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‘Darling Nikki’ grinds again {{{Foo Fighters bring Prince’s siren to new audience http://msnbc.msn.com/id/3541342/
The Foo Fighters, featuring singer Dave Grohl, released their version of "Darling Nikki" as a b-side single. The Prince remake has instead become a breakout radio hit.}}} By Hank Stuever Updated: 5:49 a.m. ET Nov. 24, 2003Nov. 24 - In another epoch, kids listened to “Darling Nikki” because they knew they weren’t supposed to, because it was too naughty. The song never appeared on any hit chart, and you never heard it on the radio or at a school dance, but almost any adolescent of the 1980s can still sing about a mysterious and lascivious woman named Nikki: “I GUESS U could say she was a sex fiend,” the song goes. “I met her in a hotel lobby masturbating with a magazine.” The song was a soulful limerick from the “Purple Rain” days of Prince, whose voraciously fey Jheri-Curl Lothario act worked its spell even on the most suburban set. It was, at the time, the dirtiest song we knew. And the world might have been a slightly different place if an 11-year-old Karenna Gore could have prevented her mother from listening to her “Purple Rain” cassette: “Darling Nikki” has the near-mythological honor in pop trivia of being the song that compelled Tipper Gore to co-found the Parents Music Resource Center with other congressional wives, who in 1985 successfully pressured big record companies to create a warning-label system for pop records. Two slutty decades later, “Darling Nikki” is back, having been faithfully remade by the multi-platinum modern rock band the Foo Fighters. Meant as a B-side to the Foo Fighters’ single “Have It All,” the new version of “Darling Nikki” has instead become a breakout radio hit: Locally, WHFS counts it among its most played and most requested songs this month, and on Los Angeles’ KROQ, the tastemaking station of mallternative-skateboarding teen chic, the song has been played several times a day since early October. Same Nikki, same lobby, same magazine, same tawdry notions . . . only now a different world, a world so sleazy that Nikki sounds comparatively quaint, in retrospect. The narrator, Prince, sings of going home with her, where she produces a release form, asking him “Sign your name on the dotted line / The lights went out and Nikki started 2 grind.” Grind? GRIND OF THE TIMES “That was the first time I think I ever heard that word,” says Bob Waugh, the assistant program director at WHFS. When “Darling Nikki” was first released in 1984, Waugh was working at an alternative radio station on Long Island. The song was too hot to touch (or play on the radio) then, and anyhow, “Purple Rain” sold 13 million copies and had four other hit songs on it. (“Darling Nikki” was the last song on Side 1 of the album, ending with a spooky sequence of Prince and company singing something backwards. Nothing freaked out teenagers of the ’80s more than backmasking. It was like a personal message from the devil.) “It’s one of those very visual songs,” Waugh explains (in the hypnotically perfect drive-time voice of a radio lifer). “Not only does it rock like all hell, but it’s got those trademark Prince screams in it.” In a post-”Nikki” era, everybody grinds. The world is completely ground, and lousy with Nikkis. The Foo Fighters, fronted by the ever-ironic Dave Grohl (a former member of Nirvana), seem to have known that “Darling Nikki” could hardly cause a blush amid the latest fare from Limp Bizkit, Jay-Z, Korn and Missy Elliott. (Self-pleasuring girls-gone-wild who hang out in hotel lobbies? Yawn. Happens all the time.) The new version is a note-for-note homage to the old, with the guitars cranked up more. Grohl screams in the same places and in the same way Prince screamed, as if to somehow address how far the world has come — or sunk. “Most cover songs are unnecessary,” Waugh says. “But Dave Grohl has always had a flair for picking out underappreciated songs and . . . making them part of the Foo Fighters’ repertoire. As soon as we heard ‘Darling Nikki’ in the office I ran down the hall and gave it to Virgin” — the afternoon deejay at WHFS is named Tim Virgin — “and we just threw it on.” TIMES CHANGE Last heard from, Prince was going door-to-door, witnessing for Jehovah. Karenna Gore Schiff is 30, married and has two kids of her own. Tipper seems, in hindsight, less like the evil queen of censorship and more like some kind of prophetic genius, even if parents are still helpless to ward off all that Nikki wrought. Porn became a legitimate industry and cultural dialogue, and the people who star in it find legitimacy and social entree into VIP rooms. Stripteases and lapdances are becoming part of the national folklore. Sex toys might as well be sold at Sears. (No, wait — Target.) Kids today, when they’re not allegedly pirating media online, send instant-message come-ons to one another in the same shorthand that Prince wrote lyrics. (U C it in their homework.) Open-mouth kissing between girls in the school cafeteria is a Nikki kind of phenomenon. Britney Spears is nothing but a Nikki. The Hilton sisters are Nikkis. Pink is a Nikki. Nikki was originally supposed to suggest something coarse, scurrilous, vulgar. Prince used to surround himself in Nikki-equivalents — women in lingerie with names like Vanity and Apollonia — and when he decided they were used up, he moved on to Sheena Easton. (Vanity and Apollonia both have made appearances in VH1 retromentaries about the ’80s; both have found Jesus.) Recently at WHFS, during Virgin’s afternoon show, a young listener called up and requested “that Foo Fighters song.” According to Waugh, the DJ asked the listener if he meant the Foo Fighters’ remake of the Prince song. “The listener was totally confused because he had no awareness the song existed years before,” Waugh says, “so we decided we had to play both versions.” The only problem was that WHFS long ago lost its copy of “Purple Rain.” (They had to go down the hall and borrow it from WPGC, the hip-hop station, which is also owned by Infinity Broadcasting Corp.) “We then played them both back to back. It was pretty cool.” It was what one might call a teachable moment, in the school of nasty. Xperience the Peach & Black Podcast: http://peachandblack.podbean.com/
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Foo Fighters was just added to the list of performers on the Grammy's. How cool would it be if they performed "Darling Nikki"!?!?!?!?!?
ChrisG | |
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I hope that this cover will be an international hit, now I'd like to hear an instrumental hot jazz version of Nikki | |
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Yeah, but it's still a b-side, right? It may get a lot of airplay on radio, but it would be the a-side that get listed on any sales chart, surely? | |
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Eye haven't heard it yet.
If it is really as true 2 the original as what is being mentioned, then it could B worth listening 2. Rock On!!! all can do, is just offer U my love... | |
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NPGen2002 said: Foo Fighters was just added to the list of performers on the Grammy's. How cool would it be if they performed "Darling Nikki"!?!?!?!?!?
ChrisG U read my mind all can do, is just offer U my love... | |
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metalorange said: Yeah, but it's still a b-side, right? It may get a lot of airplay on radio, but it would be the a-side that get listed on any sales chart, surely?
back in the 60's b-side songs would become surprise hits and chart on thier own. The Beatles had lots of double-sided hits. "Hyperactive when I was small, Hyperactive now I'm grown, Hyperactive 'till I'm dead and gone"
__ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ __ ___ "Midnight is where the day begins" | |
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push-it was released as a b-side for Salt-n-Pepa too. a BIG BIG hit for them!
i hope HOPE HOPE the Foo's perform D'Nikki on the Grammy's!!! way cooolll . . . music is its own reward - Sting | |
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chewymusic said: metalorange said: Yeah, but it's still a b-side, right? It may get a lot of airplay on radio, but it would be the a-side that get listed on any sales chart, surely?
back in the 60's b-side songs would become surprise hits and chart on thier own. The Beatles had lots of double-sided hits. Yeah, but to chart on their own, would't that require a re-release with 'Darling Nikki' as an a-side? I don't really believe in all this double-a-side nonsense, one hit or the other is always the bigger. Besides, the single 'Darlin Nikki' is on, was not released as a 'double-a-side' and besides that, the single was released a while ago, wasn't it? So how did it do on the charts? | |
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The Foos' version is currently #18 on Billboard's Modern Rock chart. It should move up some more when the new chart is released tomorrow. I hope they sing it at the Grammys. | |
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Yeah, Dave Grohl should rip open Princes shirt at the end | |
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Metalorange---
Whichever track on a single is getting the most airplay is considered the A-side. Billboard made this their current chart policy back in '99. For example, OutKast's "The Way You Move" and "Hey Ya!" were released on the same single, and since "The Way You Move" initially had more airplay, all sales of the single go towards that song. "Hey Ya!" had much more airplay though and was the bigger hit. So regardless of sales numbers (which are pretty small anyway) the Foo Fighter's version of "Darlin' Nikki" can chart solely on airplay. Hopefully this will cross over to the pop charts soon! | |
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i heard this on the radio for the first time a few days ago, abnd it was awesome. afterwards the DJ even mentioned that it's a prince cover and where you can get it and whatnot. totally cool radio experience. | |
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darlin nikki is up to number 18 on the billboard modern rock charts this week, which is its highest position. its also a gold one this week meaning an increase in "detections", which i presume is spins on the radio! | |
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B-sides can chart and are known from time-to-time to do better than A-sides. Prince's highest charting B-side was "Hot Thing" which broke the Top 40 in the US, I believe. | |
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Raven said: The Foos' version is currently #18 on Billboard's Modern Rock chart. It should move up some more when the new chart is released tomorrow. I hope they sing it at the Grammys.
moved up to #15 | |
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NPGen2002 said: Foo Fighters was just added to the list of performers on the Grammy's. How cool would it be if they performed "Darling Nikki"!?!?!?!?!?
ChrisG - I would love to see it. Their version rocks! | |
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twin663 said: Eye haven't heard it yet.
If it is really as true 2 the original as what is being mentioned, then it could B worth listening 2. Rock On!!! - It is heavier, but you can say that Foo Fighters had huge respect for the original. That´s why it sounds so cool | |
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