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Armanii & DJ Mac "HAAD (Fiesta)" (DJ BAD THA PROBLEM Mash Up)
#armanii haad fiesta#haad fiesta dj bad tha problem mash up#dj bad#dj bad tha problem#armanii dj bad tha problem#armanii haad fiesta music video#armanii music#dj mac#armanii dj mac#certified hitz music group#dancehall#r kelly fiesta#r kelly fiesta mash ups#fiesta mash ups#dj bad tha problem blends#haad fiesta dj bad tha problem blend#reggae#armanii haad#new music#music#dj mac haad#entertainment#team titan djs#24k mixtape djs#Youtube
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BLAST TO THE PAST: 1st July 2001
Hello again and welcome to BLAST TO THE PAST, where we review UK Top 40 charts from decades ago to see what was happening all the way back then. Weâre taking a break from the 1980s and zooming past in lightspeed to 2001, specifically the week of 1st-7th July, as Summer had started to kick in. This chart in particular has some classics and some notable events, which weâll get into right now.
Top 10
Okay, so first, we have a debut â yep, thatâs right, itâs not just intense streaming that lands songs at #1 immediately, there were songs that were big enough to sell just that many copies to get to the top at their first week. At number-one, we have âThe Way to Your Loveâ by megastars HearâSay, who were pretty damn big in the UK, this being their second chart-topping single. Oh, yeah, and they were created by an ITV reality show, because, I mean, of course they were! Theyâre a British pop group from the 2000s.
Sadly, we donât see the rise, yet we see the fall of classic cover âLady Marmaladeâ, by the all-star cast of Christina Aguilera, P!nk, Lil Kim and MĂ˝a, from the Moulin Rouge! soundtrack, down one spot to number-two.
We have another top five debut, and not the last top 10 debut, with Usherâs âU Remind Meâ starting its chart run at number-three.
At number-four, dropping two places from last week, we have âAngelâ by Shaggy featuring Rayvon.
Number-five is home to two-spot-dropper âThere Youâll Beâ by country singer Faith Hill, from the Pearl Harbor soundtrack.
At number-six, we have the debut of Gorillazâ â19-2000â featuring uncredited vocals from Miho Hatori as well as founding Talking Heads members Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz.
âAll I Wantâ by Alesha Dixon-fronted R&B girl group Mis-Teeq has dropped three spaces to its current spot at number-seven.
Do any of you remember Brandy? Because I sure donât. Apparently she was huge, but I remember her feature on a Kanye track from Late Registration and thatâs pretty much it. Itâs somewhat strange that she collaborated with Ray âHey-Fab-Iâmma-kill youâ J of all people, butâWait a second! Theyâre siblings? And Ray J is Snoop Doggâs cousin? Wow, he really had connections, huh? Anyway, Brandy and Ray Jâs cover of Phil Collinsâ âAnother Day in Paradiseâ is down three spots to number-eight.
âAnother Loverâ by another-rando Dane Bowers debuts at number-nine. If youâre wondering who this Dane fellow is, he was in a boyband called Another Level then he was on âCelebrityâ Big Brother. In fact, I donât think I know who this dude is, and I see no reason to find out.
âDo You Really Like Itâ by DJ Pied Piper and the Masters of Ceremonies finished off the top 10 with a four-space drop back to the final spot in the ten most popular songs of the country as of July 1st, 2001.
Climbers
Let me tell you now â there werenât many at all. In fact, other than the number-one, there werenât any songs climbing the charts, rather a whole lot of new entries and a whole lot of fallers.
Fallers
Where do we start?
âDaydream in Blueâ by electronica duo (sharing their name with a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles episode) I Monster is down 11 spots to #40, âItâs Over Nowâ by Diddyâs favourite R&B group 112 is down 17 spots to #39 and âBest Friendsâ by pop group allSTARS* is down eight spots to #38, who had a show on CITV in 2001, and appeared on the Scooby-Doo soundtrack the same year, so Iâm assuming they were for kids by kids.
âClose to Youâ by Wet Wet Wet singer Marti Pellow is down 16 to #37, âNo More (Baby Iâma Do it Right)â by three (forgettable) little women known as 3LW is down 10 to #36, âDigital Loveâ by the best robots in music Daft Punk is down 11 spots to #35, âOut of Reachâ by soul singer Gabrielle is down seven spots to #34, âSingâ by alternative rock band Travis is down 10 spots to #33, âRide wit Meâ by Kelly Rowlandâs former crush Nelly featuring rapper City Spud is down six spots to #31, âItâs Raining Menâ by ex-Spice Girl Geri Halliwell is down 10 to #30, the classic âPapercutâ by nu-metal band Linkin Park is down 15 to #29, 1980âs hit âElectric Avenueâ by Eddy Grant is here for some reason, but itâs down nine to #28... seriously, why is this here? Apparently it had a âringbang remixâ which landed it into the top five in 2001. Huh, you learn something new and kind of dumb every day.
âBooo!â by lost-in-time musician Sticky (no, not Sticky Fingaz, this Sticky is some nobody without a Wikipedia page) featuring rapper Ms. Dynamite is down 11 to #27, âHere and Nowâ by the freaking Steps is down nine to #26, âThis Time Aroundâ by house music duo Phats & Small is down 15 from #15 to #25, âThank Youâ by Dido â best known for Eminemâs excellent use of it as a sample in âStanâ â is down six spots to #24, âHave a Nice Dayâ by Britpop band Stereophonics is down eight to #20, as is âWe Come 1â by electronica group Faithless at #19 as well as âMy Wayâ by walking punchlines Limp Bizkit at #18. âDonât Stop Movinââ by S Club 7 is down five to #14, as is âAll Riseâ by boyband Blue at #13. Wow, that was a lot!
Dropouts
Some data in this section may be inaccurate or non-existent, so bear with me as not all drop-outs will be noted in this section, mostly due to the fact that we donât know a lot of them and Iâm just going by whatâs there on the UK Singles Chartâs official website.
There werenât any returning entries this week, so I figured weâd go straight to the drop-outs that we know of, of which there are quite a few of, like âCold as Iceâ by M.O.P. (the Mash-Out Posse) dropping out from #36, âHeard it All Beforeâ by Sunshine Anderson out from #35, âRock da Funky Beatsâ by Public Domain featuring Public Enemy Chuck D out from #33, âVideoâ by India Arie out from #32, âFreeâ by MĂ˝a out from #39, âFiestaâ by living trash-bag R. Kelly out from #38, âNever Enoughâ by Boris Dlugosch and Roisin Murphy out from #40, âMusakâ by Trisco out from #28, âJonathan Davidâ by Belle & Sabastian out from #31, âVoodooâ by Warrior out from #37 and, finally, âLet U Goâ by ATB out from #34.
NEW ARRIVALS
Now, letâs just jump right into talking about the ELEVEN new arrivals we have this week. Iâll try and keep it brief.
#32 â âInnocente (Falling in Love)â â Delerium featuring Leigh Nash
So, Delerium is an ambient/electronica group known for their hit song âSilenceâ featuring Sarah McLachlan and Leigh Nash is the lead singer of rock band Sixpence None the Richer, known for their massive hit âKiss Meâ. They would later go on to record a whole album together six years later in 2007, which I donât really recommend â itâs kind of boring. Is this song a foreshadowing of what to come?
So Iâm not the biggest fan of trance at all but I donât mind this calmer, peaceful trip-hop-influenced stuff from Delerium, in fact I really love the opening guitar riff and the looming instrumentation (and what seem to be bells) before the steady drum beat kicks in and Leigh Nash starts smoothly singing the first verse, all over the instrumentation like she is the main force rather than a jackhammer beat, which is why a lot of EDM doesnât click with me. However, this is almost not EDM at all. I mean, itâs kind of danceable electronica but, yeah, this is not trance at all, although the strings are definitely reminiscent and it does slowly pick up pace with some uglier synths like trance often does. I donât know about this, it really drifts along the line between boring and dreamy, much like a lot of songs from Sixpence None the Richer. Did it have to be six minutes? No, but it doesnât drag on too much in all its peaceful melancholy. I really donât know why this was listed as a trance song on Wikipedia? Are they talking about the much longer and much worse Tiesto remix? If so, then why did they not specify? Maybe Iâm nitpicking about the Wikipedia page more than I should but this song doesnât really do much for me. If it had some more pop-rock edge from Leigh Nash, maybe Iâd like it more, but as it stands, itâs just really weaksauce.
#23 â âHappy Peopleâ â Static Revenger
Ah, great, more EDM â lovely. Static Revenger is a Grammy-winning DJ, mostly known for making house and disco. This song in particular went platinum, so you know itâs going to be good, right? Well, if 6ix9ineâs (Platinum-certified!) âGUMMOâ told me anything, itâs that sales donât mean the art or the artists involved are any good... Maybe I should be more open-minded to dance music, I mean, I like a lot of 1990s house so this canât be much different. I like the R.E.M. song with pretty much the same name, so itâs not like Iâm averted to the concept of... happy people. This canât be too bad.
Oops! I already kind of hate it and love it at the same time. This guitar riff is great but the synths are too static-y for the most part and the build-up feels too drowned out to really be a good build-up until the jackhammer beat starts coming in before the drop, which is a good climax but not entirely satisfying as the simple, repetitive hook stays exactly the same after the drop â I expected some mix-up? The keys introduced after the first drop are a nice change of pace and I appreciate their inclusion, and this is definitely a really fun, exciting and catchy track, however, I think this is just not my thing. It feels soulless and like a bit of a non-presence, which I guess is good for this type of club track? I donât know, but I guess I just donât âgetâ modern EDM still, even though this is barely modern, being early 2000s and all. Maybe I just donât get EDM at all. Maybe I should learn to have some fun. Probably that last one. Next.
#22 â âGetting Away with It (All Messed Up)â â James
So, James are an indie rock band who have also dabbled in electronica and more experimental rock, including the artsy album WAH WAH. Theyâre apparently releasing an album next month, which Iâll definitely check out. This single is from their 2001 album Pleased to Meet You, which received mixed reviews by critics at its initial release. Has this song in particular stood the test of time?
Well, yeah, it has. Not in a way that I can be ecstatic about, as it still is somewhat dreary in its constant simplistic guitar strumming, but once the drum beat kicks in, it gets much more exciting and uses the quiet-loud dynamic well, albeit to a lesser extent than other alternative rock bands, as the main increase in volume is the lead singerâs voice, who croons over the oddly funky bassline and the cheap synths as well as the distorted guitar riffs after the first chorus which, yes, are awesome and are pretty nice as a back-up to synth bleeping and different string patterns that add to how intense and urgent the song seems to be, despite its slower tempo. Oh, yeah, and thereâs an insane breakdown or solo before the final chorus, where the synths just freak out and thatâs pretty damn cool, and the fact that the last chorus continues with the same instrumental makes the song all the more exciting, as it progresses in intensity just to abruptly end. Iâm more of a (similarly-named) Travis fan personally, but this song rocks as well.
#21 â âMillion Miles Awayâ â The Offspring
Remember these guys? I donât know about everyone else, but I used to love these guys. They were one of my favourite bands, and honestly, probably still are as far as rock is concerned. The Offspring are a Californian rock band fronted by Dexter Holland, who always straddled the lines between alternative, pop punk and straight-up punk rock. They have a UK number-one and many other hits (and damn good deep cuts) in their arsenal, so how does this song in particular, from their album Conspiracy of One, fare?
It starts with a rapid and intense guitar riff that isnât too heavy but fast enough to keep up with the simplistic, mad-cap drumming, creating an instrumental base for Dexter to moan about his break-up over. While I appreciate the instrumental, it is a tad too simple, as is the hook with the âoh, oh, ohâ vocalisations and the singing feeling too whiny at times, especially in that chorus. While I love the instrumental to death, I feel Dexterâs sloppily-mixed vocals being all over it ruin it for me. However, thereâs enough time where itâs just the backing and the guitar solo also rocks, so yeah, although Iâm not a fan of the repetitive lyrics and delivery here, I can dig whatâs behind it. Sadly, this is probably the first and only Offspring Iâll get to talk about â trust me, theyâve made much better stuff. My personal favourite of their singles is âHit Thatâ, if you want to check that absolute romp of a dance-rock track. Theyâre also releasing a new album this year, so Iâm excited for that.
#16 â âHard to Explainâ â The Strokes
The Strokes donât really need an explanation, right? One of the biggest American rock bands in recent memory, hailing from New York and bringing back garage rock in a huge way that led them to two top 10 UK hits. This is their first ever single, from their debut album Is This It, annoyingly without a question mark. Maybe XXXTENTACION could have lent them one, he seems to have had an extra one left around. Thatâs beside the point, letâs get into the breakout single from The Strokes.
It starts with a simple drum beat â possibly not from Fabirizio Moretti but rather from a drum machine - before going into one of the most memorable and slick guitar riffs of all time, thanks to guitarists Albert Hammond and Nick Valensi, with a funky bassline provided by Nikolai Fraiture backing not only the guitars up but also the distorted vocals from Julian Casablancas, with a catchy-as-all-hell hook that leads into an abrupt fake-end, before it picks up again for another exciting few minutes of punkish indie rock, with Casablancasâ vocals getting more strained and emotional throughout. Iâm actually finding it pretty hard to describe and review this song fairly without insane hyperbole, as Casablancas says, it is pretty hard to explain, as it is one of my favourite hit songs ever, with its perfectly balanced amount of rowdiness and genuine intrigue, and dare I say, a certain classiness to the composition. Fantastic song, fantastic album, and a damn great band.
#15 â âBaddest Ruffestâ â Backyard Dog
This is the 2002 FIFA World Cup song, made by big beat producing duo Backyard Dog, consisting of Aniff Akinola and Lloyd Hanley. To my knowledge, they havenât done anything else, although Akinola here has rapped on other songs, like the mild success âBounce ânâ Boomâ and Kirsty MacCollâs top 40 hit âWalking Down Madisonâ, so itâs debateable if these guys are one-hit wonders, but if one of the most notable things the lead singer has been in was a Vimto advert, itâs safe to say youâve probably been forgotten in time since. So, howâs Backyard Dogâs seemingly only ever piece of released music (other than their only studio album and the remix EP for this very song) that is documented on the Internet?
Well, it starts with what are assumingly sampled horns in one simple loop before a subtle but effective bass comes in and Akinola starts shouting, adding some ragga influence, but mostly Iâd say this is a pretty simple big beat song, with a solid horn hook and even Akinolaâs vocals adding a lot of uniqueness to an otherwise not-very-noteworthy track. Hell, Iâd like this a lot more if it werenât for the annoying chicken-like record scratching that makes up most of the song. As it stands, thereâs one element that just tears the whole thing apart, which is unfortunate as this is actually a pretty fun and exciting, different song, and I do wish these guys had more material to listen to, because Iâm digging their style. Itâs pretty intriguing, even if it is just some big beat loops with Caribbean-tinged vocals being yelled over the track by a charismatic performer, who Iâll try and dig up other projects from. I hope these guys reunite to make some more jams.
#12 â âMore than Thatâ â Backstreet Boys
Listen, you know who the Backstreet Boys are. I know who the Backstreet Boys are. I donât know about you, but I canât stand them. Theyâre talented men, sure, but it feels a bit too cheesy and sickly sweet for me to really get into. Does that ring true with âMore than Thatâ, from their 2000 album Black & Blue?
Yes, of course it does. Why wouldnât it? It has a pretty interesting albeit typical Latin or tropical guitar riff, but the vocals from the boys here arenât too great, and everything that surrounds them just feels like purely perfect pop blandness. Itâs too perfect â kind of like âThese Daysâ by Rudimental featuring Jess Glynne, Dan Caplen and Macklemore and âGirls Like Youâ by Maroon 5 featuring Cardi B, both of which I talked about on REVIEWING THE CHARTS. Itâs a good song, definitely, but it feels too manufactured for me to enjoy on repeated listening, as in the end, it is a soulless boyband song. What did you expect, a long, in-depth review that focuses on the vocal range of the boys and how excellently they mesh with the smooth R&B production? No, youâre not getting that, because there are better pop songs and better R&B singers that you could be listening to, even if itâs just the early 2000s. In fact, weâll be talking about another in just a short while.
#9 â âAnother Loverâ â Dane
No, this is not who I meant! I meant Usher! I didnât want this complete nobody to come in! Well, what does Dane have to say?
Nothing. He has nothing to say because he is uninteresting and typical lyrically. That was a dumb question, I donât think he even wrote this song... but in R&B, itâs more about how you say it, and, damn, does he pull off the smooth, Latin-influenced production well! The Latin riffs are still present in the guitars, and the drums are more prominent than they probably should be, but Dane brings a great presence to the track, even if it doesnât seem like he can actually sing very well at all, using his falsetto a lot of the time to mixed results, but he is fun and has more charisma than Juice WRLD and Dexter Holland when moaning about issues with a partner. I love the whispering in the penultimate chorus as well, which continues in the outro as some kind of acapella percussion, which I appreciate for its experimentalism if anything. This slick 1990s-resembling production and the manâs charisma make this a great listen, even if itâs not on Spotify and only has 70,000 views on YouTube... Yikes. Now, THIS has been forgotten in time.
#6 â â19-2000â â Gorillaz featuring Miho Hatori and Talking Heads (Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz)
I love Gorillaz. Iâve been a fan for a long while now, and I have grown to love how they blend genres excellently in accessible and catchy yet still experimental and strange pop songs, while still believing that the flow of an album is definitely important... well, they used to do that. Right now, with Humanz and The Now Now, it seems that they care more about the singular songs, which is fair because of streaming being more important now, but like the Avalanches, the flow of the album is seminal in my enjoyment of a Gorillaz album, and that has not been consistent recently, with bloated, boring albums and messes of songs like âSex Murder Partyâ and... âMan Research (Clapper)â... from their self-titled 2001 debut album. Okay, so, maybe theyâve never been too great at the whole âmaking tight compositionsâ thing. This song is kind of proving as that chaotic structure not working too well. Let me elaborate.
â19-2000â is about the new millennium, as its title suggests, and follows the trends of the bridge between 1999 and 2000 very carefully, with a sampled trip-hop/hip-hop drum beat and catchy boyband-like vocalisations. However, it feels very messy in all its minimalistic joy. You have Miho Hatoriâs repetitive lyrics about getting âthe cool sunshineâ, some reversed and heavily-edited vocal samples, Tina Weymouth and Chris Frantz doing whatever the hell they want in the background with some multi-tracked humming from frontman Damon Albarn, behind careless and slow verses from Albarn. You also have the âwe gonâ break outâ bridge thing, which is just kind of there? And then you have the various synth noises going on in one specific ear while thereâs finger-snapping â could we have saved this for the video, guys? I donât know, this song is fun and Iâm still relatively positive on it, but like âTranzâ and âDAREâ, it seems like too much is going on throughout. Also, I donât know whatâs Albarn, whatâs Hatori, whatâs Weymouth and where the hell Frantz is, so thatâs lovely. It just piles into some kind of ball of musical elements, but they donât mesh. They just keep growing.
#3 â âU Remind Meâ â Usher
Usher is one of my favourite artists of all time. His charisma and personality is unmatched in R&B, and he will go down as a legend with some of the best club bangers and powerful and slick R&B ballads in music history. This is US chart-topper âU Remind Meâ, from his third album 8701. While Iâve always preferred the Confessions era (my personal favourite Usher track is âConfessions Part IIâ), I can dig his earlier stuff and this is no exception.
Those introductory strings are damn beautiful, and then the piano and the synths come in, to assist Usher in all his glory, with his smooth delivery and scratched backing gang vocals. Sure, the lyrics can be seen as pretty corny or selfish and close-minded, but Usher pulls them off with his immense amounts of swagger, with a guitar coming in to match his charisma in the second verse. Oh, yeah, the songâs about a girl he canât date because they remind him too much of an ex... for a song about what seems to be a first-world problem, Usherâs melodramatics may seem unnecessary, but theyâre really not. The catchy hook and his many ad-libs really help rather than hinder, as it becomes pretty beautiful considering its potentially silly subject matter by the end. Maybe itâs too long, maybe itâs too overdramatic, but I donât care. Usher pulls it off like no-one else ever could.
#1 â âThe Way to Your Loveâ â HearâSay
Okay, can I get a âget out of reviewâ free card? Come on, itâs the eleventh new arrival and itâs the most anti-climactic, blandest-as-possible pop song, orchestrated by a trash talent show, with talented yet uninteresting and charmless singers, as well as clichĂŠ production â although the drums here are pretty cool albeit unfitting, I will admit â including the cheapest strings Iâve heard this side of Soundcloud rap, which I feel Iâve made too many comparisons to in a blog about 2000s pop music. Ah, well. Whatâs this song got to say, do or try and get across? Nothing. Nothing at all. This is so cheesy that I feel the milk being heated already... yet itâs not even funny. Itâs just boring. Itâs just a slog. Just an uninteresting, undeserving #1. At least itâs not âFreaky Fridayâ.
Conclusion
Best of the Week goes to âHard to Explainâ by The Strokes, no competition, although âU Remind Meâ is an Honourable Mention and deservedly so. Worst of the Week? Although I have the most bile for our #1 here, yeah, itâs going to âInnocente (Falling in Love)â by Delerium for just being insanely boring, with Dishonourable Mention going to âThe Way to Your Loveâ, I suppose. Nothing here is outright bad, just very uninteresting. See you tomorrow for REVIEWING THE CHARTS!
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