 "I Need a Doctor" is a song by American hip-hop artist Dr. Dre, released as the second single from his third and final studio album, Detox (2011). The song features guest appearances from American rapper Eminem and singer Skylar Grey. The song is produced by British record producer Alex da Kid, mixed by Dr. Dre, and was released for digital download through the American iTunes Store on February 1, 2011. Musically, "I Need a Doctor" is predominantly a rap song, backed by a "spacey," drum-heavy production, with extra piano keys featured in the introduction and the chorus. However, it also incorporates elements of other genres, particularly pop music with the Skylar Grey-sung chorus and the unusually serious subject matter, much different to the topics covered on Dr. Dre's previous music, especially on his previous two studio albums The Chronic (1992) and 2001 (1999).
 "I Need a Doctor" is a song by American hip-hop artist Dr. Dre, released as the second single from his third and final studio album, Detox (2011). The song features guest appearances from American rapper Eminem and singer Skylar Grey. The song is produced by British record producer Alex da Kid, mixed by Dr. Dre, and was released for digital download through the American iTunes Store on February 1, 2011. Musically, "I Need a Doctor" is predominantly a rap song, backed by a "spacey," drum-heavy production, with extra piano keys featured in the introduction and the chorus. However, it also incorporates elements of other genres, particularly pop music with the Skylar Grey-sung chorus and the unusually serious subject matter, much different to the topics covered on Dr. Dre's previous music, especially on his previous two studio albums The Chronic (1992) and 2001 (1999). Lyrically, the song is largely about Dr. Dre and Eminem's close  friendship, and how they have often needed and inspired each other in  the past. Due to the song being leaked onto the Internet several months  in advance to its release, it was a significant commercial success on  its official release, particularly in the United States, where it peaked  at number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Dr. Dre's second highest  peaking song on the chart ever, and also peaking in the upper regions  of many national charts. As of July 2011, it has sold over 2,051,000  digital copies in the United States alone, making it Dr. Dre's first  song to reach the landmark. An unmastered version of the song was originally leaked on the internet in September 2010, by Studio Leaks's Koolo. A version of the song not featuring Skylar Grey was released in 2004. A newer version was made featuring Skylar Grey in 2010.
Lyrically, the song is largely about Dr. Dre and Eminem's close  friendship, and how they have often needed and inspired each other in  the past. Due to the song being leaked onto the Internet several months  in advance to its release, it was a significant commercial success on  its official release, particularly in the United States, where it peaked  at number 4 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Dr. Dre's second highest  peaking song on the chart ever, and also peaking in the upper regions  of many national charts. As of July 2011, it has sold over 2,051,000  digital copies in the United States alone, making it Dr. Dre's first  song to reach the landmark. An unmastered version of the song was originally leaked on the internet in September 2010, by Studio Leaks's Koolo. A version of the song not featuring Skylar Grey was released in 2004. A newer version was made featuring Skylar Grey in 2010.Dr. Dre "I Need A Doctor" Song Ft Eminem, Skylar Grey
 The official version premiered through Dre's official website. It was  produced by English producer Alex da Kid, who is known for co-writing  Eminem's hit single "Love the Way You Lie". Kid told MTV News about the  experience of working with Dre. "That was amazing. He's one of my  favorite producers of all time. Everybody knows how much of a  perfectionist he is: He's been working on his album for 11 years. For  him to bring me in, trust me, not micro-manage me, and let me bring what  I do to the table, I can't even describe how that makes me feel." In an  interview with WiLD 94.9, Skylar Grey revealed that the genesis of the  song's recording was when Eminem invited her and Alex da Kid to Detroit  to work on Detox with him and Dr. Dre. She said that they came to the  studio with the hook and "the track" prepared and they loved it and  Eminem went in the backroom and two hours later came out and said that  he was done writing his verses. Skylar Grey also said that she was in  tears when she heard Eminem's verses for the first time and that Alex da  Kid initially proposed featuring Lady Gaga on the hook, but Eminem  supported the idea of having Skylar's voice and said that they were not  taking her voice off the track. The song contains the rapper Eminem  rapping two verses about his mentor, thanking Dre for believing in him  in his early days and returning the favor, before Dre delivers the  song's final verse.
The official version premiered through Dre's official website. It was  produced by English producer Alex da Kid, who is known for co-writing  Eminem's hit single "Love the Way You Lie". Kid told MTV News about the  experience of working with Dre. "That was amazing. He's one of my  favorite producers of all time. Everybody knows how much of a  perfectionist he is: He's been working on his album for 11 years. For  him to bring me in, trust me, not micro-manage me, and let me bring what  I do to the table, I can't even describe how that makes me feel." In an  interview with WiLD 94.9, Skylar Grey revealed that the genesis of the  song's recording was when Eminem invited her and Alex da Kid to Detroit  to work on Detox with him and Dr. Dre. She said that they came to the  studio with the hook and "the track" prepared and they loved it and  Eminem went in the backroom and two hours later came out and said that  he was done writing his verses. Skylar Grey also said that she was in  tears when she heard Eminem's verses for the first time and that Alex da  Kid initially proposed featuring Lady Gaga on the hook, but Eminem  supported the idea of having Skylar's voice and said that they were not  taking her voice off the track. The song contains the rapper Eminem  rapping two verses about his mentor, thanking Dre for believing in him  in his early days and returning the favor, before Dre delivers the  song's final verse. The video was shot with Allen Hughes, the director behind Menace II Society and The Book of Eli. The video premiered on February 24, 2011. The video begins with an introduction of his music career, such as when he and fellow N.W.A. member DJ Yella were in the 80's funk group World Class Wreckin' Cru. There are also scenes of Dr. Dre and his family, such as him hugging his daughter and son and getting married.There are also snippets from past music videos. It includes many rappers such as 2Pac, Eazy-E, The D.O.C, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Xzibit and all the rest of the members from N.W.A.
 The video was shot with Allen Hughes, the director behind Menace II Society and The Book of Eli. The video premiered on February 24, 2011. The video begins with an introduction of his music career, such as when he and fellow N.W.A. member DJ Yella were in the 80's funk group World Class Wreckin' Cru. There are also scenes of Dr. Dre and his family, such as him hugging his daughter and son and getting married.There are also snippets from past music videos. It includes many rappers such as 2Pac, Eazy-E, The D.O.C, Snoop Dogg, Eminem, Xzibit and all the rest of the members from N.W.A. The video then features Dr. Dre driving down Pacific Coast Highway in a  Ferrari 360, with flashbacks of his life, crashing his car and the last  thing heard was his daughter say "Good night Daddy." Then he is  transported to a medical facility. The date at the beginning of the  video is February 18, 2001 (his 36th birthday). They fast-forward to  present day ten years later, where he has been hospitalized and is on  life support. The Marin County Civic Center stands in for the medical  facility. Eminem raps next to him as he is floating in an isolation  tank, during which the figure of The Pythia (played by Canadian actress  Estella Warren) is singing as a hologram behind and over Dre, mouthing  the words to Skylar Grey's vocal part in the song. Skylar Grey herself  appears as one of the doctors in the video, but never actually appears  singing her part. Dre eventually wakes up and goes through rehab, and  the video ends with him standing next to the grave of Eazy-E, a rapper  who had launched Dre's music career by founding N.W.A and was also a  member along with Ice Cube, MC Ren and DJ Yella. Through the video, a  clock ticking is heard midway through the video. The music video  received complaints of being an "act of advertising" for a variety of  products from a Ferrari, a G-Shock, HP, Gatorade, and Dr. Dre's  signature headphones, Beats by Dr. Dre.
The video then features Dr. Dre driving down Pacific Coast Highway in a  Ferrari 360, with flashbacks of his life, crashing his car and the last  thing heard was his daughter say "Good night Daddy." Then he is  transported to a medical facility. The date at the beginning of the  video is February 18, 2001 (his 36th birthday). They fast-forward to  present day ten years later, where he has been hospitalized and is on  life support. The Marin County Civic Center stands in for the medical  facility. Eminem raps next to him as he is floating in an isolation  tank, during which the figure of The Pythia (played by Canadian actress  Estella Warren) is singing as a hologram behind and over Dre, mouthing  the words to Skylar Grey's vocal part in the song. Skylar Grey herself  appears as one of the doctors in the video, but never actually appears  singing her part. Dre eventually wakes up and goes through rehab, and  the video ends with him standing next to the grave of Eazy-E, a rapper  who had launched Dre's music career by founding N.W.A and was also a  member along with Ice Cube, MC Ren and DJ Yella. Through the video, a  clock ticking is heard midway through the video. The music video  received complaints of being an "act of advertising" for a variety of  products from a Ferrari, a G-Shock, HP, Gatorade, and Dr. Dre's  signature headphones, Beats by Dr. Dre. Dr. Dre, Eminem and Skylar Grey performed the song at the 2011 Grammy Awards as part of a medley with "Love the Way You Lie (Part II)" performed by Rihanna, Adam Levine and Eminem.Nick Levine of Digital Spy gave the song a very positive review - rating the song five stars out of five; "Why is 'I Need A Doctor' such a brilliant single? Well, first of all there's the production from British knob-twiddling whizz Alex da Kid, which has a similar gravitas and bone-rattling bombast to his work on 'Love the Way You Lie' and 'Airplanes'. Then there's the haunting chorus, delivered by Diddy's 'Coming Home' bud Skylar Grey, which inhabits you from first listen.
 Dr. Dre, Eminem and Skylar Grey performed the song at the 2011 Grammy Awards as part of a medley with "Love the Way You Lie (Part II)" performed by Rihanna, Adam Levine and Eminem.Nick Levine of Digital Spy gave the song a very positive review - rating the song five stars out of five; "Why is 'I Need A Doctor' such a brilliant single? Well, first of all there's the production from British knob-twiddling whizz Alex da Kid, which has a similar gravitas and bone-rattling bombast to his work on 'Love the Way You Lie' and 'Airplanes'. Then there's the haunting chorus, delivered by Diddy's 'Coming Home' bud Skylar Grey, which inhabits you from first listen. However, what elevates 'I Need A Doctor' from "very good" to "a little  bit special" are the performances of Dre and Em. That single manly tear  dribbling down your cheek? Entirely, entirely justified."The track first  appeared on the UK Singles Chart, at number 21 on February 6,  2011—being Dr. Dre's sixth highest-charting single in the UK and his  ninth Top 40 single. It has since peaked at #8 as of March 27, 2011. It  debuted at number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 with sales of 226,000,  becoming his first top-ten single as lead artist on the chart in 16  years, since "Keep Their Heads Ringin" reached #10 in 1995. It is also  his second highest peak on the chart ever as lead artist, behind only  "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" which peaked at #2 in 1993. It has since  peaked at #4 after selling 283,000 in its third week on the charts, the  resurgence in sales seemingly due to its performance at the 2011 Grammy  Awards.
However, what elevates 'I Need A Doctor' from "very good" to "a little  bit special" are the performances of Dre and Em. That single manly tear  dribbling down your cheek? Entirely, entirely justified."The track first  appeared on the UK Singles Chart, at number 21 on February 6,  2011—being Dr. Dre's sixth highest-charting single in the UK and his  ninth Top 40 single. It has since peaked at #8 as of March 27, 2011. It  debuted at number 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 with sales of 226,000,  becoming his first top-ten single as lead artist on the chart in 16  years, since "Keep Their Heads Ringin" reached #10 in 1995. It is also  his second highest peak on the chart ever as lead artist, behind only  "Nuthin' but a 'G' Thang" which peaked at #2 in 1993. It has since  peaked at #4 after selling 283,000 in its third week on the charts, the  resurgence in sales seemingly due to its performance at the 2011 Grammy  Awards.
 

















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