First Day Out

Album: My Moment (2016)
Charted: 48
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • After spending three years in jail on home invasion charges, Detroit native Terry Wallace drove back home to Motor City and headed straight for the studio on the day he was released. Not even bothering to change out of the clothes he'd left his Kentucky prison in, Wallace immediately recorded "First Day Out" - a song he'd first started working on behind bars back in April 2015. Released under his performing moniker of Tee Grizzley, Wallace's debut single and its accompanying video quickly went viral, earning him a deal with 300 Entertainment in early 2017. He told Genius:

    "I started on it in April of 2015. It didn't take that long to write. But that's when I started it. I left it alone. Kept coming back to it. Kept updating it. It ain't really take no time limit, because I could've did it all in the same day. I didn't even think the song would go as far as it did. It was just another song that I wrote.

    I think the build-up played a big part. And what I had to say. Them the two factors. What I had to say, how I said it, and the build-up of it. Because it affected people."
  • The song provides an insight into Wallace's state of mind as he languished in jail. He said:

    "What happened in Kentucky was I had committed a crime, and when they sat me down, I felt like I wasn't never goin' to get out.

    Kentucky jails got a way of making you feel like them doors ain't gone never be open. I remember thinking like, 'I ain't never gone make it up out of here.' No matter how much time they tell you, the conditions are so terrible down that you feel like you ain't never gone come home."
  • Meek Mill jumped on the song's remix. Tee Grizzley told MTV News correspondent Gaby Wilson how the collaboration happened.

    "I always wanted to do something with Meek anyway, because he inspired the 'First Day Out' song,' said Grizzley. "You know, it's like the 'Dreams and Nightmares' type of feel. We end up doing that song. I had reached out to him. He had hit me. We was just kicking it for a minute. We met up in Atlanta at a studio. I really was just coming to listen to [Meek's album] Wins and Losses, and then he's like, 'Man, pull some beats up. Let's do something.' I end up getting the 'First Day Out' instrumental."

Comments: 1

  • Jake from UsaNot dissing, but where's the German engineering?
see more comments

Editor's Picks

Queen

QueenFact or Fiction

Scaramouch, a hoople and a superhero soundtrack - see if you can spot the real Queen stories.

Grunge Bands Quiz

Grunge Bands QuizMusic Quiz

If the name Citizen Dick means anything to you, there's a chance you'll get some of these right.

Tom Johnston from The Doobie Brothers

Tom Johnston from The Doobie BrothersSongwriter Interviews

The Doobies guitarist and lead singer, Tom wrote the classics "Listen To The Music," "Long Train Runnin'" and "China Grove."

Deconstructing Doors Songs With The Author Of The Doors Examined

Deconstructing Doors Songs With The Author Of The Doors ExaminedSong Writing

Doors expert Jim Cherry, author of The Doors Examined, talks about some of their defining songs and exposes some Jim Morrison myths.

Bass Player Scott Edwards

Bass Player Scott EdwardsSong Writing

Scott was Stevie Wonder's bass player before becoming a top session player. Hits he played on include "I Will Survive," "Being With You" and "Sara Smile."

Who Did It First?

Who Did It First?Music Quiz

Do you know who recorded the original versions of these ten hit songs?