Black and Yellow
"Black and Yellow" is a song by American rapper Wiz Khalifa from his third studio album, Rolling Papers. It was released on September 14, 2010, as the lead single from the album. The song was written by Khalifa, along with Stargate, who produced it. It was released as a CD single in honor of Record Store Day. The song peaked at number one on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Wiz Khalifa's first number-one single in the US.
The song is about growing up in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and also Khalifa's car, a yellow Dodge Challenger Hemi with black stripes. He has stated that he got the car in those colors as a tribute to his hometown of Pittsburgh, whose official colors are black and gold, and its professional sports teams, all of whose colors are black and some variation of gold or yellow. The song itself does not mention Pittsburgh or sports, although the song's music video made the connection to Pittsburgh explicit, showing various iconic locations in the city, as well as apparel associated with the football team the Pittsburgh Steelers, the hockey team the Pittsburgh Penguins, and the baseball team the Pittsburgh Pirates. In the year after it was released, "Black and Yellow" spawned dozens of remixes, parodies and remakes, both in the U.S. and internationally, many of them made in tribute to a local sports team. At Super Bowl XLV in 2011, which featured the Steelers competing against the Green Bay Packers, the Steelers used "Black and Yellow" as their fight song, while the Packers used a remix by Lil Wayne called "Green and Yellow", marking the first time both teams at the Super Bowl had used the same song. The song earned Khalifa his first Grammy nominations, for Best Rap Song and Best Rap Performance at the 2012 ceremony.
Chart performance
On the issue dated October 2, 2010, "Black and Yellow" debuted at No. 100 on the Billboard Hot 100. It then dropped out the following week and re-entered at No. 64 on the issue dated October 30, 2010. On its eighteenth charting week, the song rose to No. 1 on the issue dated February 19, 2011, selling 198,000 digital copies that week. "Black and Yellow" has sold 4,144,922 digital copies since release.Music video
The music video was directed by Bill Paladino. It was filmed in Pittsburgh and features sights of the city, including the U.S. Steel Tower, BNY Mellon Center, PPG Place, William Penn Hotel, Citizens Bank Tower, Union Trust Building, One PNC Plaza, K&L Gates Center the Three Sisters and Smithfield Street bridges, Station Square, Shannon Hall of the Art Institute of Pittsburgh and the smoke stacks of the former U.S. Steel Homestead Works at The Waterfront adjacent to the city. The video also prominently features city icons such as the Terrible Towel, a rally towel for the Pittsburgh Steelers, and city sports in general, as well as Pittsburgh Pirates apparel. It was recorded in Chatsworth Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA.In popular culture
- The song was featured in the soundtrack for the 2011 film Footloose.
- In a 2012 commercial for the video game Madden NFL 13, Paul Rudd sings the song while playing the game as the Pittsburgh Steelers against Ray Lewis.
- On April 7, 2014, Jimmy Kimmel Live! held a skit called "American Sign Language Rap Battle." Khalifa performed the song as three ASL-certified interpreters competed.
- The song was featured in multiple trailers for the 2017 film The Lego Batman Movie.
- The song was an anthem for 1% Motorcycle club Satudarah due to its black and yellow club colors.
- The song is used by the Tucson Sugar Skulls of the Indoor Football League after every touchdown scored at the Tucson Convention Center by the Sugar Skulls.
Remixes
Track listing
- Digital download
- "Black and Yellow" – 3:37
- Digital download
- "Black and Yellow" – 4:38
Remakes and freestyles
- "Purp & Yellow" by The Game, Snoop Dogg, and YG, representing the Los Angeles Lakers. This version also had a remix produced by DJ Skee, with a rock-instrumented backing track; a music video for the DJ Skee remix featured the artists as well as members of the Lakers. An extended mix was released the next day, also featuring Kendrick Lamar, Joe Moses and Thurzday.
- "Rossonero " by Denny La Home feat. Jake La Furia – Italian version performed by two Italian rappers. The colors refer to Italian football club AC Milan.
- "Eff Australia" by Rucka Rucka Ali – an anti-Australian song parody to the tune of the original.
- "Green and Yellow" by Lil Wayne, representing the Green Bay Packers, who defeated the Pittsburgh Steelers in Super Bowl XLV in 2011.
- "White and Navy" by Fabolous representing New York City, and the New York Yankees.
- "Black and Yellow " by Wale, in reference to the Steelers' head coach Mike Tomlin.
- "Yeah Carmelo" by Maino, in reference to Carmelo Anthony of the New York Knicks.
- "Black and Red" by Jermaine Dupri representing the Atlanta Falcons.
- "Black and Orange" by San Quinn representing the San Francisco Giants in their 2010 World Series victory.
- "White and Purple" by Chet Haze, representing Northwestern University.
- "Black and Yellow" by Tyler Ward and Crew and Cobus, a rock version.
- "Black and Ghetto" by Serius Jones describing the lifestyle of being an African American gangster.
- "Green and Purple" by Kritikal which refers to marijuana and the culture surrounding it.
- "Black and Yellow" by Chris Cobbins
- "Gold N Blue" by 6'6 240 about West Virginia University's football team the West Virginia Mountaineers.
- "Black Camaro" by T-Pain, Fabolous, Maino and Young Jeezy representing the return of the Camaro in 7 years for the 2010 Fifth Generation Camaro.
- "Byalo, Zeleno i Cherveno " by Big Sha ft. Sarafa, Xplicit, Konsa representing the Flag of Bulgaria. In 2012, the song caused nationwide controversy culminating in a government lawsuit against the artist, subsequently dropped in 2013.
- "Red and Yellow" by IRV DA PHENOM – a parody to the tune of the original. It was used in the "Best Friends Day" promotional of the 2024 Marvel Cinematic Universe film Deadpool & Wolverine.
- ”Brown and Yellow” by play-by-play announcer Tommy Maroon about the 2025 Baldwin Wallace Yellow Jackets women’s basketball team that would win the Ohio Athletic Conference and reach the Elite Eight.