868. ‘7 Days’, by Craig David

Of all the year 2000’s many, many number ones (this being twenty-four out of forty-two), is Craig David’s ‘7 Days’ its most famous…?

7 Days, by Craig David (his 2nd and final #1)

1 week, from 30thJuly – 6th August 2000

There aren’t many Brits of my vintage who can’t still recite Craig’s week of wooing: I met this girl on Monday, Took her for a drink on Tuesday, We were making love by Wednesday, and on Thursday, and Friday, and Saturday… (sounds exhausting, to be honest…) We chilled on Sunday…

Like his first chart-topper, ‘Fill Me In’, this is light and airy commercial garage. The Spanish guitar riff and insistent beat make it more instantly appealing than its predecessor, and the chorus is as memorable as they come. It’s calmer, more confident, a fact also reflected in the lyrics. No longer is Craig David creeping around behind his girlfriend’s parents’ backs. Oh no, here he’s picking up a twenty-four year old ‘cinnamon queen’ in an underpass… She asks him for the time, and the rest is history.

The call and response bit, in which his friends quiz him on his conquest, is fun too, Was it for real…? Damn sure… It’s like ‘Summer Nights’ for the new millennium. Elsewhere, though, it does meander a little. Again, this is garage’s problem, in that it is so breezy in places that sometimes it fails to land. But, I’ll stick with my initial claim, in terms of the record’s sound being peak-2000, and the chorus being an era-defining earworm.

It also feels very old-fashioned too, twenty-five years down the line, when everyone now meets their romantic partners on the apps. Imagine approaching someone in a subway (he’s using the word in the British sense, rather than the American) and asking them out on a date. The 2025 version of this song wouldn’t get past day one, and would probably end in a restraining order.

It would be easy to argue that Craig David’s career peaked early, with his first two solo singles giving him his only two number ones. But he’s had a near twenty-year stretch of Top 40 hits, and thirteen further Top 10s. I’ll give a shout out to ‘Walking Away’ and ‘Don’t Love You No More (I’m Sorry)’ as two favourites of mine. However, he is probably just as well known in Britain for being played in caricature by Leigh Francis on ‘Bo’ Selecta!’, a massively popular comedy. David has both claimed to have been fine with his portrayal in the show; and has described it as “racist blackface”, and “hurtful beyond belief”. He probably does have a point, though, in claiming that it affected his career.

8 thoughts on “868. ‘7 Days’, by Craig David

  1. It’s crazy that Craig David is still dropping singles to this day. I do think he peaked early too – the storytelling was really fun in his early music. Was he ever popular in the states?

    ~ Alasdair

  2. I’ve always quite liked this one, but never really got the iconic status. I also prefer Walking Away, that’s the one that topped my charts, or his Bowie Lets Dance revamp. I think he started to come over (as many pop stars do) as a bit self-promoting and maybe that’s why Bo Selecta targeted him. It was grotesquely funny for about 5 minutes and then it became obvious that it was affecting public opinion towards Craig, which wasnt necessarily fair as such, though he has had the last laugh with his new status as a Grandee of the era. And of course, self-promoting and self-absorption is the order of the day now.

  3. Horrible trash. Oooh I’m heterosexual me, I do lady sex, I met her on Monday, we were bumping by Tuesday, went to the clap clinic on Wednesday.

    I quite like the ‘Rewind’ one, but we all know how that ended up!

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