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Top 5 failed experiments merging pop and hip-hop

Friday, September 25th, 2009

hateweekThe Beastie Boys and Run-DMC were always on a Quixotic task of exposing the so-called “suckah emcee.” Perhaps their charge was inspired by some of these Top 5 failed experiments merging pop and hip-hop:

1. “Come With Me,” Puff Daddy
To actually give Senior Diddy credit for this song is ludicrous, despite Jimmy Page’s complacence. “Come With Me” simply reworks the instrumental tracks of Led Zepplin’s “Kashmir” as Puffy coughs “uh, uh-huh, yeah” repeatedly between sets of nonsensical lyrics. It was fittingly released on the horrible 1998 American remake of Godzilla, another pop culture giant that destroys all in its path.

Come With Me (feat. Jimmy Page) (live) – Puff Daddy

2. “Do the Bartman,” Bart Simpson
Around the time of The Simpsons’ second season, a huge effort was made to capitalize on the show’s popularity with all manner of merchandise – the one and only Bart leading the charge. Animated or not, and Michael Jackson notwithstanding, you don’t give a yellow suburban fourth grader a mic. Thankfully, both the show and Bart himself not only survived this onslaught of fame but flourished.

Do The Bartman – The Simpsons

3. “Roll The Bones,” Rush
Canadians are great at a lot of things. Their hockey players are legendary, their maple syrup and bacon products are far above par, and their Terrence & Philip cartoons are a delight. But our neighbors to the north ought to be steered a way from attempting to rap. Their own Rush injected a number of rhymes in 1990’s title track to Roll the Bones, with such memorable lines as “Let’s kick some gluteus max” and “The night has a thousand saxophones.”

Rush |MTV Music

(Say what you want, the world would be a better place if all our music videos included rapping skeletons. Yes, I know all the words to this song by heart. No, I will not apologize.)

4. “Radio Song,” R.E.M. feat. KRS-One
It’s depressing to think that the worst part of “Radio Song” is its defining element – the bellows and shouts of hip-hop legend KRS-One. A song with excellent potential that fails in its task to be everything to everyone. Indeed, the DJ sucks.

R.E.M. |MTV Music

5. “Rapture,” Blondie
Kudos for Blondie for experimenting in what was largely unknown territory in 1981. Now, about this “eating cars” thing? In retrospect, Debbie Harry sounds pretty silly as she attempts to rap, but the chart-topping success of “Rapture” brought an untried art form a step closer to the masses.

Blondie |MTV Music

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Posted in Hate Week, Top 5 | 1 Response »
Tags: Bart Simpson, Blondie, Debbie Harry, Jimmy Page, KRS-One, Led Zeppelin, Michael Jackson, P. Diddy, Puff Daddy, R.E.M., Rush

Les Paul, rock ‘n’ roll architect, dead at 94

Thursday, August 13th, 2009

lespaulWHITE PLAINS, N.Y. — Les Paul, the musician who helped change the face of music, has died today at 94 of complications of pneumonia, the Associated Press reports.

“Though he couldn’t read music, Paul had a magnificent ear and innate sense of structure, conceiving complete arrangements entirely in his head before he set them down track by track on disc or tape,” his official biography, in part, reads.

“Even on his many pop hits for Capitol in the late ’40s and early ’50s, one can always hear a jazz sensibility at work in the rapid lead solo lines and bluesy bent notes – and no one could close a record as suavely as Les. And of course, his early use of the electric guitar and pioneering experiments with multitrack recording, guitar design and electronic effects devices have filtered down to countless jazz musicians.”

The Gibson Les Paul guitar, which went on the market in 1952, is one of the most iconic instruments in rock, country and more. The humbucker pickups lent themselves to the preferred distortion favored by many hard-rock guitarists like Joe Perry, Slash and Jimmy Page. But the guitar also lent itself to an array of other music stylings, from jazz to rockabilly.

“He’s the man who started everything,” Page is quoted on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Web site. ”He’s just a genius.”

“Without Les Paul, we would not have rock and roll as we know it,” said Terry Stewart, president and CEO of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum. “His inventions created the infrastructure for the music and his playing style will ripple through generations. He was truly an architect of rock and roll.”

Paul was inducted into the hall of fame in 1988. He remained active until his death, performing and inventing. He released the American Made/World Played album in 2005, netting two Grammys.

“Les Paul was truly a unique human being,” said Jim Henke, vice president of exhibitions and curatorial affairs at the museum. “He was an artist who made his mark as a tremendously influential guitarist. He was also an inventor, the man responsible for the solid-body electric guitar and multi-track recording. Few people have accomplished as much as Les did in his legendary career. We will truly miss him.”

— JS


Caravan – Chet Atkins & Les Paul

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Posted in Newsbit | No Responses »
Tags: Jimmy Page, Joe Perry, Les Paul, Slash

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