Blonde · Track 14 · 2016

White Ferrari

by Frank Ocean

50 VERSIONS SCRAPPED · A BEATLES MELODY THAT BROKE WRITER’S BLOCK · KANYE’S VOCALS UNCREDITED FOR MONTHS · AND A 15-YEAR-OLD BOY WHO TOLD OCEAN WHICH ONE TO RELEASE

50+
Versions made
1966
Beatles sample
3 writers
Ocean McCartney Lennon
+Kanye
Revealed months later

Frank Ocean made fifty versions of “White Ferrari” and couldn’t find peace in any of them. It was his 15-year-old brother who finally said: that’s the one. Ocean released it anyway, telling himself the boy was right. The track that sounds like a single, lucid dream — perfectly still — was actually the surface of enormous creative struggle. That’s the first thing you need to know.

How the Beatles Unlocked the Song

“White Ferrari” samples — more precisely, interpolates — the Beatles’ “Here, There and Everywhere” from the 1966 album Revolver. The specific line borrowed is “making each day of the year,” which Ocean changed to “spending each day of the year” while retaining the original melody. This required crediting Paul McCartney and John Lennon as co-writers on the track.

The interpolation wasn’t just a production choice. Ocean said on his Blonded Radio show that the Beatles “almost single-handedly got me out of writer’s block” during the sessions for Endless and Blonde. He was stuck. He listened to the Fab Four. The rest of Blonde followed.

The creative unlock

According to reporting by The New York Times, Ocean told them directly: “There was 50 versions of ‘White Ferrari’. I have a 15-year-old little brother, and he heard one of the versions, and he’s like, ‘You gotta put that one out, that’s the one.’ And I was like, ‘Naw, that’s not the version,’ because it didn’t give me peace yet.” He eventually released it. The peace he needed turned out to be the Beatles line — a 1966 melody woven into a 2016 meditation on loss and impermanence that somehow made both feel more true.

The Uncredited Kanye West Question

Blonde was released on August 20, 2016. The credits listed Ocean, McCartney, and Lennon as writers on “White Ferrari.” Months later, in a Black Friday reprint of the vinyl, a new liner note revealed that Kanye West was also credited as a writer on the track.

What exactly Kanye contributed — a lyric, a structural idea, a melody fragment — has never been publicly clarified. What’s notable is the delay in disclosure. Ocean chose to release the song without that credit initially, then allowed it to surface through a vinyl reprint that most casual listeners would never see. Whether that was intentional positioning, an administrative oversight, or something else entirely is unknown.

The production team

The synth sounds were recorded by keyboardist Buddy Ross on a Roland Juno-106 — he had been Ocean’s live keyboardist since 2012. The guitar segment near the song’s end was recorded by Alex G, who met Ocean in London while he was on tour. The song was also produced with Jon Brion and Om’Mas Keith. A track that sounds intimate and solo is actually the product of multiple collaborators across multiple countries.

Reading the Lyrics: What the White Ferrari Actually Is

Every analysis of “White Ferrari” identifies the car as a symbol. What they disagree on is what it symbolizes — and that disagreement is the song’s central achievement. Ocean has kept his interpretation private. What we can do is map what the lyrics actually say, and what they leave open.

“Bad luck to talk on these / I’m sure we’re taller in another dimension”

The “bad luck to talk on these” is believed to reference superstitions about discussing matters openly — as if naming something makes it real and therefore fragile. The alternate dimension line suggests two people who exist more fully, more perfectly, in some version of reality they can’t access from inside this one. It’s the feeling of a relationship that was almost everything it needed to be.

“I care for you still and I will / forever / that was my part of the deal”

The most discussed line in the song. The word “deal” shifts the emotional register — love as contract, care as obligation, duration as something agreed to rather than felt. But the context is not cold: it’s the acceptance that ongoing feeling doesn’t require ongoing presence. The deal was made and the deal stands even after everything else has changed.

“Spending each day of the year” [Beatles interpolation]

The original Beatles lyric is “making each day of the year” — active creation, building. Ocean changed it to “spending” — as if time is a resource being used rather than produced. The two words are close enough that most listeners won’t notice the substitution. But the change shifts the relationship to time from generative to consuming. You can’t get it back.

Why Ocean Declined the Grammy — and What It Means for the Song

Frank Ocean chose not to submit Blonde for Grammy consideration in 2017, stating that the institution had “nostalgic importance” but wasn’t where the most vital work in music was being recognized. This was not a minor decision: Blonde was widely considered the year’s best album.

The choice was consistent with how he released the album — independently, through his own Boys Don’t Cry imprint, with a surprise drop that bypassed traditional promotion. Ocean’s deliberate removal of “White Ferrari” and Blonde from institutional frameworks is part of how the music has been allowed to mean whatever it needs to mean to whoever is listening. There’s no official narrative about what the white Ferrari is. Ocean left that space intentionally empty.

The production context

Jon Brion — the producer behind Fiona Apple’s When the Paw Saw the Paw and films including Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind — worked on the track alongside Ocean and Om’Mas Keith. Brion’s signature is music that sounds like it was always slightly out of reach. His presence on “White Ferrari” is audible in how the song seems to dissolve rather than end.

The “Here, There and Everywhere” Connection: Two Songs About the Same Thing

McCartney wrote “Here, There and Everywhere” in 1966 sitting by John Lennon’s pool, waiting for him to wake up. It’s a simple, direct love song — one of the most harmonically sophisticated things on Revolver hidden inside what sounds like a lullaby. Its subject is the ubiquity of love: wherever you are, it’s there.

Ocean’s use of that melody in a song about love ending — being “spent” rather than “made” — creates a dialogue between the two tracks that neither song could sustain alone. The Beatles melody carries the feeling of abundance. Ocean’s lyric redirects it toward loss. The result is that you hear the original even when it isn’t playing: the happiness the song describes becomes the distance between where you were and where you are now.

That’s what Ocean thanked the Beatles for. Not inspiration in the general sense — a specific melody that made his song make sense. Fifty versions in, it was the one thing that finally gave him peace.

People Also Ask

What Beatles song does Frank Ocean sample in “White Ferrari”?

Ocean interpolates “Here, There and Everywhere” from the Beatles’ 1966 album Revolver. He changed the lyric from “making each day of the year” to “spending each day of the year” while retaining the melody. This required crediting Paul McCartney and John Lennon as co-writers on the track.

Is Kanye West on “White Ferrari”?

Yes, though his contribution was not disclosed at the time of release. Kanye West was credited as a writer on “White Ferrari” in the liner notes of a Black Friday vinyl reprint released months after Blonde‘s original drop. The nature of his contribution — lyric, melody, structural idea — has not been publicly specified.

What does “that was my part of the deal” mean in “White Ferrari”?

The line — “I care for you still and I will / forever / that was my part of the deal” — is one of Ocean’s most discussed lyrics. It frames ongoing love as an obligation that survived the end of the relationship: he continues to care not because the relationship continues, but because he committed to it. The word “deal” is deliberate — love as something agreed to, not just felt.

Who plays guitar on “White Ferrari”?

The guitar near the end of the song was recorded by Alex G (Sandy Alex G), who met Ocean in London while touring. The synth sounds were recorded by Buddy Ross on a Roland Juno-106. Jon Brion and Om’Mas Keith also contributed to the production alongside Ocean.

Key Takeaways

01

Ocean made 50+ versions of the song; his teenage brother identified the one to release. The serenity you hear is the product of enormous iteration.

02

The Beatles interpolation wasn’t decoration — it was the creative breakthrough that unlocked the rest of Blonde.

03

Kanye West is a credited writer — disclosed months after release, in a vinyl reprint. What he contributed remains unspecified.

04

The word change from “making” (Beatles) to “spending” shifts the song’s relationship to time — from creation to consumption. You can’t get it back.

05

Ocean declined Grammy consideration, preserving the song’s interpretive openness. There’s no official narrative about what the white Ferrari means — that space was left empty deliberately.

White Ferrari · Frank Ocean · Blonde · 2016

50 versions to find peace in one — and a Beatles melody that made the rest possible

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