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It’s All In the Details: Comments on Specific Parts of Radio Hits

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One of the byproducts of radio’s refusal to play more than say, the same eight songs all day, every day, is that you get to really think about and focus on those few they do play a whole bunch of times. It makes the bad ones suddenly interesting and the already good ones really interesting.

-The Chillwaviness of “Un-Thinkable”
Alicia Keys, produced by Noah “40″ Shebib

This production by Noah “40″ Shebib (another Canadian child-star), is the first Alicia Keys song since “You Don’t Know My Name” that escapes the mannered, A-Student-ness of most of her work. There’s emotion here and desperation–you know, the stuff soul music’s supposed to contain. Weirdly though, “Un-Thinkable” gets to that point by stealing a whole bunch of moves from “In the Air Tonight”, throwing in some slivers of Eric Johnson guitar, Toto synth-flute, and just in general, getting itself mired in 80s action show score histrionics. Crockett could lose a lover to a drug-lord set to this song, you know?

But it’s oddly modern too, it lacks that cheez, even as it conjures up images of the beachy, chilled-out 80s grooves. It strolls along at almost the exact same depressed-but-dancing pace as Washed Out’s “Feel It All Around”. In one end of the 80s cornball vortex and out the other side as something that’ll make you tear-up. That’s chillwave, right?

-Nicki Minaj’s verse on “My Chick Bad”
Ludacris ft. Nicki Minaj, produced by The Legendary Traxster

When this unfortunate song comes on, it’s all about the build-up to Nicki Minaj’s verse. Those oboe sounds rumbling and rumbling, hinting that something big and worthwhile’s gonna appear and well, you get it: Minaj for 45 necessary seconds. It doesn’t even matter that she does the “name a [movie] and guess who’s playing [villain of that movie]” thing twice in a row, it’s a break from Luda’s coasting and there’s energy and fun injected into a song that only thinks it’s energetic and fun.

Her verse is also a clever flip on the female-verse-as-counterpoint thing that’s rap’s always employed. You expect her to give voice to the “bad chick” Luda’s talking about, verifying the stuff he’s said and throwing in some of her own perspective on it all. But Minaj doesn’t concede to anything, she just talks shit and does whatever the hell she wants. She redefines Luda’s use of the word “bad”. It’s a twist-ending–like some funky R. Crumb comic where the bad bitch shows up and chop’s everyone’s dick off.

-The Brassy Atmospherics of “Find Your Love”
Drake, produced by Kanye West

The benefit of being a producer, even a super-producer like Kanye West, is that your sound and style can evolve organically. Unlike a conventional recording artist, who dips away for a while and returns with a new album and dramatically shifted image, subtle shifts in beat construction, some newly discovered synth-preset, or a wonky drum pattern peak out of a few songs here and there before the “new” sound hits critical mass on the next album. Before Graduation we had his work on Press Play or Finding Forever to prepare us.

808s & Heartbreak though was that big, aggressive, capital-A “artist” seachange. But since then, many of the sounds on that album have found their way into his new production work and we’re all like, retroactively understanding that album as a classic. Recall “Love Lockdown” and “Amazing” where vocals or some electronic sound got so overloaded with effects and manipulation that it echoed out of the song like some prehistoric wail. Well, it’s here on “Find Your Love” but a bit more smoothed-out. Crystalline globs of synth, stretched and nearly screwed, spread out into the syrupy new-age soundscape. It’s something for your ears to focus on once the song’s cheap rewards (super-simple drums, a damn catchy but easy chorus) lose their charm.

-The Crowd Noise in “OMG”
Usher ft. Will.I.Am, produced by Will I.Am

Will.I.Am tries to recreate “I Gotta Feeling”–which he did not produce, people forget this–and it comes off goofier, more cloying, and well, better. Dance music is all about structure, knowing when to do this or that, and also knowing when not to do that and “OMG”’s secret weapon is the crowd chanting. If you listen closely, the crowd, which sounds like an army of Jersey Shore cast members with only date-rape on their mind, is almost always simmering below the other sounds of “OMG”.

At certain times, Will.I.Am either pushes it up in the mix or drops it completely out for a few moments. It’s always rewarding when it makes its way back up to the front of the song because it’s instructive–do what the people in the song are doing, it’s telling you–and because it’s a chunk of humanity, of actual human voice and energy in an otherwise obsessively “perfect” song. It’s also just “Kernkraft 400″ with Usher over top of it and well, how the hell could that go wrong?

further reading/viewing:
-”The Playlist: Washed Out – “Feel It All Around” by Mike Orme for Pitchfork
-Wikipedia entry for 40 (Producer)
-”In the Air Tonight” from the Miami Vice Pilot
-”Usher: Painting By Numbers” by Maura Johnston and Jay Smooth for NPR
-Zombie Nation “Kernkraft 400 (Sport Chant Stadium Remix)”
-Complete soundtrack to Commodore 64’s Lazy Jones

Written by Brandon

May 26th, 2010 at 8:53 pm

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10 Responses to 'It’s All In the Details: Comments on Specific Parts of Radio Hits'

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  1. Loving this “it’s all in the details” series, brandon. god knows how many times a seemingly minute detail has made me fall in love with an entire track.

    also major LOL @ “the crowd, which sounds like an army of Jersey Shore cast members with only date-rape on their mind…” I just have this old school, Peloponnesian war-like mental image but yknow it’s a sea of Ed Hardy tees swooping in to take over. It’s an army of fist pumps yelling their “GYM,TAN,LAUNDRY” war cry

    Jay Deff Kay

    27 May 10 at 3:34 pm

  2. Jay-
    Thanks, man. For some reason I just find that chanting in “OMG” as awesome as it is, just really nefarious…

    Brandon

    27 May 10 at 5:06 pm

  3. Yeah, this series is pretty great, if for only pointing out the bass line in Lemonade, which only added to my love of that song.

    As, for this post pointing out that Nicki Minaj’s verse is really the only good thing about “My Chick Bad”, even if her verse has the horrible line “It is going downn…basement”. I also find it odd how on the remix of the song the only thing that Ludacris has to do with taht song is introducing the three female rappers.

    AAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH

    27 May 10 at 8:50 pm

  4. The chanting in OMG is this sports thing of course and it makes me want to chant Ushers repeated O at an Oriole’s game real bad.

    Jesse

    28 May 10 at 6:43 pm

  5. Chiming in to say that this series is my favorite too, I really like when you write about songs that are on the radio. I find it weird that so many people who are in to music completely avoid listening to the radio, even if it can get really bad, I feel like I’d be disconnected and missing out if I didn’t know what was being played, and as you say, some of these songs have interesting production and assorted weirdness that you can’t find anywhere else.

    randomkid

    29 May 10 at 6:02 pm

  6. Nice site you have, so much interesting info. Thanks for sharing!

    Greece Travel

    29 May 10 at 6:17 pm

  7. AAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHH-
    It’s kinda like that Yelawolf “I Wish” remix that no longer has Raekwon on it only even weirder, right? Yes, everything about that Minaj verse is bad except that it’s all good? Makes no sense.

    The all broads remix is a bummer too, only Diamond brings her A-Game.

    Jesse-
    LOLZ

    randomkid-
    Appreciate this comment–and everybody saying they like this series–because well that was my intention. I love the radio. To be a music fan, but especially a rap and r & b fan and not listen to the radio is fucking lame. I think of this series as the sort of thing a total say, indie rock snob could read and get something out of and radio rap nerds like us can enjoy it too.

    Brandon

    30 May 10 at 7:13 am

  8. Off topic, but….happy bday lol

    http://www.livemixtapes.com/mixtapes/11871/araab_muzik_how_to_be_an_mc.html

    Marcus

    31 May 10 at 4:46 am

  9. Also off topic but….

    I’ve been listening to the yelawolf I Wish remix and my lord. i’ve repeated the section of the first verse way too many times to count.

    i wish a mothafucka
    the best of lucka
    suckaz can kiss my pickle
    adjust your lips up and fuckin pucker
    i got pull like a trucker
    specifically southern
    louis the slugger tucked under chevy rubber to bust your bubble

    say that one time fast. i don’t think the UH rhyme sound is used that often in rap especially that densely and especially when not just replacing the ER sound. it’s fucking awesome.

    Akin

    2 Jun 10 at 12:20 am

  10. Hi!
    Do you have lyrics for whole Yela verse on I wish remix?
    Really appriciate that.

    Thanks!

    Felton to Akin

    14 Oct 10 at 4:32 pm

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