It takes an awful lot to beat Prince at his own game, but Sinéad O’Connor managed it in January 1990 with little more than a perfect vocal, an ocean of emotion and a black rollneck jumper. This was the song that set The Fugees on their path to world domination: a hip hop hit built for chart supremacy. We already have this email. It was actually recorded by several artists including alt-rock band Ednaswap before the 'Neighbours' alum turned it into a global smash in 1998. It's a dazzling testament to everything the former Fugee can do: she sings, she raps, she packs in hook after hook, and she shows her empathy by urging both men and women not to let themselves be exploited for sex. I didn’t ever give that tape back to my sister. And who could blame the scenesters? As they’ve publicly admitted, it was actually cocaine that fuelled the Ever licked a window? Ludacris. For a moment in the 1990s jungle really was massive, and no one epitomised that most uniquely British of movements better than Goldie. 07/2001. His lo-fi, sepia-saturated take on a school concert that descends into madness – complete with slo-mo cheerleaders, smashed up guitars and smoke and fire in a sports hall full of sweaty headbanging teens – was as disturbing and anarchic as the song itself. A generation of disaffected youth had found an anthem like no other. Because for a short period Noel Gallagher’s smash-’n’-grab raid on the ’60s pop canon yielded magnificent results.
One of several chart-bothering singles from their epic double album ‘Mellon Collie and the Infinite Sadness’, ‘1979’ is a beautiful, bittersweet slice of teenage Americana (all sweet rides, 7/11s and gentle ennui), perfectly matched in mood and tone by its cracking Amyl nitrite – or ‘poppers’ to the layman – wasn’t actually the drug of choice for Brett Anderson’s glammed-up Britpop troupe. Was ‘Madchester’ a) the greatest musical movement since punk; b) the final nail in the coffin for a proud industrial city; or c) just a canny bit of marketing? 10 R&B. © 2020 OLDIES.com and its affiliates and partner companies. Get us in your inbox Legions of mad-fer-it teenage boys swaggered under crap sun hats. Déjà vu! Ludacris - Samples, Covers and Remixes on WhoSampled. Everyone knew they would never forget it. The strap in question is a contraption deployed by impotent men to maintain an erection – kind of ironic when you consider how successfully B&S purged their music of rock’s traditional priapic thrust. ‘Pony’ is a lesson in the art of the euphemism. A melancholy but grooving ballad scattered with samples, ‘Unfinished Sympathy’ was heralded as a stunning song on release and still holds its own today. Not bad for a gold-toothed graffiti artist from Wolverhampton. If you’re after a campfire singalong it’s ‘Inspired by a crop of bands who allegedly preferred staring at their guitar effects pedals to interacting with the audience, ‘shoegaze’ was never a great term for the hazy, noisy, deafeningly loud sound pegged out in the late ’80s by My Bloody Valentine. Nirvana weren’t the only ’90s act to thumb their noses at the mainstream after releasing a breakthrough album. By US geek rock champions Weezer may have hit the limelight with the jaunty ‘It’s easy to poke fun at this dumbed-down dubby dance-pop number, its near nonsensical lyrics about… something (broodiness? Discover all Ludacris's music connections, watch videos, listen to music, discuss and download. Fusing jungle’s intricate breakbeats, sub bass and unbridled futurism with heart-aching soul soundscapes and the lamenting voice of Diane Charlemagne, this beautiful-yet-brutal piece of sonic art switched an entire generation on to the power of jungle and D&B. Whack on 'Fantasy' next time your bus is stuck in a traffic jam and for a second, you might just think you're cruising down a California highway with the top down. The Fargo … This was like nothing we’d ever heard before: the sound of Seattle’s grunge scene coming out of the garage like a ravenous monster. Ludacris Songs List Overview Biography Songs Similar Artists DVDs Blu-rays CDs Vinyl. I mean, who doesn’t wanna be free to do what we wanna do. Boosted by its iconic, tear-streaked video, O’Connor’s version of the song totally obliterated Yeah, we said ‘Beetlebum’.