"Gimme the Light" | ||||
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Single by Sean Paul | ||||
from the album Dutty Rock | ||||
B-side | "Can You Do the Work" (Liquid Riddim) | |||
Released | 2001 | |||
Genre | Dancehall | |||
Length |
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Label | ||||
Songwriter(s) |
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Producer(s) | Troyton Rami & Roger Mackenzie | |||
Sean Paul singles chronology | ||||
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"Gimme the Light" is the first single from Jamaican dancehall musician Sean Paul's second studio album, Dutty Rock (2002). The song was originally released in Jamaica in 2001 as "Give Me the Light" [1] and was issued internationally in 2002. "Gimme the Light" was Paul's first hit single, peaking at number seven on the US Billboard Hot 100 and becoming a top-20 hit in Canada, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. It is the most popular hit single from the "Buzz" riddim, which was the debut hit production for Troyton Rami & Roger Mackenzie a production duo of Black Shadow Records in Miami, Florida.
In 2001, a fledgling Miami-based Jamaican production team known as Black Shadow created a new dancehall riddim which they called "The Buzz". Of approximately 12 tracks that were vocalized by the latest stars and upcoming artists of dancehall, four of them became hits in the following year: Elephant Man's "Haters Wanna War", Cobra's "Press Trigger", Sizzla's "Pump Up", and Sean Paul's "Give Me the Light", which became the most popular one because of its catchy chorus. "The Buzz" became the biggest Dancehall riddim of 2002, followed by the Diwali riddim by Steven "Lenky" Marsden later on, which was also his first hit production. Black Shadow followed up "The Buzz" with the "Surprise" riddim in 2003.[ citation needed ]
The unedited version of "Gimme the Light", as is the case with many Sean Paul releases, makes direct reference to smoking marijuana (in this case, passing along hydroponically grown marijuana, referred to as "the 'dro" in the song's chorus). The edited version of "Dutty Rock" contains the lyrics "Just gimme the light and start the show," instead of "pass the dro." Paul is also out clubbing and checking out women for a possible nightcap. References to marijuana were removed from the song for the edited version.[ citation needed ]
The official remix, "Gimme the Light (Pass the Dro-Voisier Remix)", features rapper Busta Rhymes. This version uses only the chorus from the original (the clean version also uses the unedited version's chorus), replaced by new lyrics from Paul and Busta, also of Jamaican heritage. The remix's name is referenced from Busta Rhymes' 2002 hit single, "Pass The Courvoisier, Part II".[ citation needed ] The song's instrumental was used for the remainder of the remix of Sean Paul's next single, "Get Busy", featuring Fatman Scoop.[ citation needed ]
In 2017, the song was included on Billboard's 12 Best Dancehall & Reggaeton Choruses of the 21st Century list at number three. [2] In 2024, American rapper Ice Spice sampled the song in her single "Gimmie a Light".
The music video was directed by Director X, known as Little X at the time. Features video vixen Pasha de Matas Bleasdell and choreographer Tanisha Scott.
CD maxi – US
CD maxi – Europe
CD single
12-inch maxi – US
12-inch maxi – Europe
CD maxi – Remixes
Weekly charts
| Year-end charts
|
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Canada (Music Canada) [29] | Gold | 5,000^ |
United Kingdom (BPI) [30] | Silver | 200,000‡ |
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone. |
Region | Date | Format(s) | Label(s) | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|
Jamaica | 2001 | 7-inch vinyl | Black Shadow | [1] |
United Kingdom | 9 September 2002 | CD | [31] | |
United States | 21 October 2002 | Contemporary hit radio | [32] | |
United Kingdom (re-release) | 3 February 2003 |
| [33] |
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