Thursday, June 12

Y'all ready for this?

This a long one, but it's worth it - I promise. It is very, very high on the kitsch/camp scale.


On my way home yesterday, as I was nearing my apartment, I suddenly had a powerful kick of musical nostalgia. Surprisingly, I wasn't yearning for the grunge, alternative, or hook-laden R&B and hip-hop that was popular in the mid 90's. Instead, I was thinking of the pulsing beats, talk-rap and percussive synths that really defined early-90's dance music (you know, along with the spandex, high-tops, and MTV's The Grind).


I'd been listening to Cut Copy, and while their album In Ghost Colours sounds kinda New Order / 80's New Wave overall, this one song, "Hearts on Fire," is very 90's. As in, reminiscent of La Bouche, Real McCoy, 2Unlimited, etc. Don't hide it. You remember those guys and you loved them, too.


In the early 90's, around 4th grade, my treasure was my Casio radio casette player. Like all my friends, I was doggedly loyal to the one radio station that was cool - and it also happened to be a radio station dedicated to dance music. It was called - and I can almost hear the DJs in my head as I type it - Hot 97.7. I think I mostly used TV for cartoons back then, so new music came in via FM and friends' mixtapes (CD-Rs had just been invented). God knows I didn't give two shits about independent radio stations, so alternative had yet to register as more than a blip on my radar.


Wiki calls this genre, "Rhythmic Top 40."


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/KFFG


In January 1988, 97.7 became KHQT (Hot 97.7), with a Rhythmic Top 40 format. They became very popular in the South Bay [holla!], often besting San Francisco's KMEL in the ratings. The format continued until late July 1995, when the station was sold to Susquehanna Radio and turned into a simulcast of KFOG. [Boo.]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhythmic_Top_40


Rhythmic contemporary, also known as rhythmic top 40, rhythmic contemporary hit radio and "rhythmic crossover", is a music radio format that includes of a mix of dance, and upbeat rhythmic pop, hip-hop, and R&B hits. While most rhythmic stations' playlists comprised that mentioned above, some tend to lean very urban with current hip-hop, urban pop, and R&B hits that gain mainstream appeal. Rhythmic contemporary is usually the music played at clubs and school dances.

They will not play music with a harder rock sound or songs that sound too adult for their taste, leaving those songs to the conventional top 40 stations.

Most of its core listeners makeup a multicultural mix of African-Americans, Hispanics and Asian-Americans, that include a core group of teens, young adults (mostly 18-34) and young females.


By the way, right there, they nailed my home demographic. And I am so many of those things!


Anyway, thanks to Hot 97.7, even to this day, when I hear a thudding dance beat and synthesizers, I can't help but shake my booty a little and get all fired up. Here now, for you, are some of my favorites. People, this is what got me started on music...but somehow I doubt any of the readers of my blog are nearly as obsessed as I am. Still, relive the magic!


Real McCoy - "Run Away" Oh GOD the club dancing!! And I don't remember the singer/rapper dude being...kinda fug.



Real McCoy - "Another Night" Oh yes, he is all about making love to the mic. Aviator helmet, what? I believe I owned this album.



No Mercy - "Where Do You Go" Gay? No, just typical 90's fare. Mmm, well, maybe a little gay, too. Lots of random arm-flailing bordering on vogueing.



La Bouche - "Be My Lover" Drag queen-y big hair and bondage.



La Bouche - "Sweet Dreams" Yes, I totally owned this album. A startling amount of vogueing here.



(Oh god but check out the European version! Extremely fetishistic.)



Corona - "Rhythm of the Night" More uh...strong black vocals, shoulder pads, and pagan imagery to boot.



Whigfield - "Saturday Night" A lesser known song, but a good one. E-piano chords and nonstop frog sounds. I once took a cheer/dance class, and we composed a whole routine to this song. Am I proud or ashamed? I don't know.



Rob Base and DJ EZ Rock - "It Takes Two" Crossing over into another genre here, seeing as these guys can actually rap and can actually dance. Old school hip-hop is a whooole 'nother blog post. But, the background "WHOO! Yeah" sounds are so, so characteristic of 90's dance. That's probably what really got me in the Cut Copy song.



Unlimited - "Twilight Zone" This is also crossing into another genre, maybe, but it's also got the "WHOO!" thing going on. Also, the breakdown in this song is great, and even more, it is reminiscent of the Mortal Kombat movie song.


Carla: OH MY GAWD

Carla: i know HOW i know this song
me: hahaha
me: school dance?
Carla: as a kid...saturday mornings...JAZZERCISE


If I've forgotten any real gems, feel free to put them in the comments.

4 comments:

Greg said...

No Haddaway? Tsk tsk. And for those of you who think he's given us nothing more than an SNL skit, may I direct your attention to the gem known as "Life."

Unknown said...

Watching these was like attending a Barmitzvah.
mia

Kat said...

I attended several, they were kinda awesome. Unfortunately no one bothered to learn such cool dance moves as featured in these vids.

akatsuki said...

This wins the award for Best Blog Entry of All Time.