Fergalicious

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“Fergalicious”
“Fergalicious” cover
Single by Fergie featuring will.i.am
from the album The Dutchess
B-side "Paradise"
Released October 23, 2006 (U.S.)
November 12, 2007 (UK)[1]
Format CD single, digital download
Recorded 2006
Genre Dance-pop, hip hop, R&B, pop rap, electropop
Length 4:52 (album version)
3:42 (radio edit)
Label A&M
Writer(s) Will Adams, Stacy Ferguson, Dania Maria Birks, Michelle Juana, Juanita Lee, Kim Hazel, Fatima Shaneed, Derrick Rahming
Producer will.i.am
Certification 2× platinum (RIAA)
Fergie singles chronology
"London Bridge"
(2006)
"Fergalicious"
(2006)
"Glamorous"
(2007)
Fergie UK singles chronology
"Big Girls Don't Cry"
(2007)
"Fergalicious"/"Clumsy"
(2007)
will.i.am singles chronology
"I Love My Bitch"
(2006)
"Fergalicious"
(2006)
"Hip Hop Is Dead"
(2006)
The Dutchess track listing
"Fergalicious"
(1)
"Clumsy"
(2)
Alternate covers
UK double A-side download single cover
UK double A-side download single cover

"Fergalicious" is the second single from pop/R&B singer Fergie's debut solo album, The Dutchess. It features Black Eyed Peas member will.i.am, who also produced the track. "Fergalicious" was not officially released as the second single in the UK, where "Glamorous" was officially made the second single instead.[2] However, "Fergalicious" still managed to chart at number 26 on the UK Official Download Chart and will be released as the fourth single there, over a year after the song's initial release, as a double A-side with "Clumsy". This is possibly due to the huge success of "Big Girls Don't Cry" in the UK which reached #2, saved the album, and even made it reach a new peak position at #18. As of March 2008, the single has sold over 2,450,000 copies. Also, The Dutchess had a re-release in Japan & Australia. The cover of the new CD was Fergie in a cake scene from this video.

Contents

[edit] Song information

The song peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 several months after its release. However, "Fergalicious" managed to top the Pop 100 chart and spent fourteen weeks in the top ten of the Hot 100. "Fergalicious" was extremely successful as a digital song. In fact, it's one of the very few tracks which have been certified 2x platinum in the U.S., thanks to the heavy downloads. This achievement was very easy as, in January 2007, it sold 294,797 downloads in a single week, being immediately certificated platinum and holding the record for the most downloaded song in a single week (which has since been broken by Flo Rida's "Low"). As of March 2008, "Fergalicious" has been downloaded for over 2,450,000 times in the U.S. only, being in the Top 10 of the most downloaded songs in the U.S. history. "Fergalicious" was not released in the U.K. or Ireland in 2006 but was later released as a double A side with "Clumsy" in October 2007.

  • "Fergalicious" (2006)
    The song heavily samples J. J. Fad's "Supersonic" and Afrorican's "Give It All You Got."
  • Problems playing the files? See media help.

The song heavily samples "Give It All You Got" by Afro-Rican and "Supersonic" by J.J. Fad.[3] It also features elements from "Night Train" by James Brown and "It's More Fun to Compute" by Kraftwerk (both sampled in "Give It All You Got"). The riff at the opening of the song and featured throughout is from Dominic Frontiere's theme music for the 60's TV show The Rat Patrol. will.i.am's opening line is an interpolation of the opening line of 2 Live Crew's "Throw The D." The word "Fergalicious" is a portmanteau of the words 'Fergie' and 'delicious'. Spelling is a large part of the song's lyrics, with vocalists spelling Fergie's name, the word 'delicious,' and a misspelling of the word 'tasty' (the vocalist spells it as 'tastey').

On December 4, 2006, Fergie and will.i.am performed the song live at the 2006 Billboard Music Awards and Big In '06 Awards. In 2007, this song was nominated by rock station WNEW as for "most annoying song" of 2006, but, apart from this, it was nominated for various other awards: in fact, it won the "Sexiest Video of the Year" at MTV Australia Video Music Awards and, always with this song, Fergie was given the award for "Best International Video - Artist" at Much Music Video Awards. "Fergalicious", for unknown reasons, was not released in the UK or Ireland. The song was used on the videogame Boogie.

[edit] Controversy

The song caused controversy between Fergie and Nelly Furtado. In the lyrics, Fergie wrote: "But I ain't promiscuous", which Furtado thought had referred to her successful single. Later, in the song "Give It to Me", Furtado wrote a verse, which she confirmed,[4] directed at Fergie.

[edit] Music video

Fergie dressed as a Scout Girl in the music video.
Fergie dressed as a Scout Girl in the music video.
"Delicious Fergie".
"Delicious Fergie".

The video premiered on MTV on October 24, 2006 and premiered on Yahoo! Music on October 31, 2006. The music video was filmed in Hollywood, and directed by Fatima Robinson, who also directed the "My Humps" music video. will.i.am from the Black Eyed Peas also appears in the video, which features Fergie as Willy Wonka in a candy factory called "Fergieland" (the factory was nameless in the original book and both film versions). The video starts with the Oompa Loompas packaging pink and purple boxes of "Fergalicious" candy. In the beginning of the video, Fergie sings in a field of candy canes with the Oompa Loompas. Throughout the video, she wears a tan and khaki girl scout outfit (it could be noted that Fergie herself was a girl scout[citation needed]), sports a black one-piece swimsuit while lying in a pile of candy, (often in a kaleidoscope view) works out in a colorful gym flexing her biceps, sings in a room filled with lollipops and other candies while dressed like Shirley Temple, and pops out of a cake while wearing a tiny blue swimsuit with gems encrusted on the exterior. She then starts watching two women wrestle in ice cream before joining them at the end of the video.

As of June 10, 2008 the music video for "Fergalicious" has been viewed 15,437,467 times on popular video-sharing website YouTube.

[edit] 2006 Billboard Music Awards

At the 2006 Billboard Music Awards, Fergie reported that there would be a surprise at her performance. It was revealed that the surprise was her outfit, the only outfit produced for but never used in the music video.[5] When Fergie was asked to pick her own outfit, she decided to wear her "blue dress" very similar to her red shirley temple outfit seen in the beginning of the video.

[edit] Track listings

European Maxi-CD
  1. "Fergalicious" (Album version) — 4:52
  2. "Paradise" — 4:08
  3. "London Bridge" (Live version) — 2:43
  4. "Fergalicious" (Music video) — 3:52
Australian CD single
  1. "Fergalicious" (album version) — 4:54
  2. "Paradise" — 4:07
UK 2006 Promo CD Single
  1. "Fergalicious" (Radio Edit) — 3:47
UK 2007 Promo CD single
  1. "Fergalicious" (Radio Edit) — 3:47
  2. "Clumsy" (Radio Edit) — 3:17
UK Download Single
  1. "Clumsy" (Album Version) — 4:00
  2. "Fergalicious" (Album Version) — 4:52

[edit] Charts

Chart (2006) Peak
position[6]
Brazil - Top 100 Singles 1
Australian ARIA Singles Chart 4
Belgium Top 50 Singles 11
chile TOP 100 1
Finland Singles Chart 3
France Singles Chart 15
GIB Singles Chart 1
Ibero-America Top 100[7] 3
Latin America Airplay Chart[8] 3
Latin America Top 40 6
Los 10+ Pedidos Argentina 1
Los 10+ Pedidos México 4
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart 5
Norway Singles Chart 1
Polish Singles Chart[9] 50
Russian Airplay Chart[10] 1
Swedish Charts 1
Turkish Top 20 Chart[11] 4
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 2
U.S. Billboard Pop 100 1
U.S. Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs[12] 71
United World Chart 4


Preceded by
"Irreplaceable" by Beyoncé
U.S. Billboard Pop 100 number-one single
January 13, 2007 - January 20, 2007
Succeeded by
"Irreplaceable" by Beyoncé
Preceded by
"Self Control" by Soraya
GIB Singles Chart number one single
December 17, 2006 - December 24, 2006
Succeeded by
"A Moment Like This" by Leona Lewis
Preceded by
"Eu Sei" by Papas da Língua
Hot100Brasil number-one single
January 27, 2007 - February 3, 2007
Succeeded by
"Berimbau Metalizado" by Ivete Sangalo

[edit] References