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Reply #90 posted 03/09/15 5:44pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

Noodled24 said:

Are you saying that in 1990 teenage (and predominantly white if you want to be crude about it) girls were not a major consumer of pop singles? You don't think their purchasing decisions impact what is sold?

The pop chart is not only music for white teenaged girls. There were singers & groups that were in magazines like Tiger Beat & Bop that got little if any Top 40 radio airplay like Menudo. There were others like Tiffany and the twin brothers Nelson who had limited success. But Menudo used to have a Saturday morning TV show on ABC and they were on sitcoms like Silver Spoons. I don't think people who had pop hits like Bruce Hornsby, Kenny Loggins, Air Supply, & Tracy Chapman were primarily bought by teen girls. There were acts like Debbie Gibson & NKOTB marketed to teens. In R&B, teens had New Edition, The Jets, & Tracie Spencer and their parents had Freddie Jackson and Rene & Angela. NKOTB was really popular in the late 1980s and they had hip hop elements, including their look. The New Kids were extremely popular and had dolls, bedsheets, a 1-900 chat line that you had to pay to call, a cartoon show, and all kinds of other things. The 2nd video is a commercial that used air on MTV in the mid 1980s

Bob Dylan did a verse on Kurtis Blow's Street Rock in 1986

Others in the 1980s who used hip hop/rap in their music and/or visuals. Hip hop is not just rapping. It includes B-Boys/B-Girls breakdancing, popping, locking, graffiti art, fashion, etc. Most are well known people.

.

Stevie Wonder: Do I Do (Stevie also produced the 1983 rap track The Crown by Gary Byrd)

Chaka Khan: I Feel For You

The Gap Band: I'm Gonna Get You Sucka (They had breakdancers in the Party Train video and also had a breaker named Baby Gap who performed with them)

Lionel Richie had some poppers & lockers in his All Night Long video

The moonwalk was a breakin' move before Michael Jackson did it on Motown 25

Gladys Knight & The Pips had breakers and guys with boom boxes in the Save The Overtime For Me video

Midnight Star had some kids tagging in the Midas Touch video

Phil Collins said he got the "ha ha ha" in the Genesis song Mama from Melle Mel in The Message

Falco was rapping in a German/English mix

Arthur Baker was a popular producer & remixer who worked with many acts including on Hall & Oates Big Bam Boom album

Cameo: She's Strange (12" Version)

Big Audio Dynamite: BAD

Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis played on Ice T's first single The Coldest Rap and produced Captain Rapp's Bad Times.

Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers played bass on Bust A Move by Young MC.

Herbie Hancock: Rockit (Had a popular music video)

Blondie: Rapture

Tom Tom Club: Genius Of Love, Wordy Rappinghood

Rich Little: President's Rap

James Brown: Unity, Static

Art Of Noise: Beat Box

Mel Brooks: Hitler Rap

Weird Al: Twister

Time Zone: World Destruction (features John "Rotten" Lydon from Sex Pistols)

Wham!: Wham! Rap, Young Guns

Bellamy Brothers: Country Rap

Glenn Medeiros feat. Bobby Brown: She Ain't Worth It

The Jets: Rocket 2 U

Jody Watley feat. Rakim: Friends

Pet Shop Boys: West End Girls

Malcom McLaren: Buffalo Gals

Rodney Dangerfield: Rappin' Rodney

René And Angela: Save Your Love (For #1)

Teena Marie: Square Biz

Midnight Star: Don't Rock The Boat

Quincy Jones: The Dude, Back On The Block, Jazz Corner Of The World

Rebbie Jackson: R U Tuff Enuf {12" Version}

Rick James: Loosey's Rap

Levert: Just Coolin'

.

Sheena Easton, James Ingram, Boy George, Aretha Franklin, Gap Band, James Brown, The Jacksons, Randy (Jackson) & The Gypsys and other veterans made New Jack Swing records. Bobby Brown was in popular in the late 1980s and he did the theme song for Ghostbusters 2. LA & Babyface were popular producers. So hip hop was in the background of 1980s popular music.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #91 posted 03/09/15 6:03pm

Marrk

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MickyDolenz said:

Noodled24 said:

Are you saying that in 1990 teenage (and predominantly white if you want to be crude about it) girls were not a major consumer of pop singles? You don't think their purchasing decisions impact what is sold?

The pop chart is not only music for white teenaged girls. There were singers & groups that were in magazines like Tiger Beat & Bop that got little if any Top 40 radio airplay like Menudo. There were others like Tiffany and the twin brothers Nelson who had limited success. But Menudo used to have a Saturday morning TV show on ABC and they were on sitcoms like Silver Spoons. I don't think people who had pop hits like Bruce Hornsby, Kenny Loggins, Air Supply, & Tracy Chapman were primarily bought by teen girls. There were acts like Debbie Gibson & NKOTB marketed to teens. In R&B, teens had New Edition, The Jets, & Tracie Spencer and their parents had Freddie Jackson and Rene & Angela. NKOTB was really popular in the late 1980s and they had hip hop elements, including their look. The New Kids were extremely popular and had dolls, bedsheets, a 1-900 chat line that you had to pay to call, a cartoon show, and all kinds of other things. The 2nd video is a commercial that used air on MTV in the mid 1980s

Bob Dylan did a verse on Kurtis Blow's Street Rock in 1986

Others in the 1980s who used hip hop/rap in their music and/or visuals. Hip hop is not just rapping. It includes B-Boys/B-Girls breakdancing, popping, locking, graffiti art, fashion, etc. Most are well known people.

.

Stevie Wonder: Do I Do (Stevie also produced the 1983 rap track The Crown by Gary Byrd)

Chaka Khan: I Feel For You

The Gap Band: I'm Gonna Get You Sucka (They had breakdancers in the Party Train video and also had a breaker named Baby Gap who performed with them)

Lionel Richie had some poppers & lockers in his All Night Long video

The moonwalk was a breakin' move before Michael Jackson did it on Motown 25

Gladys Knight & The Pips had breakers and guys with boom boxes in the Save The Overtime For Me video

Midnight Star had some kids tagging in the Midas Touch video

Phil Collins said he got the "ha ha ha" in the Genesis song Mama from Melle Mel in The Message

Falco was rapping in a German/English mix

Arthur Baker was a popular producer & remixer who worked with many acts including on Hall & Oates Big Bam Boom album

Cameo: She's Strange (12" Version)

Big Audio Dynamite: BAD

Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis played on Ice T's first single The Coldest Rap and produced Captain Rapp's Bad Times.

Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers played bass on Bust A Move by Young MC.

Herbie Hancock: Rockit (Had a popular music video)

Blondie: Rapture

Tom Tom Club: Genius Of Love, Wordy Rappinghood

Rich Little: President's Rap

James Brown: Unity, Static

Art Of Noise: Beat Box

Mel Brooks: Hitler Rap

Weird Al: Twister

Time Zone: World Destruction (features John "Rotten" Lydon from Sex Pistols)

Wham!: Wham! Rap, Young Guns

Bellamy Brothers: Country Rap

Glenn Medeiros feat. Bobby Brown: She Ain't Worth It

The Jets: Rocket 2 U

Jody Watley feat. Rakim: Friends

Pet Shop Boys: West End Girls

Malcom McLaren: Buffalo Gals

Rodney Dangerfield: Rappin' Rodney

René And Angela: Save Your Love (For #1)

Teena Marie: Square Biz

Midnight Star: Don't Rock The Boat

Quincy Jones: The Dude, Back On The Block, Jazz Corner Of The World

Rebbie Jackson: R U Tuff Enuf {12" Version}

Rick James: Loosey's Rap

Levert: Just Coolin'

.

Sheena Easton, James Ingram, Boy George, Aretha Franklin, Gap Band, James Brown, The Jacksons, Randy (Jackson) & The Gypsys and other veterans made New Jack Swing records. Bobby Brown was in popular in the late 1980s and he did the theme song for Ghostbusters 2. LA & Babyface were popular producers. So hip hop was in the background of 1980s popular music.

Oh. You missed Adam & The Ants 'Ant Rap' from 1981. Those drums! biggrin

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Reply #92 posted 03/09/15 6:43pm

babynoz

I doubt that hip hop's entry into the mainstream had anything whatsoever to do with Prince. The songs where he tried to incorporate rap are clumsy efforts that sound forced for the most part. Neither he nor Tony M. were "hard" enough to rap without it sounding inauthentic.

Now if we're talking about spoken word, both Prince and Tony's spoken word songs are very good because they have a very smooth style that fits both men much better than when they tried to come off as hard, street dudes.

The best genuine raps on Prince songs were the ones with Chuck D and Eve on the Rave cd. I didn't even care too much for Poet whatsherface on Emancipation.

Prince, in you I found a kindred spirit...Rest In Paradise.
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Reply #93 posted 03/10/15 12:17am

MickyDolenz

avatar

Marrk said:

Oh. You missed Adam & The Ants 'Ant Rap' from 1981. Those drums! biggrin

Yep. Hip hop had a lot of influence and popularity in the 1980s that chart positions don't tell like Run DMC increasing the sales of Adidas sneakers and the influence on youth culture including slang. Words like 'fresh', 'live', 'fly' and 'def' went into mainstream use in the US. The Rappin' Rodney video used to get shown on BET & MTV. There's also the G.L.O.W. raps and ones from commercials. If these don't prove rap was mainstream before 1990, nothing will lol

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #94 posted 03/10/15 8:19am

herb4

You guys are forgetting about "Mr. T's Commandments" released in 1984. Mainstream rap.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._T%27s_Commandments

Just kidding.

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Reply #95 posted 03/10/15 10:54am

MickyDolenz

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herb4 said:

You guys are forgetting about "Mr. T's Commandments" released in 1984. Mainstream rap.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._T%27s_Commandments

Just kidding.

I remember that and Mr. T's cereal. smile There was also a Fruity Pebbles commercial from around 1987 where Barney wears a thick gold chain and a hat like Run DMC and Fred is scratching a record. In 1986 Bob Hope had a special where there was a skit with Rap News. Mr. Hope was as mainstream as you can get. He's old Hollywood.


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #96 posted 03/10/15 1:31pm

herb4

MickyDolenz said:

herb4 said:

You guys are forgetting about "Mr. T's Commandments" released in 1984. Mainstream rap.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mr._T%27s_Commandments

Just kidding.

I remember that and Mr. T's cereal. smile There was also a Fruity Pebbles commercial from around 1987 where Barney wears a thick gold chain and a hat like Run DMC and Fred is scratching a record. In 1986 Bob Hope had a special where there was a skit with Rap News. Mr. Hope was as mainstream as you can get. He's old Hollywood.


So it was realtively mainstream as far back as 1984. I posted my link mainly as a joke but if advertisers were rapping and using it commercials and shit...well...that's practically the definition of mainstream, right?

.

I just listened to Exodus again today and there's a lot of rap on there that's absolutely bangin. "The Good Life" rap is great. I think it's fair to say that Prince never informed hip hop and unfair to say that every time he uses rap he sucks.

.

Why do you post in that weird font, BTW? It hurts my eyes.

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Reply #97 posted 03/10/15 2:28pm

Noodled24

Aerogram said:

Noodled24 said:


If I was wrong then this thread would have been over 2 pages ago because someone would have said Here's a #1 single, and another and another.

Until then it was a few break out songs. You're naming a handful of artists who had a handful of top 10 hits over 4/5 year period. Thats why you're not giving me chart positions just names of artists who today we look back on as innovators but who at the time had very little chart success.

Tone Loc - 1 hit album, 2 US top 10 hits in 1989. Internationally, he never broke the UK top 10 album or single.

Young MC - 1 Top 10 album, no top 10 singles, Internationally never broke the UK top 10 album or single.

LL Cool J - First US top 10 single 1990. Another in 1995 and two more in 1996. With the same trend in the UK one top ten hit single in '87, then he didn't dent the charts again until 95 where he had a string of top 10 singles...

Will Smith - First top 10 hit 1991, "Boom Shake the Room" in 1993 didn't make the US top 10 but was a UK #1 - success that wasn't repeated until '97. "Parents Just Don't Understand" was huge... but still no top 10.

[Edited 3/9/15 15:10pm]

So according to you, "rap" went from not being mainstream to being dominant, with only insignificant chart action or cultural impact before that big year?

Well, thats the story being told by looking back at the charts?

When did Prince go "Mainstream"? He had a hit in the US with "I Wanna Be Your Lover" in 79' But he didn't hit the mainstream until 1999/LRC & Delirous were hit singles.

Also, since you're talking about international charts now, you think it went from the kind of stuff you had to look for to the kind of stuff available internationally nearly anywhere?


Can a genre be considered "mainstream" if it's only popular in one location? The pop charts are generally populated by international artists

Prince had no impact on hip hop other than making the genre even more common place than it already was.


He had equally no impact on the Rock genre with Purple Rain. Was it dying out? He didn't even make it more common than it already was. It was around before and around after. I don't see why Prince needs to be credited with inventing a "genre" - because he never has. Even the "MPLS sound" is generally used to describe a style of drum programming.

I find it curious that we view Prince as a trend setter in the 80s... People watched him and drew ideas from what he did... Yet come 1990 we assume this to have stopped completely. Yet after he has international success with 3 rap/hiphop (influenced) songs we start to see hip-hop on the charts much more. (I'm ignoring Cats rap on "Alphabet St" for now)

The two albums D&P & prince didn't influence the genre, that goes without saying. Although 2Pac did sample multiple earlier Prince songs. But they were big selling albums and he still had the worlds ear.


Prince incorporating hip-hop into his music and taking it to the charts may have opened the doors to the pop charts for a lot of artists. - I suspect this is more true outside of the USA than within - since the USA was the birthplace of the genre, had been exposed to the genre for longer than the rest of the world, and the 3 songs I'm talking about didn't perform nearly as well in the USA as they did around the world.

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Reply #98 posted 03/10/15 3:03pm

Aerogram

avatar


Noodled24 said:

Aerogram said:


Can a genre be considered "mainstream" if it's only popular in one location? The pop charts are generally populated by international artists

Prince had no impact on hip hop other than making the genre even more common place than it already was.


He had equally no impact on the Rock genre with Purple Rain. Was it dying out? He didn't even make it more common than it already was. It was around before and around after. I don't see why Prince needs to be credited with inventing a "genre" - because he never has. Even the "MPLS sound" is generally used to describe a style of drum programming.

I find it curious that we view Prince as a trend setter in the 80s... People watched him and drew ideas from what he did... Yet come 1990 we assume this to have stopped completely. Yet after he has international success with 3 rap/hiphop (influenced) songs we start to see hip-hop on the charts much more. (I'm ignoring Cats rap on "Alphabet St" for now)

The two albums D&P & prince didn't influence the genre, that goes without saying. Although 2Pac did sample multiple earlier Prince songs. But they were big selling albums and he still had the worlds ear.


Prince incorporating hip-hop into his music and taking it to the charts may have opened the doors to the pop charts for a lot of artists. - I suspect this is more true outside of the USA than within - since the USA was the birthplace of the genre, had been exposed to the genre for longer than the rest of the world, and the 3 songs I'm talking about didn't perform nearly as well in the USA as they did around the world.

First you say mainstream, then you say pop, then you say "international". There's no debating with you because you just change parameters you poorly understand when you see you're not winning a point.
Answer some interesting posts up there instead, I was a witness to the rise of rap though I have no merit -- you could not hide from it as some beautiful posts up there point out.

[Edited 3/10/15 15:32pm]

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Reply #99 posted 03/10/15 3:23pm

Noodled24

MickyDolenz said:

Noodled24 said:

Are you saying that in 1990 teenage (and predominantly white if you want to be crude about it) girls were not a major consumer of pop singles? You don't think their purchasing decisions impact what is sold?

The pop chart is not only music for white teenaged girls. There were singers & groups that were in magazines like Tiger Beat & Bop that got little if any Top 40 radio airplay like Menudo. There were others like Tiffany and the twin brothers Nelson who had limited success. But Menudo used to have a Saturday morning TV show on ABC and they were on sitcoms like Silver Spoons. I don't think people who had pop hits like Bruce Hornsby, Kenny Loggins, Air Supply, & Tracy Chapman were primarily bought by teen girls.


Menudo - clearly had an audience. But no top 10 hits?

The other artists you mentioned. I agree their audience wasn't teenage girls. Perhaps thats why they didn't have many top 10 singles in the 80's?

There were acts like Debbie Gibson & NKOTB marketed to teens. In R&B, teens had New Edition, The Jets, & Tracie Spencer and their parents had Freddie Jackson and Rene & Angela. NKOTB was really popular in the late 1980s and they had hip hop elements, including their look. The New Kids were extremely popular and had dolls, bedsheets, a 1-900 chat line that you had to pay to call, a cartoon show, and all kinds of other things. The


All true.

2nd video is a commercial that used air on MTV in the mid 1980s

Bob Dylan did a verse on Kurtis Blow's Street Rock in 1986

Others in the 1980s who used hip hop/rap in their music and/or visuals. Hip hop is not just rapping. It includes B-Boys/B-Girls breakdancing, popping, locking, graffiti art, fashion, etc. Most are well known people.

I've never said otherwise. But I've made it pretty clear I'm talking about Rap and the pop charts?
Do you think I don't listen to hip-hop? Who's gone digging through the past 20 years of #1 singles?


Stevie Wonder: Do I Do (Stevie also produced the 1983 rap track The Crown by Gary Byrd)

Chaka Khan: I Feel For You

The Gap Band: I'm Gonna Get You Sucka (They had breakdancers in the Party Train video and also had a breaker named Baby Gap who performed with them)

Lionel Richie had some poppers & lockers in his All Night Long video

The moonwalk was a breakin' move before Michael Jackson did it on Motown 25

Gladys Knight & The Pips had breakers and guys with boom boxes in the Save The Overtime For Me video

Midnight Star had some kids tagging in the Midas Touch video

Phil Collins said he got the "ha ha ha" in the Genesis song Mama from Melle Mel in The Message

Falco was rapping in a German/English mix

Arthur Baker was a popular producer & remixer who worked with many acts including on Hall & Oates Big Bam Boom album

Cameo: She's Strange (12" Version)

Big Audio Dynamite: BAD

Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis played on Ice T's first single The Coldest Rap and produced Captain Rapp's Bad Times.

Flea from the Red Hot Chili Peppers played bass on Bust A Move by Young MC.

Herbie Hancock: Rockit (Had a popular music video)

Blondie: Rapture

Tom Tom Club: Genius Of Love, Wordy Rappinghood

Rich Little: President's Rap

James Brown: Unity, Static

Art Of Noise: Beat Box

Mel Brooks: Hitler Rap

Weird Al: Twister

Time Zone: World Destruction (features John "Rotten" Lydon from Sex Pistols)

Wham!: Wham! Rap, Young Guns

Bellamy Brothers: Country Rap

Glenn Medeiros feat. Bobby Brown: She Ain't Worth It

The Jets: Rocket 2 U

Jody Watley feat. Rakim: Friends

Pet Shop Boys: West End Girls

Malcom McLaren: Buffalo Gals

Rodney Dangerfield: Rappin' Rodney

René And Angela: Save Your Love (For #1)

Teena Marie: Square Biz

Midnight Star: Don't Rock The Boat

Quincy Jones: The Dude, Back On The Block, Jazz Corner Of The World

Rebbie Jackson: R U Tuff Enuf {12" Version}

Rick James: Loosey's Rap

Levert: Just Coolin'

.

Sheena Easton, James Ingram, Boy George, Aretha Franklin, Gap Band, James Brown, The Jacksons, Randy (Jackson) & The Gypsys and other veterans made New Jack Swing records. Bobby Brown was in popular in the late 1980s and he did the theme song for Ghostbusters 2. LA & Babyface were popular producers. So hip hop was in the background of 1980s popular music.



For the record I've never denied any of that. Simply that rap was largely absent from the pop charts. Thus not being a mainstream genre unto itself.

What I find interesting about that list (and this is kind of the reason I started the thread)...

"Wham Rap" and "Westend Girls" I think are tenuous at best. You could have easily cited Prince calling for Cat to rap on "Alphabet St". Or the fact "DMSR" is as much rapped as "Westend Girls". Even the verses to "When Doves Cry" are arguably mostly spoken. Why doesn't Prince get a mention? Jackson didn't incorporate more than the image until "Dangerous" that was 91. Prince had done that in 88 on Lovesexy, and the Black Album.

I was reading a Wiki that cited "Snap! - The Power" as a "hiphop" song. I thought, OK, but why isn't SexyMF listed next to it?

If posing naked on the cover of "Lovesexy" was 'breaking down barriers' in the 80s, then taking a song called "Sexy MotherFucker" to #4 on the UK charts in 1992 was driving a 16 wheeler at them.

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Reply #100 posted 03/10/15 3:42pm

Noodled24

MickyDolenz said:

Marrk said:

Oh. You missed Adam & The Ants 'Ant Rap' from 1981. Those drums! biggrin

Yep. Hip hop had a lot of influence and popularity in the 1980s that chart positions don't tell like Run DMC increasing the sales of Adidas sneakers and the influence on youth culture including slang. Words like 'fresh', 'live', 'fly' and 'def' went into mainstream use in the US. The Rappin' Rodney video used to get shown on BET & MTV. There's also the G.L.O.W. raps and ones from commercials. If these don't prove rap was mainstream before 1990, nothing will lol


Again... have I not already said there was a vibrant rap scene?

Where was it on the mainstream pop charts though?

For example - In 1997/98 Prince tells Mel B his upcoming concert is gonna be "sick" - only fairly recently has that term come into common use as a synonym for "awesome". The mainstream often isn't on the pulse. We know this.

Michael Jackson didn't "invent" the moonwalk but everyone and their grandmother will swear under oath that he did, because mainstream audiences had never seen anyone move like that before.

Perhaps it's just the word "mainstream" you have a problem with? What if I was to replace the term with "commercialisation"? - If I said there was no "commercial" hip-hop till the mid 90's at which point we saw it on the charts? I'll admit it sounds better that way, but obviously things are generally said to be "commercial" when they enter the mainstream and sell to much wider audiences than they had previously?

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Reply #101 posted 03/10/15 4:14pm

Aerogram

avatar

Noodled24 said:

MickyDolenz said:

Yep. Hip hop had a lot of influence and popularity in the 1980s that chart positions don't tell like Run DMC increasing the sales of Adidas sneakers and the influence on youth culture including slang. Words like 'fresh', 'live', 'fly' and 'def' went into mainstream use in the US. The Rappin' Rodney video used to get shown on BET & MTV. There's also the G.L.O.W. raps and ones from commercials. If these don't prove rap was mainstream before 1990, nothing will lol


Again... have I not already said there was a vibrant rap scene?

Where was it on the mainstream pop charts though?

For example - In 1997/98 Prince tells Mel B his upcoming concert is gonna be "sick" - only fairly recently has that term come into common use as a synonym for "awesome". The mainstream often isn't on the pulse. We know this.

Michael Jackson didn't "invent" the moonwalk but everyone and their grandmother will swear under oath that he did, because mainstream audiences had never seen anyone move like that before.

Perhaps it's just the word "mainstream" you have a problem with? What if I was to replace the term with "commercialisation"? - If I said there was no "commercial" hip-hop till the mid 90's at which point we saw it on the charts? I'll admit it sounds better that way, but obviously things are generally said to be "commercial" when they enter the mainstream and sell to much wider audiences than they had previously?

There's no point. Noodles only looks at number 1 international smashes and MTV trophies in his deep quest to understand how and when rap became mainstream. Most people would think "hey, Aerosmith got with these black rapping dudes to make a top ten hit in 1986, that's got to be pretty mainsteam" but not our friend.

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Reply #102 posted 03/10/15 4:38pm

Noodled24

herb4 said:

So it was realtively mainstream as far back as 1984. I posted my link mainly as a joke but if advertisers were rapping and using it commercials and shit...well...that's practically the definition of mainstream, right?


Interesting dichotomy.

Without doubt advertising agencies latch onto whats popular and use it to sell their shit. If rap wasn't "cool" they wouldn't want their brand to be associated with it.

I suppose I'd have to say that yes that's mainstream... but it's mainstream advertising. It's not Rap as a mainstream music genre... unless any of the commercials were also hit singles?

By the late 80s and early 90s we saw rap swing towards a more violent lyrical content. Remember the press in the early 90s? All the "growing concerns" about "this violent rap music"; Which obviously just made it even more popular... A few years later #1 rap songs were common place in the top 10. Initially however there was resistance from mainstream media.

The international factor may be at play too Hip-Hop was born in the US. But "Rappers Delight" was even more successful on the UK chart than it was on the US chart. What I'm saying though is that it was RARE to see rap in the top 10 pop charts, on both sides of the ocean until the mid 90s. from 95/96 onwards hip/hop is as common as every other genre from rock, dance, bubblegum pop, boybands, you name it.

By 95/96 Prince has Ejected Tony M and is working with "Poet99"...

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Reply #103 posted 03/10/15 5:10pm

Noodled24

Aerogram said:


Noodled24 said:

Aerogram said:


Can a genre be considered "mainstream" if it's only popular in one location? The pop charts are generally populated by international artists


He had equally no impact on the Rock genre with Purple Rain. Was it dying out? He didn't even make it more common than it already was. It was around before and around after. I don't see why Prince needs to be credited with inventing a "genre" - because he never has. Even the "MPLS sound" is generally used to describe a style of drum programming.

I find it curious that we view Prince as a trend setter in the 80s... People watched him and drew ideas from what he did... Yet come 1990 we assume this to have stopped completely. Yet after he has international success with 3 rap/hiphop (influenced) songs we start to see hip-hop on the charts much more. (I'm ignoring Cats rap on "Alphabet St" for now)

The two albums D&P & prince didn't influence the genre, that goes without saying. Although 2Pac did sample multiple earlier Prince songs. But they were big selling albums and he still had the worlds ear.


Prince incorporating hip-hop into his music and taking it to the charts may have opened the doors to the pop charts for a lot of artists. - I suspect this is more true outside of the USA than within - since the USA was the birthplace of the genre, had been exposed to the genre for longer than the rest of the world, and the 3 songs I'm talking about didn't perform nearly as well in the USA as they did around the world.

First you say mainstream, then you say pop, then you say "international". There's no debating with you because you just change parameters you poorly understand when you see you're not winning a point.

Mainstream, Pop, International... surely they all go hand in hand. I've never diverted from the fact I've been looking at the "Mainstream Pop Charts" Specifically the top 10. The top 10 is a good historical indication of what people were listening to at any given time.

I've said numerous times Rap was alive and well. There was a vibrant scene... there just weren't many top 10 hits. It was rare to see a rap song in the top 10. Towards the end of the 80s and the early 90's there was a lot of resistance from mainstream media - taking lyrics out of context and blowing them up. Suddenly everybody wants to hear what they're not allowed to listen to perhaps...

Do you disagree that by 95/96 there were far more top 10 rap songs? #1 rap singles were coming 2/3/4/5 times a year where as in 1994 there was no #1 rap single that year on the US top 10.

I don't deny that I'm looking purely at the data. The cultural and social impact was a mighty one to say the least. We got to live though the birth and evolution of a new music genre. Few generations can say that. BUT... looking at the data from the charts...
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Reply #104 posted 03/10/15 5:15pm

herb4

Noodled24 said:

MickyDolenz said:

stuff


Perhaps it's just the word "mainstream" you have a problem with? What if I was to replace the term with "commercialisation"? - If I said there was no "commercial" hip-hop till the mid 90's at which point we saw it on the charts? I'll admit it sounds better that way, but obviously things are generally said to be "commercial" when they enter the mainstream and sell to much wider audiences than they had previously?

Well then you'd be wrong. Rap was being used in commercials, advertisements and even in a joke on "Cheers" which I think aired I 1985 or so.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg9ruee3Vos

This is a great thread though. One of the more interesting I've read here in a while.

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Reply #105 posted 03/10/15 5:16pm

Noodled24

Aerogram said:

Noodled24 said:


Again... have I not already said there was a vibrant rap scene?

Where was it on the mainstream pop charts though?

For example - In 1997/98 Prince tells Mel B his upcoming concert is gonna be "sick" - only fairly recently has that term come into common use as a synonym for "awesome". The mainstream often isn't on the pulse. We know this.

Michael Jackson didn't "invent" the moonwalk but everyone and their grandmother will swear under oath that he did, because mainstream audiences had never seen anyone move like that before.

Perhaps it's just the word "mainstream" you have a problem with? What if I was to replace the term with "commercialisation"? - If I said there was no "commercial" hip-hop till the mid 90's at which point we saw it on the charts? I'll admit it sounds better that way, but obviously things are generally said to be "commercial" when they enter the mainstream and sell to much wider audiences than they had previously?

There's no point. Noodles only looks at number 1 international smashes and MTV trophies in his deep quest to understand how and when rap became mainstream. Most people would think "hey, Aerosmith got with these black rapping dudes to make a top ten hit in 1986, that's got to be pretty mainsteam" but not our friend.



Well how else but the pop charts would one use to gauge what the mainstream public was listening to at any given time?

If I said - what was the most mainstream song of 1992 (but you're not allowed to look at the charts) what would you do, guess? Because I say, lets just cheat and look at the charts.

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Reply #106 posted 03/10/15 5:39pm

Noodled24

herb4 said:

Noodled24 said:


Perhaps it's just the word "mainstream" you have a problem with? What if I was to replace the term with "commercialisation"? - If I said there was no "commercial" hip-hop till the mid 90's at which point we saw it on the charts? I'll admit it sounds better that way, but obviously things are generally said to be "commercial" when they enter the mainstream and sell to much wider audiences than they had previously?

Well then you'd be wrong. Rap was being used in commercials, advertisements and even in a joke on "Cheers" which I think aired I 1985 or so.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vg9ruee3Vos

This is a great thread though. One of the more interesting I've read here in a while.


I totally get that: the commercials etc. But am I wrong when I say it was infrequent in the top 10 pop charts?

It was 1/2 songs per year that broke the top 10. Fewer did so on an international level. Albums sold but the singles... not so much.

There was a rich and vibrant scene, the fashion and the culture was blatant... but with all that going on we saw very few top 10 hits and fewer #1 rap singles. MC Hammer and Vanilla Ice helped gain traction on the pop charts and we saw the first #1 but they quickly faded into obscurity, we continued to see a few one hit wonders... 1994 we had previously had a couple of #1 rap singles, but that year there was no #1 rap single. Plenty of RnB, Rock, Pop... then by 95 it just explodes there are suddenly 3/4 #1 rap singles every year... We start to have the rap superstars with international popstar-like followings.

I don't think it detracts from hip-hop, it just shows how long it took the mainstream to catch-up. But from looking at the charts, it seems it did take time to catch up?



[Edited 3/10/15 17:44pm]

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Reply #107 posted 03/10/15 6:16pm

KingSausage

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A loop is a loop is a loop is a loop is a loop is a loop is a loop...
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #108 posted 03/11/15 6:59am

BartVanHemelen

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Aerogram said:

So when award shows started handing out trophies for hip hop, they were simply catching up to the culture in addition to broadening the palette of "rap" to include new branches of the movement.

.

If award shows are the norm then heavy metal didn't exist until the Grammies awarded Jethro Tull the first such award in 1989. Which would be odd considering metal and hard rock festivals had been attracting massive audiences in Europe for years, and even Moscow had seen one of those.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
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Reply #109 posted 03/11/15 7:06am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

Noodled24 said:

Aerogram said:

Sorry to say it does demonstrate mainstream, unless you live on a small island in the middle of the ocean. Mainstream refers to something accepted by a wide audience, you confuse that with dominant.


No, I've used the term mainstream in reference to the charts. You must have read my first post. Although you make a good point that rap was big in the USA, it took much longer for the genre to go international, where we saw more than one hit wonders.

.

Again: NONSENSE. The Beastie Boys tour was HUGE. Front page news. There were hits. There were documentaries on TV (VPRO TV in Holland visited LL Cool J's house, for instance). Public Enemy releases were events amongst music lovers.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #110 posted 03/11/15 7:21am

BartVanHemelen

avatar

Noodled24 said:

There was a rich and vibrant scene, the fashion and the culture was blatant... but with all that going on we saw very few top 10 hits and fewer #1 rap singles.

.

SO WHAT.

.

Charts are only part of the picture.

.

Look at this comic. Hell, look at ALL the Hip Hop Family Tree comics. There's also a bunch of them over at The Nib, including this one about a segment on rap on 20/20 back in 1981.

.

Learn about the ACTUAL history of rap and hip hop.

.

If you're actually interested in it instead of moving your goalposts once again.

© Bart Van Hemelen
This posting is provided AS IS with no warranties, and confers no rights.
It is not authorized by Prince or the NPG Music Club. You assume all risk for
your use. All rights reserved.
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Reply #111 posted 03/11/15 7:49am

Rebeljuice

In the mid-to-late 80's Prince and I were riding in his Thunderbird on the freeway. A mellow drive, going nowhere in particular, he decided to turn on the radio because, well, he wanted to hear some music play. He turned the dial until he came accross a station which was not playing music in the way Prince thought music ought to be, but was spinning some tune by a silly rapper talking silly shit instead. Puzzled, Prince pondered to himself and thought fuck this shit, "the only good rapper is one that's dead on it" he exclaimed to me. "Dead on it!" he repeated loudly.


"Shall we go back?" he asked me. I nodded.
"Lets go" he said and started signalling to leave the freeway in order to turn around and go back from whence we came. Upon entering back onto the freeway on our way back to god-only-knows-where Prince turned to me and said, "You see, the rappers problem usually stem from being tone def." I pondured this for a second and then put it to him that whilst that may be the case, rap music is going to be the next big thing and rappers will be packing the house all accross the world. Prince looked at me as if I had just dropped the stinkiest bottom burp he had ever had the misfortune to whiff. "Yeah right. But pack the house and try to sing, there wont be no one left" he responded in disgust.


"Now" he said. "Shall we go back?". I nodded.
"Lets go" he responded as it dawned on me as we drove around in circles - that day in the T'Bird a seed was planted. Little did I know what it would eventually grow into.

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Reply #112 posted 03/11/15 9:27am

skywalker

avatar

Rebeljuice said:

In the mid-to-late 80's Prince and I were riding in his Thunderbird on the freeway. A mellow drive, going nowhere in particular, he decided to turn on the radio because, well, he wanted to hear some music play. He turned the dial until he came accross a station which was not playing music in the way Prince thought music ought to be, but was spinning some tune by a silly rapper talking silly shit instead. Puzzled, Prince pondered to himself and thought fuck this shit, "the only good rapper is one that's dead on it" he exclaimed to me. "Dead on it!" he repeated loudly.


"Shall we go back?" he asked me. I nodded.
"Lets go" he said and started signalling to leave the freeway in order to turn around and go back from whence we came. Upon entering back onto the freeway on our way back to god-only-knows-where Prince turned to me and said, "You see, the rappers problem usually stem from being tone def." I pondured this for a second and then put it to him that whilst that may be the case, rap music is going to be the next big thing and rappers will be packing the house all accross the world. Prince looked at me as if I had just dropped the stinkiest bottom burp he had ever had the misfortune to whiff. "Yeah right. But pack the house and try to sing, there wont be no one left" he responded in disgust.


"Now" he said. "Shall we go back?". I nodded.
"Lets go" he responded as it dawned on me as we drove around in circles - that day in the T'Bird a seed was planted. Little did I know what it would eventually grow into.

Funny. I never really saw "Dead On It" as THE big slam to rap/hip-hop that people claim it to be. The idea in this song is that the only good rap is great rap aka "Dead on" rap. Oh, and that rappers can't sing. Which (by in large) they cannot.

-

This is a similar idea to, "Real Music, by Real Musicians" and "take ur pick turntable, or a band...if it aint Chuck D, or Jam Master Jay....they losin'..."

-

Are these all examples of Prince being a bit elitist? Sure. Yet, it echoes a similar sentiment that Chris Rock recently stated in a Rolling Stone interview.

-

RS: Someone like Chuck D will say that there needs to be more historical awareness among hip-hop fans, that it's not right that the Stones can play arenas and stadiums and Public Enemy can't.

-

Chris Rock:
The Stones can play arenas because the Stones have songs that are not purely based on references that you had to be there for. I love Public Enemy. But they don't have "You Can't Always Get What You Want." Kanye will be able to play arenas maybe more than Jay Z honestly, because there's a vulnerability and an emotional thing that happens in his music that doesn't happen in most rap. I love rap, but rap is like comedy: It rots. Comedy rots. Trading Places is a perfect movie, just unbelievably good. But there are other comedies, not nearly as old as Trading Places, that just have references and things in them that aren't funny five years later. And rap's got a lot of that.

[Edited 3/11/15 9:28am]

[Edited 3/11/15 9:29am]

"New Power slide...."
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Reply #113 posted 03/11/15 1:33pm

Noodled24

BartVanHemelen said:

Noodled24 said:


No, I've used the term mainstream in reference to the charts. You must have read my first post. Although you make a good point that rap was big in the USA, it took much longer for the genre to go international, where we saw more than one hit wonders.

.

Again: NONSENSE. The Beastie Boys tour was HUGE. Front page news. There were hits. There were documentaries on TV (VPRO TV in Holland visited LL Cool J's house, for instance). Public Enemy releases were events amongst music lovers.


Beastie Boys tour was Huge compared to what? Which tour? HUGE as in highest grossing? Most dates? or.... was it huge as in not as big as the mainstream popstars of the time?

The only wikipedia page I see is for the '87 tour.... is that the one you're talking about?... 31 dates across the US co-headlining with Run-DMC?

Regardless the people buying concert tickets weren't exactly helping the lads top the charts were they? They had 1 top ten hit as of 1990. although by the mid 90s they had more chart success.

Where is the rapper who was performing at the level of mainstream pop acts of the time. Who was scoring hit single after hit single and selling a million records?

LL Cool J had a few hits in the US but then even he kind of dissapeared from the charts for a few years until the mid 90s.

[Edited 3/11/15 14:58pm]

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Reply #114 posted 03/11/15 1:53pm

Noodled24

BartVanHemelen said:

Aerogram said:

So when award shows started handing out trophies for hip hop, they were simply catching up to the culture in addition to broadening the palette of "rap" to include new branches of the movement.

.

If award shows are the norm then heavy metal didn't exist until the Grammies awarded Jethro Tull the first such award in 1989. Which would be odd considering metal and hard rock festivals had been attracting massive audiences in Europe for years, and even Moscow had seen one of those.


Why would you claim it "didn't exist" - have I at any point in this thread claimed any such thing about hip-hop?

My argument is simply that it wasn't common in the top 10, some songs broke out. If they were pop songs we'd consider them one-hit wonders because by and large after that one hit the rapper was never heard from again - though by the mid 90s some were able to revive their careers. Others had an audience and could sell albums, but their singles weren't selling or getting the airplay needed to dent the top 10.

Award shows are considered pretty mainstream are they not? The ceremonies mean next to nothing but mainstream TV and Press are all over them. Which can propel lesser known bands and artists into "the mainstream".

There are many genres with huge audiences but we generally don't describe them as mainstream because they're not in the top 10.

[Edited 3/11/15 14:51pm]

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Reply #115 posted 03/11/15 2:37pm

Noodled24

BartVanHemelen said:

Noodled24 said:

There was a rich and vibrant scene, the fashion and the culture was blatant... but with all that going on we saw very few top 10 hits and fewer #1 rap singles.

.

SO WHAT.

.

Charts are only part of the picture.


Yes. The charts are only part of the picture. They are specifically the part of the picture which indicates what songs most people bought each year. Or in the USA what the mainstream radio stations were playing.

Correct?

Look at this comic. Hell, look at ALL the Hip Hop Family Tree comics. There's also a bunch of them over at The Nib, including this one about a segment on rap on 20/20 back in 1981.

.

Learn about the ACTUAL history of rap and hip hop.


I know the story. Hence making this thread.

If you're actually interested in it instead of moving your goalposts once again.


I haven't once moved my goalpost. Have I not used the word "mainstream" a million times in this thread? What on earth else could you have thought I was talking about? Are the pop charts not THE definition of "mainstream music"?

Whats your take on why hip-hop went from being one or two break out songs a year then in the US 1995 Along comes TLC, Coolio, 2Pac Puffy. Suddenly there are multiple #1 rap hits on the pop charts?

Can you explain why Gett Off, MNIP and SexyMF aren't regarded as hip-hop in the same way people reference "The Power" by Snap!?

When tracing the history of hip-hop via to "Westend Girls" "Wham Rap" Shouldn't Prince's international "Rap Influenced" songs get a mention? They were hits in several countries (granted the USA was not one of them)... Adam Ant? but not DMSR? ...Really? It's funk-rap right? Is it just because he doesn't use the word rap in the title?

[Edited 3/11/15 16:00pm]

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Reply #116 posted 03/11/15 3:57pm

Noodled24

Rebeljuice said:

"Now" he said. "Shall we go back?". I nodded.
"Lets go" he responded as it dawned on me as we drove around in circles - that day in the T'Bird a seed was planted. Little did I know what it would eventually grow into.


He does appear to "diss" rappers. But he himself is rapping when delivering the line so it's all clearly a parody of sorts. As of 1990 it was "unreleased". TBA replaced by LS with the albums biggest single having Prince call for Cat to rap.

Rap/Hip-Hop never became a crutch for Prince. He didn't depend on it. Some singles had a rapper or were rap-influenced others didn't/weren't. In the UK and around the world his rap singles performed better on the charts where as in the USA they didn't do so well.


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Reply #117 posted 03/11/15 5:54pm

KingSausage

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DMSR is not rap.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #118 posted 03/11/15 6:06pm

KingSausage

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Noodled24: I went back and re-read your original post. I think a lot of people (myself included) may have misconstrued what you were saying in your first post. Perhaps that's due to the following debate and shit getting off track. Anyway, in your first post I think you clearly take a position on the status of hip-hop that's more consistent with the views of your "opponents" than it is inconsistent.

That being said, I think this paragraph is where your post is wrong or at least overstated: "I don't think Hip-Hop owes anything to Prince. But I think he did to a degree help establish hip-hop on the mainstream charts. He was still a multi-million seller, he was still banging out top 10 hits... Nobody was buying D&P or prince thinking they were getting a rap album, both are clearly pop efforts. But back in 91/92 before hip-hop went mainstream Prince was taking it to a mainstream international audence."

Prince did not play a unique role in bringing hip-hop to the top of the charts in 1991 and 1992. There were many artists on the charts who were either straight-up hip-hop or had hip-hop elements before and concurrently with Prince. At best, Prince helped segments of his existing audience open their minds to hip-hop. The general audience hearing Prince songs with rap elements at that time had already been exposed again and again to hip-hop. Prince was a drop in the ocean.
"Drop that stereo before I blow your Goddamn nuts off, asshole!"
-Eugene Tackleberry
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Reply #119 posted 03/12/15 2:22pm

MickyDolenz

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Noodled24 said:

Well how else but the pop charts would one use to gauge what the mainstream public was listening to at any given time?

So according to you Isn't She Lovely by Stevie Wonder is not mainstream. It was never actually released as a single so didn't chart, except on the adult contemporary one. But it recieved a lot of airplay on multiple radio formats when the album originally came out and still gets played today. George Thorogood's Bad To The Bone was not a big Top 10 hit, but it's well known in the US. The USA is a large place with many types of people. A song could be popular in a certain area, like zydeco music in Louisiana & Texas or Miami bass in the south or with a certain ethnicity like salsa, reggaeton, tejano, or Hawaiian music. That's why there is a Latin Grammys and different country music awards. In the "heartland" stuff like Bob Seger, John Mellencamp, and country music tends to be more popular, which is generally what you'd see at a Farm Aid concert. There's southern soul (aka soul blues) & southern rock which are more popular in the south. In the 1980s, there were 2 local Top 40 stations. One played more hair metal acts than the other and the other played more dance music like Erasure & Depeche Mode and AC acts. There's singles which hit #10 that sold more than ones that made it to number #1. There was another chart magazine called Cashbox, which tends to be different from Billboard. The Jet Magazine chart is also generally different than the Billboard R&B chart.

Noodled24 said:

Menudo - clearly had an audience. But no top 10 hits?

If posing naked on the cover of "Lovesexy" was 'breaking down barriers' in the 80s

Most of their music was in Spanish, and Top 40 radio in the US rarely plays anything non-English. Even on their TV show they tended to sing in Spanish, but had subtitles at the bottom. Menudo changed members a lot since they would get kicked out at 16 years. The most known lineup with the non-Latino audience in the US is the early 1980s one that had the TV show. But Ricky Martin came from a later lineup.

.

What's so special about that album cover? There were naked album covers in the 1970s. John Lennon & Yoko Ono released Two Virgins in 1968.


You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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