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Post by mc98 on Feb 23, 2020 0:55:54 GMT 10
So, I had a discussion with someone that Good Vibrations by Marky Mark sounds more 80s than 90s. While the rap style and flow is 80s, the production sounds more 90s because it was influenced by House music. What do you guys think?
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Post by Telso on Feb 23, 2020 8:47:15 GMT 10
It's a very late 1980s to early 1990s song I would say.
The song actually samples a disco song from 1980 called "Love Sensation" by Loleatta Holloway (who is a feature artist on "Good Vibrations"), which got sampled by countless of house songs throughout the 1980s. Most notoriously on "Ride on Time" by Black Box which was the biggest song of 1989 in the UK:
The production doesn't even sound too far off that of "Good Vibrations"!
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Post by mc98 on Feb 23, 2020 8:54:05 GMT 10
It's a very late 1980s to early 1990s song I would say. The song actually samples a disco song from 1980 called "Love Sensation" by Loleatta Holloway (who is a feature artist on "Good Vibrations"), which got sampled by countless of house songs throughout the 1980s. Most notoriously on "Ride on Time" by Black Box which was the biggest song of 1989 in the UK: The production doesn't even sound too far off that of "Good Vibrations"! Yeah, that particular sound is unique in the Bush 41 era.
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Post by sman12 on Feb 23, 2020 12:50:20 GMT 10
I feel like it's a late 80s-early 90s cusp song. It employs house and hip hop music, both of which were becoming popular around that time.
jaydawg89 likes this
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Post by jaydawg89 on Feb 23, 2020 13:49:56 GMT 10
It's a very late 1980s to early 1990s song I would say. The song actually samples a disco song from 1980 called "Love Sensation" by Loleatta Holloway (who is a feature artist on "Good Vibrations"), which got sampled by countless of house songs throughout the 1980s. Most notoriously on "Ride on Time" by Black Box which was the biggest song of 1989 in the UK: The production doesn't even sound too far off that of "Good Vibrations"! I always kind of saw 'Ride on Time' as a sign of the emerging 90s music scene really. Also a lot of songs from the 90s sampled songs from the 70s and early 80s. I agree with your opinion on 'Good Vibration', I can imagine that song being made in 1989 (not any year before that though). Overall, 'Good Vibration' is definitely more of a product of the 1990s (especially the early 90s).
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Post by sman12 on Feb 23, 2020 16:50:07 GMT 10
It's a very late 1980s to early 1990s song I would say. The song actually samples a disco song from 1980 called "Love Sensation" by Loleatta Holloway (who is a feature artist on "Good Vibrations"), which got sampled by countless of house songs throughout the 1980s. Most notoriously on "Ride on Time" by Black Box which was the biggest song of 1989 in the UK: The production doesn't even sound too far off that of "Good Vibrations"! I can't stand "Ride on Time" with the awkward editing of the woman's gritty singing. It's just grating to me. "Good Vibration" is a lot more tolerable.
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Post by #Infinity on Feb 24, 2020 6:53:16 GMT 10
Quintessential early '90s, honestly. House music with rapping.
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Post by al on Mar 3, 2020 11:50:08 GMT 10
OMG I saw the title and assumed it meant the 1966 song by the Beach Boys and was about ready to say y'all are wild for thinking it sounds anything but.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 4, 2020 21:51:27 GMT 10
OMG I saw the title and assumed it meant the 1966 song by the Beach Boys and was about ready to say y'all are wild for thinking it sounds anything but. My thoughts exactly, was gonna come in here demanding to know what these people are smoking and can I have some.
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