Area Codes (Ludacris song)
2001 single by Ludacris and Nate Dogg
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"Area Codes" is a song by the American hip hop recording artist Ludacris, released as the first single from his third album, Word of Mouf (2001). It features Nate Dogg. The song was originally released on the soundtrack to Rush Hour 2. The song's lyrics focus on U.S. telephone area codes that denote the location of women with whom the rapper has had sexual relations in cities across the United States.[1]
| "Area Codes" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by Ludacris featuring Nate Dogg | ||||
| from the album Rush Hour 2 Soundtrack and Word of Mouf | ||||
| Released | July 3, 2001 | |||
| Recorded | 2000 | |||
| Genre | Hip hop | |||
| Length | 5:03 | |||
| Label | Disturbing tha Peace, Def Jam | |||
| Songwriters | Jones, R. Walters, C. Bridges, Fred Tatlow | |||
| Producer | Jazze Pha | |||
| Ludacris singles chronology | ||||
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| Nate Dogg singles chronology | ||||
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The song was written by D. Davis, K. Hilson, J. Jones, R. Walters and C. Bridges[2] and was produced by Jazze Pha.[3]
Overview
It entered the Billboard Hot 100 at No. 84 on July 14, 2001, and peaked at No. 24 on September 8, 2001.
The song was also included briefly in a scene from The Fast and the Furious.
Cultural legacy
Because telephone area codes have increasingly become less constrained to particular geographic areas, a cultural critic has noted that the core conceit of the "Area Codes" song may become confusing to future generations of listeners not raised with the concept that a particular area code must be tied to residence in a particular region and not knowledgeable about the assigned area code numbering for major urban areas.[1] De La Soul's "Area", a comparable song released 8 years prior, faces a similar conundrum.
American rapper Kali interpolates the song in her song of the same name, released in 2023.
Area codes mentioned
These are the area codes listed in the song, in order:
| Position | Area code | City or general area | State |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 770 | Atlanta | Georgia |
| 2 | 404 | Atlanta | Georgia |
| 3 | 718 | New York City (exc. Manhattan) | New York |
| 4 | 202 | Washington | D.C. |
| 5 | 901 | Memphis | Tennessee |
| 6 | 305 | Miami | Florida |
| 7 | 312 | Chicago | Illinois |
| 8 | 313 | Detroit | Michigan |
| 9 | 215 | Philadelphia | Pennsylvania |
| 10 | 803 | Columbia | South Carolina |
| 11 | 757 | Hampton Roads | Virginia |
| 12 | 410 | Baltimore | Maryland |
| 13 | 504 | New Orleans | Louisiana |
| 14 | 972 | Dallas | Texas |
| 15 | 713 | Houston | Texas |
| 16 | 314 | St. Louis | Missouri |
| 17 | 201 | North Jersey | New Jersey |
| 18 | 212 | Manhattan | New York |
| 19 | 213 | Los Angeles | California |
| 20 | 916 | Sacramento | California |
| 21 | 415 | San Francisco | California |
| 22 | 704 | Charlotte | North Carolina |
| 23 | 206 | Seattle | Washington |
| 24 | 808 | Honolulu | Hawaii |
| 25 | 216 | Cleveland | Ohio |
| 26 | 702 | Las Vegas | Nevada |
| 27 | 414 | Milwaukee | Wisconsin |
| 28 | 317 | Indianapolis | Indiana |
| 29 | 214 | Dallas | Texas |
| 30 | 281 | Houston | Texas |
| 31 | 334 | Montgomery | Alabama |
| 32 | 205 | Birmingham | Alabama |
| 33 | 318 | Shreveport | Louisiana |
| 34 | 601 | Jackson | Mississippi |
| 35 | 203 | New Haven | Connecticut |
| 36 | 804 | Richmond | Virginia |
| 37 | 402 | Omaha | Nebraska |
| 38 | 301 | Suburban Washington/Western Maryland | Maryland |
| 39 | 904 | Jacksonville | Florida |
| 40 | 407 | Orlando | Florida |
| 41 | 850 | Tallahassee | Florida |
| 42 | 708 | Cook County | Illinois |
| 43 | 502 | Louisville | Kentucky |
Charts
Weekly charts
|
Year-end charts
|
Certifications
| Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
|---|---|---|
| New Zealand (RMNZ)[14] | Platinum | 30,000‡ |
| United States (RIAA)[15] | Gold | 500,000‡ |
|
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. | ||