Webster

The Constitution was made to guard the people against the dangers of good intentions." --American Statesman Daniel Webster (1782-1852)


Monday, October 2, 2017

Monday Music "The Macarena" by Los Del Rio(1995)

 I was real busy the past couple of days, My son went to a band tournament on a different part of the state and they did well, but it kept me out of the house all day, and I also was dealing with some house issues or rather appliance issues.  They are mostly fixed except I have to buy a part this afternoon.   Well anyway I decided to roll with this song, I heard somebody playing it and it reminded me of the song.

 I remember when this song hit and all the radio's were playing the hell out of this song, I was driving to work in my F150,
 It looked kinda like that.  Well anyway I was driving through the other town to get to the Ford Plant and it was 1995 and I was on the way to work.  Well anyway this song was all over the airways and people were dancing to it at all the shows, at concerts and at work*eek*, well anyway the first few times I heard the song, I thought it was pretty neat, but after the 1000th time, I was over the song but it was very popular.  It was a different kind of song and it was catchy...at first but after a while I would cringe...not as bad as I did for the Lee Greenwood song from the Gulf War. 



The song was originally recorded in 1992, and released in 1993 as a rumba. This was the first of six versions of the song that can be associated with Los Del Rio. Another version, a new flamenco rumba pop fusion theme with fully Spanish lyrics, attained significant success in Spain, Colombia and Mexico. It also became popular in Puerto Rico because of its use as an unofficial campaign theme song for then-governor Pedro Rosselló, who was seeking reelection under the New Progressive Party of Puerto Rico's ticket. Being the base for many cruise ships, visitors to the island were constantly exposed to the song during their stay in Puerto Rico. This may explain how the song spread to—and became a hit in—cities with sizable Latino communities in the United States, particularly Miami, New York City and Los Angeles


In mid-1996, the song became a worldwide hit when the Bayside Boys, composed of Mike Triay, and Carlos de Yarza , produced a remix of the song which added English lyrics. Jammin Johnny Caride, a radio personality at Power 96 in Miami, first learned of the "Macarena" when clubgoers at a club where he worked as a deejay requested the song. Caride brought the "Macarena" to his supervisors at Power 96 who asked him to create an English-language version of the song.
Caride recruited his two partners at Bayside Records, Mike "In The Night" Triay and Carlos de Yarza, to remix the original song. The new, English-language lyrics were written by Carlos de Yarza. The Bayside Boys, Triay and de Yarza, added a new dance beat specifically targeted to American and British audiences with English-language lyrics sung originally by a studio singer, then, on tour, by Carla Vanessa. Vanessa accepted a fixed fee contract for her participation and live performances, and so does not receive any residual performer royalties. The finished version was called "Macarena (Bayside Boys Remix)." The Bayside Boys remix hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in August 1996 and remained at the top of the chart for fourteen weeks.

The reworked "Macarena (Bayside Boys remix)" spent 14 weeks at No. 1 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, one of the longest runs atop the Hot 100 chart in history. The single spent its final week at No. 1 on its 46th week on the chart, recorded as the latest No. 1 single in Hot 100 history. Billboard ranked it as the No. 1 song for 1996. In the United Kingdom the song was released in June 1996 and peaked at No. 2 on August 17, 1996, kept off the No. 1 spot by the huge popularity of the Spice Girls song "Wannabe."

"Macarena" remained popular through 1996, but by the end of 1997, its popularity had diminished. The song stayed in the Hot 100 chart for 60 weeks, the longest reign among No. 1 songs, only surpassed fifteen years later by Adele's "Rolling in the Deep". The Bayside Boys remix includes a sample from Yazoo (also known in the United States as Yaz) track "Situation"—the laughter of Yazoo vocalist Alison Moyet. The chorus uses female vocal samples previously used by the Farm in their song "Higher and Higher (Remix)" from their album, Spartacus. The Bayside Boys toured the U.S. and the world, and featured singer Carla Vanessa.

By 1997, the song had sold 11 million copies. While having only a 25% take in royalties from the song, Romero and Ruiz became immensely wealthy. According to the BBC News Service, during the year 2003 alone—a full decade after the song's initial release—Romero and Ruiz made USD$250,000 in royalties. Julio Iglesias is quoted as congratulating the duo personally: "My success singing in English from Miami is nothing compared to yours; coming out of Dos Hermanas with little international exposure elsewhere and selling these many records in Spanish takes two huge sets of cojones."
In VH1's 2002 documentary 100 Greatest One-hit Wonders, "Macarena" was ranked as No. 1. "Macarena" was also ranked No. 1 on a different VH1 documentary, 40 Awesomely Bad No. 1 Songs.
On America's Best Dance Crew, it was danced to on the Whack Track Challenge, given to the Ringmasters.

There are two different music videos. The most common one, based on the Bayside Boys Mix and directed by French director Vincent Calvet, was created in 1996, featuring Los del Rio performing on a white backdrop. Ten women are also seen dancing with the band. Among them is Mia Frye, who choreographed the video. This version, where nine of the ten women lip sync the English lyrics, samples a line from The Graduate ("I am not trying to seduce you!") that had been earlier used by George Michael in "Too Funky", but was later removed due to possible copyright issues. The other, similar version of the music video was in black and white and was more instructional in that the women and men are clearly shown performing the specific dance moves.

8 comments:

  1. No, no, please no!!!!!! When I would DJ dances at my lodge and other venues back in the day I would have to play that thing over and over. It took me two and a half decades to get it purged from my head and now you've reinstalled it. I'm gonna go now and listen to "Return Of The Son Of Monster Magnet" by the Mothers Of Invention cranked to eleven to counteract your evilness...............

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Tom,
      Thank you for the humorous comment, lol. it is part of the evilness that I provide, lol

      Delete
  2. The first few times I heard the song, I thought it was pretty neat, but after the 1000th time... it was lunch time and I was sick of it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Angus;

      I felt the same way about it and the Lee Greenwood song.

      Delete
  3. Oh wow, I thought I was done with that one... NOOOOOoooooo :-)

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hey Old NFO;

      Gotta give you the song to run through your mind today, lol

      Delete
  4. Ha. I like all of it. And it doesn't leave the brain. Kind of like when Trump used the word Rocket Man...now you know. Paybacks are hell. LOL

    ReplyDelete
  5. And I can dance to it good too. LMAO. Luckily it is the same only faster each time.

    ReplyDelete

I had to change the comment format on this blog due to spammers, I will open it back up again in a bit.