchfork'' included it in its collection of ''The Pitchfork 500''. The song's unusual arrangement drew comparisons to artists from a variety of genres. ''Pitchfork'' referred to it as the apex of the album and added that it successfully mixed The Flaming Lips, Flaming Lips-style instrumentation with the energy of Prince (musician), Prince's 1983 single "Little Red Corvette". Marcello Carlin of ''Uncut (magazine), Uncut'' described the song as "Andre going power pop with overtones of early-'80s electro music, electro; The Knack meet side one of The The's ''Soul Mining''." Subsequently, ''Pitchfork'' gave it the number two slot in its "The Top 100 Singles of 2000–2004" feature in January 2005, bested only by OutKast's own "B.O.B. (song), B.O.B.". ''Blender'' described it as a mix of soul music by Ike Turner and new wave music by Devo and later as an "Electro music, electro/Folk rock, folk-rock/funk/power pop/hip-hop/Neo soul, neo-soul/kitchen sink rave-up". ''Rolling Stone'' compared André 3000's vocals to those of "an indie-rock Little Richard" and the backing arrangement to the Beatles' 1969 album ''Abbey Road'', later ranking it at number 182 in their list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, 500 Greatest Songs of All Time and ranking it at number four on their 2011 list of the "100 Best Songs of the Aughts". According to Acclaimed Music, it is the 18th most celebrated song in popular music history, and the best song of the 2000s. ''New York (magazine), New York'' also likened it to the Beatles and found it to be one of the best singles of 2003. AllMusic described it as an "incandescent" mix of electro, funk, and soul music. ''NME'' likened trying to classify the song as "akin to trying to lasso water" and described it as "a monumental barney between the Camberwick Green brass band, a cruise-ship cabaret act, a cartoon gospel choir and a sucker Master of Ceremonies, MC hiccuping ''Shake it like a Polaroid pic-chaaaa!'' backed up by the cast of an amateur production of The Wizard of Oz (adaptations), ''The Wizard of Oz''. Sort of." In 2011, they placed it at number three on its list of the "150 Best Tracks of the Past 15 Years". In 2013, the sports website Grantland.com named it the best song of the millennium after a March-Madness style bracket of 64 songs. The music video of the same name was likewise well received by critics, who regarded it as a contemporary piece of post-industrial performance art. In 2014, ''NME'' ranked the song at number 18 on their list of the 500 greatest songs of all time, and in 2021, ''Rolling Stone'' ranked the song at number 10 on their list of Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Songs of All Time, The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.


Commercial performance and impact

"Hey Ya!" was successful in North America, first charting on the week ending October 18, 2003, at number 57 on the ''Billboard'' Hot 100, three weeks after "The Way You Move" debuted; which was at number 25 at the time. It topped the Hot 100 for nine weeks, from December 13, 2003, to February 7, 2004. The digital sales topped the ''Billboard'' Hot Digital Tracks for 17 consecutive weeks. The song's time at number one bridged two eras, ending Casey Kasem's second tenure as host of ''American Top 40'' and beginning Ryan Seacrest's tenure as host. The song performed well in urban contemporary markets, topping the Rhythmic Airplay Chart, Rhythmic Top 40 chart and reaching number nine on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks. It was also successful in mainstream music, topping the Mainstream Top 40 (Pop Songs), Top 40 Mainstream and Top 40 Tracks and reaching number 13 on the Adult Top 40. The song also crossed over to modern rock radio, and peaked at number 16 on ''Billboard'' Alternative Songs chart in December 2003. "Hey Ya!" was the first song on Apple's iTunes to reach one million downloads and in September 2005, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the single platinum for shipping one million copies. At the 46th Grammy Awards, the song won Best Urban/Alternative Performance and was nominated for Grammy Award for Record of the Year, Record of the Year, but lost to Coldplay's "Clocks (song), Clocks". The song also performed well in Europe. In the United Kingdom, it debuted at number six on the UK Singles Chart and peaked at number three after 12 weeks, remaining on the chart for a total of 21 weeks. "Hey Ya!" topped the Norway, Norwegian singles chart for seven weeks, and it reached the top in Sweden for the first week of 2004. It performed well across the continent, reaching the top ten in Austria, Finland, France, Germany, Ireland, and Switzerland. "Hey Ya!" debuted at number 17 on Australia's ARIA Charts, ARIA Singles Chart, and later topped the chart for two consecutive weeks. The song remained on the chart for 16 weeks and was certified 9× platinum by the Australian Recording Industry Association. The song charted at number 61 for the 2003 end of year chart and was listed at number 15 on the 2004 chart and number five on the 2004 urban chart. It was also successful in New Zealand, reaching number two and staying on the Recording Industry Association of New Zealand, RIANZ Singles Chart for 23 weeks. The lyric "shake it like a Polaroid picture", along with the song's commercial success, helped to temporarily revitalize the Polaroid Corporation, which had declared bankruptcy in 2001. Because modern Polaroid film is sealed behind a clear plastic window, casually waving the picture has no effect on the film's development. Vigorously shaking the film may actually distort the image by causing the film to separate prematurely and creating blobs in the final image. Nevertheless, Polaroid sought to capitalize on the allusion, hiring Ryan Berger of the Euro RSCG advertising agency. Polaroid sponsored parties for OutKast at which Euro RSCG distributed Polaroid cameras. OutKast also made a deal to hold Polaroid cameras during some of its performances. While Polaroid did not release sales figures, its public image, which was in decline with the growing popularity of digital cameras, was bolstered by the song. However despite the welcome exposure, Polaroid would eventually discontinue the sale of original Polaroid cameras and film, and again declare bankruptcy in 2008.


Accolades


Music video


Background

The song's music video, directed by Bryan Barber, is conceptually similar to the video for former The Beatles, Beatle's Paul McCartney's song 'Coming Up (song), Coming Up', but is also based on The Beatles on The Ed Sullivan Show, the Beatles' landmark appearance on ''The Ed Sullivan Show'' on February 9, 1964. However, it sets the action in London. The beginning and end of the video blend with those of "The Way You Move" so that the two can be watched in either order, and a "The Way You Move/Hey Ya!" video combining both clips with a bridging sequence was released on the ''OutKast: The Videos'' DVD. After listening to the song, Barber was inspired to create a video around the Beatles' appearance on Sullivan's show based on the song's musical structure, but André 3000 had never seen this footage. Barber showed the footage to André 3000 and came up with the idea of reversing the British Invasion, by having the American band the Love Below becoming popular on a British television program. The music video was filmed using motion control photography in two days in August 2003 on a sound stage at Universal Studios in Los Angeles, California. The cast included more than 100 women. Each of André 3000's parts was shot several times from different angles, and he performed the song 23 times during the course of filming. Because releasing "Hey Ya!" as a single was a last-minute decision, André did not have time to choreograph the parts, and all of the dancing was improvised. Ice Cold 3000's sequences were the first filmed, resulting in the character's energetic performance, and Johnny Vulture's were the last, so André, exhausted from the previous takes, sat on a stool for those sequences.


Synopsis

In the video, André 3000 plays all eight members of the fictional band Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, The Love Below: keyboardist Benjamin André, bassist Possum Aloysius Jenkins, vocalist André "Ice Cold" 3000, drummer Dookie Blossom Gain III, three backing vocalists the Love Haters, and guitarist Johnny Vulture. The video opens with the band's manager Antwan (Big Boi) talking to Ice Cold and Dookie backstage. Meanwhile, the television presenter, portrayed by Ryan Phillippe (another version featured an energetic Phillippe), tries to calm a crowd of screaming girls on a show being broadcast live in black-and-white. Afterwards, he introduces the band and they start performing. While the girls in the audience scream loudly, one girl is carried off by security after rushing the stage, and another faints. A family is shown dancing to the broadcast at home. When Ice Cold instructs listeners to "shake it like a Polaroid picture", some of the girls begin taking pictures and shaking them. Ice Cold dances with one of the girls on stage, and the video closes with several friends of the band watching and discussing the performance.


Performance

The video debuted on MTV's ''Total Request Live'' on September 5, 2003, at number 10. It topped the countdown for 19 days and retired at number eight on November 24, having spent 50 days on the program. At the 2004 MTV Video Music Awards, the video won four awards for MTV Video Music Award for Video of the Year, Video of the Year, MTV Video Music Award for Best Hip-Hop Video, Best Hip-Hop Video, MTV Video Music Award for Best Special Effects, Best Special Effects, and MTV Video Music Award for Best Art Direction, Best Art Direction. It was also nominated for MTV Video Music Award for Best Direction, Best Direction but lost to Jay-Z's "99 Problems". "Hey Ya!" was nominated for Best Short Form Music Video at the 46th Grammy Awards, but it lost to Johnny Cash's cover of Nine Inch Nails' "Hurt (Nine Inch Nails song), Hurt". In Canada, the video topped MuchMusic's ''Countdown (MuchMusic), Countdown'' for the week beginning January 30, 2004, and it won the award for Best International Video by a group at the 2004 MuchMusic Video Awards. In 2006, Stylus Magazine listed it at number 72 on its "Top 100 Music Videos of All Time", comparing André 3000's dancing to James Brown's performances in the early 1970s.


Formats and track listings

*American 7-inch vinyl single # "Hey Ya!" (radio edit) # "Hey Ya!" (instrumental) *Australian CD maxi single # "Hey Ya!" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" (Benny Benassi remix) # "Hey Ya!" (Enhanced CD video) *European CD single # "Hey Ya!" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" (radio edit) *German CD maxi single # "Hey Ya!" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" (Benny Benassi remix) # "Hey Ya!" (Enhanced CD video) *UK 12-inch vinyl single # "Hey Ya!" (radio edit) # "Ghetto Musick" # "My Favourite Things" *UK CD maxi single # "Hey Ya!" # "Ghetto Musick" (radio edit) # "My Favourite Things" # "Hey Ya!" (Enhanced CD video)


Credits and personnel

The credits for "Hey Ya!" are adapted from the liner notes of ''Speakerboxx/The Love Below''. Recording * Recorded at: Stankonia Studios and Tree Sound Studios in Atlanta, Georgia; Larrabee Sound Studios in Los Angeles, California. Personnel * André 3000 – Singing, vocals, guitars, Electronic keyboard, keyboards, Record producer, production, audio programming * Kevin Kendricks – keyboards * John Frye – Audio engineering, recording engineer * Pete Novak – recording engineer * Robert Hannon – recording engineer * Mike Nicholson – recording engineer * Josh Monroy – assistant recording engineer * Warren Bletcher – assistant recording engineer * Jared Robbins – assistant recording engineer * Rabeka Tuinei – assistant recording engineer, additional vocals * Neal Pogue – Audio mixing (recorded music), audio mixer * Greg Price – assistant audio mixer


Charts


Weekly charts


Year-end charts


Decade-end charts


All-time charts


Certifications


Release history


Cover versions

The rock influences of "Hey Ya!" have allowed many other artists to release cover versions of the song. In 2006, Mat Weddle, frontman of the unsigned folk music, folk band Obadiah Parker, performed an acoustic music, acoustic cover of the song at a local open mic night, and a friend of his posted a video of the performance on YouTube, which quickly became viral video, virally popular online. Inspired by slowcore band Red House Painters, Weddle's version moves at a much slower tempo backed by a rhythmic guitar strum and converts the breakdown into a "staccato chime". The cover received international airplay and spawned many other wikt:copycat, copycat acoustic versions. An acoustic cover of the song, sung by Sam Lloyd in his role as List of characters on Scrubs#Ted Buckland, Ted Buckland appeared in the 2009 episode of Scrubs (TV series), Scrubs My Soul On Fire, Part 2. In 2015, Postmodern Jukebox released a Scott Bradlee arrangement of "Hey Ya!" with a big band tempo and 1960s feel. Featuring Sara Niemietz on lead vocals, their version was featured in ''Billboard (magazine), Billboard'' magazine, Time (magazine), ''Time'' magazine online, and the Daily News (New York), ''New York Daily News''.


References

{{Authority control 2003 singles 2003 songs 2004 singles Arista Records singles Bertelsmann Music Group singles Billboard Hot 100 number-one singles Canadian Singles Chart number-one singles Funk songs Grammy Award for Best Urban/Alternative Performance MTV Video of the Year Award Music videos directed by Bryan Barber Number-one singles in Australia Number-one singles in the Czech Republic Number-one singles in Norway Number-one singles in Sweden Outkast songs Songs written by André 3000