Tuesday at 21:211 day I’d almost forgotten about Dirtee Disco but it’s actually a lot of fun. The sample is great too. Hard to dislike and certainly brings a smile to my face
Tuesday at 22:341 day I don’t recall hearing this one. In face I don’t know many Dizzee RascaL songs.
Tuesday at 22:591 day I remember everyone hating 'Dirtee Disco', but I absolutely adore it. It very often gets stuck in my head, moreso than any of his other songs I'd say!I can kind of see why this pretty much destroyed his charting career though for pretty much the same reasons as you, but I still love it!(And I'm pretty sure I could still [badly] rap the whole first verse if I had a gun to my head) Edited Tuesday at 23:001 day by Juranamo
Yesterday at 10:191 day well, another I've not heard since it left the charts - upbeat disco strings and chuntering rhythms, what's not to like from my point of view, and much as I loved I'll Take You There at the time it was an annoyingly minor UK hit I'm struggling to hear it in the mix other than the lyrics! Those recognisable funk rhythms are well disguised in this. Fun! John-at-the-time rated it top 30, which is mostly likely down to lack of airplay if it was out the charts in 4 weeks. I'd be happy to hear it again, at least as much as his new single C U Dance which I just bought.
Yesterday at 11:381 day Author 1 hour ago, Popchartfreak said:well, another I've not heard since it left the charts - upbeat disco strings and chuntering rhythms, what's not to like from my point of view, and much as I loved I'll Take You There at the time it was an annoyingly minor UK hit I'm struggling to hear it in the mix other than the lyrics! Those recognisable funk rhythms are well disguised in this. Fun! John-at-the-time rated it top 30, which is mostly likely down to lack of airplay if it was out the charts in 4 weeks. I'd be happy to hear it again, at least as much as his new single C U Dance which I just bought.You're right. 'I'll Take You There' should have raised more warning signs for me when I searched and saw it wasn't disco, I'm normally listening to all associated songs as I write these. I think it still samples the words from 'I'll Take You There' (though common enough words that is it a sample?), but Wikipedia is more wrong than right here.The disco part of the sample actually comes from John Davis & The Monster Orchestra - Hangin' Out, a 1981 track obscure enough to not be on streaming services:
23 hours ago23 hr 'California Girls' is good but not one I would care to check out of Katy's now.'Dirty Disco' is just there for me. One I forget about instantly afterwards.
23 hours ago23 hr Dirtee Disco is quite good, it's kind of a late 90s disco house revival - in fact its similar to Stretch and Vern - I'm Alive.And as I read before on Buzzjack the 'Disco Disco Disco Disco' bit may refer to Ray from 2Unlimited's infamous 'Techno Techno Techno Techno' on the UK version of No Limit. Edited 23 hours ago23 hr by TheSnake
7 hours ago7 hr On 20/05/2026 at 12:38, Iz様 🌟 said:You're right. 'I'll Take You There' should have raised more warning signs for me when I searched and saw it wasn't disco, I'm normally listening to all associated songs as I write these. I think it still samples the words from 'I'll Take You There' (though common enough words that is it a sample?), but Wikipedia is more wrong than right here.The disco part of the sample actually comes from John Davis & The Monster Orchestra - Hangin' Out, a 1981 track obscure enough to not be on streaming services:Hi Iz, wow that is obscure, not heard of it before - but I like it! Lush. I can see why Dizzee went for it. I wouldnt worry about listening to older tracks sampled, there arent enough hours in a day to be that thorough when you are working for a living and your reviews are fabulous! Wikipedia is always only going to be mostly right, by its very nature. Comedian Gary Delaney gave us some fab clips of funny stuff he'd stuck into some Wiki topics last Friday. They get re-corrected, but are funny for a while. 😄
5 hours ago5 hr Completely agree that 'California Gurls' is the weakest link from those standard edition Teenage Dream singles, very basic. I do remember enjoying the music video through 12-year-old eyes though, mostly due to the assault of colour, fun boardgame layout and sweet treats. Speaking of the latter... I recently dug out my CD copy of Teenage Dream from 2010 and the scented booklet still smells like candyfloss all these years later *.*I was wondering when 'Dirtee Disco' would drop out! This track feels so far removed from what he was doing before, especially with a member of One True Voice providing vocals, but it's ultimately harmless and preferable to 'Shout' at least.
13 minutes ago13 min Author 19. B.o.B – Nothin’ On You (feat. Bruno Mars)1 week at #1 (entered 23rd May): 01-02-02-08-13-18-19-23-29-33-36-39-43-54-70-79-94-100-97-96Kept off #1: Jason Derülo – Ridin’ SoloEOY #45 Funny you say that Mack, as I was going to open this song with a very specific anecdote, a point in time that I recall very well. Not studying for GCSEs, but at a camping night out that my class had planned to celebrate finishing our GCSEs. I don’t normally recall songs that well but this has forever stood out as a song that I remember from that night, probably as quite a few of us got singing it around the fire in the pleasant June air. Quite a lovely time really. At least, that’s the idealised version I remember. Had no clue who the singers were, particularly that bright-voiced fellow on the chorus. I wonder if we’ll hear anything more from him ever.While B.o.B may be known these days, if at all, for being that rapper who really, really went off the boil into flat-earth conspiracism and if you look further, any and all sorts of conspiracy theories (standard issue stuff plus racism, eek), as far as his debut album The Adventures Of Bobby Ray is concerned, he was the industry’s new favourite pop rap artist, with a Georgian twang and a great sense of rhythm, and seemingly a talent for attracting some really really big names right out the gate, with T.I, Eminem, Rivers Cuomo of Weezer, new hot suite-server Janelle Monae and Lupe Fiasco among others taking the time to show up on his album. He’d had some mixtapes before and was getting his dues as a major player to be in the future for a couple of years before the big breakthrough, but normally rappers worked their way up by showing their skills in the hip-hop community and really establishing their career on their own merits before going this far into sellouts and collaborations, B.o.B seemed to come from nowhere in the charting world and disappeared nearly as fast. Though worth saying the Rivers Cuomo song, ‘Magic’, contains what I think are my favourite bars from B.o.B, and this would be a fair-selling #16 hit as the third single.His debut single though would include not those guys, but one music producer with potential, Bruno Mars, for whom this was also his first chart hit. It’s this combination, the fresh-faced rapper and the newest hot property for choruses that make ‘Nothin’ On You’ such a good track for the music industry, two debutants building off of each other’s skills to create, well, a good, solid track, at least, in an ideal world it would be. It was produced by the Smeezingtons, of whom Bruno Mars was a part, they’d most notably produced K’Naan’s ‘Wavin’ Flag’ for that track’s first release, and of course for the UK this song would get in ahead of them, both songs were written and released in the US in 2009, as we were still in the staggered release era. Mars wasn’t going to be on the chorus originally but he sang on it on the demo and despite some industry pushback, featured on the final product – it was a similar story for the #3 hit ‘Billionaire’ with Travie McCoy, which was being worked on at the same time, both of which served to keep Bruno Mars' voice on the airwaves throughout the summer of 2010 in the UK. It did at least keep Ridin' Solo off of #1, Derülo also of course a relative chart newbie, and would be in the battles to keep 'Dirtee Disco' and 'Gettin' Over You' from getting the top spot, which is something of an indication of how much more commercial staying power this kind of pop rap had at the time - numerous examples throughout this thread. 'Nothin' On You' is perhaps the most basic and 'just fine' one, which is how it gets to just below the halfway point with me.It’s a very smooth, lovely-sounding song, nice hip-hop ballad, I have no complaints on the lyrics, B.o.B’s bars have nothing wrong with them, they flow well. It feels good to listen to, if maybe a bit too smooth, no edge at all that makes you go back for more . The main criticism that I have with it though is that unlike with ‘Magic’, and his other #1 yet to come, B.o.B really feels like a background player here on his own song, to the song's detriment. The only lyric I recall with any ease from him here is about him going down to home in Georgia and then on to all these other places that B.o.B may well have seen in his very brief window as the world's biggest rap star. The rest, might as well be white noise.When you take it as a Bruno Mars-dominated song, it’s less exciting too, it’s just a love ballad, a very well-performed love ballad, but missing bits, like verses to tie it all together. Also this was Bruno at his peakest of less interesting pop crooners and though he can certainly perform those, it’s not exactly what I really want to go listen to when I think ‘let’s listen to Bruno Mars’. Admittedly I don’t think that often but his more interesting funky stuff in the years to come would be so much better than this. As for B.o.B, he'd become a fair bit more interesting in hits, the few others of those that he had, where he, as the industry's new flash-in-the-pan rap darling, wasn't being outshone by the guy from the production team.
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