Ice Ice Baby," by Vanilla Ice (1989) Vs. "Under Pressure,

1990 unmarried past Vanilla Water ice

1990 single by Vanilla Water ice

"Ice Ice Baby"
Abstract black cover with thick red band in centre and gold lettering
Single by Vanilla Ice
from the anthology To the Extreme
A-side "Play That Funky Music" (US)
B-side "It's a Political party" (Great britain)
Released July ii, 1990[i]
Genre
  • Pop rap
Length 3:46 (radio edit)
4:31 (album version)
Label SBK
Songwriter(s)
  • Floyd Brown
  • Mario Johnson
  • Robert Van Winkle[2]
  • Brian May
  • David Jones
  • Freddie Mercury
  • John Deacon
  • Roger Taylor
Producer(south) Vanilla Ice, Queen, David Bowie
Vanilla Water ice singles chronology
"Play That Funky Music"
(1990)
"Ice Ice Baby"
(1990)
"I Love Yous"
(1991)
Music video
"Ice Ice Baby" on YouTube

"Water ice Ice Infant" is a hip hop vocal by American rapper Vanilla Ice, and DJ Earthquake.[3] [4] It was based on the bassline of "Under Pressure" past British stone band Queen and British singer David Bowie, who did not receive songwriting credit or royalties until afterwards information technology had become a hit. Released on his debut album, To the Extreme, it is his best known song. It has appeared in remixed form on Platinum Underground and Vanilla Water ice Is Back! A live version appears on the album Extremely Alive, while a nu metal version appears on the anthology Difficult to Swallow, under the title "Too Cold".

"Ice Ice Baby" was first released as the B-side to Vanilla Ice's cover of "Play That Funky Music", but the single was not initially successful. When disc jockey David Morales[5] played "Ice Ice Baby" instead, it began to gain success. "Ice Ice Baby" was the kickoff hip hop single to top the Billboard Hot 100. Outside of the U.s., "Water ice Ice Baby" topped the charts in Australia, Kingdom of belgium, kingdom of the netherlands, New Zealand, the Commonwealth of Ireland, and the Great britain, thus helping the song diversify hip hop by introducing it to a mainstream audience.[6] [7]

Lyrics and music [edit]

Head shot of Vanilla Ice with a goatee wearing a black T-shirt and baseball cap.

Vanilla Ice based the song's lyrics upon the Due south Florida area in which he lived.

Robert Van Winkle, meliorate known by his stage name Vanilla Ice, wrote "Ice Ice Baby" in 1983 at the age of 16, basing its lyrics upon his experiences in South Florida.[8] The lyrics describe a shooting and Van Winkle'south rhyming skills.[9] The chorus of "Ice Ice Baby" originates from the signature chant of the national African American fraternity Blastoff Phi Alpha.[ten] [11] Of the song'due south lyrics, Van Winkle stated in a 2001 interview that "If yous released 'Ice Ice Babe' today, it would fit in today's lyrical respect among peers, you know what I'grand sayin'? [...] My lyrics aren't, 'Pump it up, go! Go!' At least I'm sayin' somethin'."[12]

The vocal'due south hook samples the bassline of the 1981 song "Nether Pressure" by Queen and David Bowie,[thirteen] who did not receive credit or royalties for the sample.[14] In a 1990 interview, Van Winkle claimed the two melodies were slightly different because he had added an additional note on the "and" of the fourth beat, an anacrusis ("pickup") betwixt odd-numbered and subsequent even-numbered iterations of the "Under Pressure level" sample.[15] In afterwards interviews, Van Winkle readily admitted he sampled the song and claimed his 1990 statement was a joke; others, however, suggested he had been serious.[15] [16] After representatives for Queen and Bowie threatened a copyright infringement suit against him, the matter was settled out of court, with Van Winkle being required to pay financial recompense to the original artists.[17] Bowie and all members of Queen were also given songwriting credit for the sample.[15] "Ice Water ice Baby" is written in the key of D pocket-size.[18]

In December 1990, Van Winkle told British youth music magazine Smash Hits where he came up with the idea of sampling "Nether Force per unit area":[19]

The way I do stuff is to become through one-time records that my brother has. He used to listen to stone 'north' whorl and stuff like that. I listened to funk and hip hop considering rock wasn't actually my era. Simply having a brother similar that, well, I but mixed the two, and he had a copy of 'Under Force per unit area'. And putting those sounds to hip hop was nifty.

Robert Van Winkle, Boom Hits

Van Winkle described himself as the outset rapper to cantankerous into the pop market and said that although his pioneer status forced him to "take the heat for a lot of people" for his music'southward use of samples, the criticism he received over sample use allowed sampling to get acceptable in mainstream hip hop.[20]

Release [edit]

"Water ice Water ice Infant" was initially released by Ichiban Records every bit the B-side to Van Winkle's cover of "Play That Funky Music".[14] [21] The 12-inch single featured the radio, instrumental and a cappella versions of "Play That Funky Music" and the radio version and "Miami Drop" remix of "Ice Ice Baby".[22] When a disc jockey named David Morales[5] played "Ice Water ice Baby" instead of the single's A-side, the song gained more success than "Play That Funky Music".[xiv] A music video for "Ice Ice Babe" was produced for $8000.[23] [24] The video was financed by Van Winkle'south managing director, Tommy Quon, and shot on the roof of a warehouse in Dallas, Texas.[25] In the video, Van Winkle is shown rapping the lyrics while he and others dance to the vocal. Heavy airplay of the video by The Box while Van Winkle was still unknown increased public interest in the song.[26] "Ice Ice Babe" was given its ain single, released in 1990 by SBK Records in the United States, and EMI Records in the Britain. The SBK single contained the "Miami Drop", instrumental and radio mixes of "Water ice Ice Babe" and the album version of "It's A Political party".[27] The EMI single contained the club and radio mixes of the song, and the shortened radio edit.[28] The single was apace pulled from the American market soon later on the song reached number one, in a successful endeavor to drive consumers to purchase the album instead.[29]

Reception [edit]

"Water ice Ice Baby" garnered critical acclamation, was the showtime hip hop single to top the Billboard charts,[xxx] and has been credited for helping diversify hip hop past introducing it to a mainstream audience.[31]

Larry Flick from Billboard commented, "Photogenic white rapper rocks impressively over a sparse crush-bed that borrows heavily from Queen's "Under Pressure". Could pack a powerful multiformat punch."[32] The Daily Vault'southward Christopher Thelen said it "did more than for overexposure than New Coke did for soft drinks".[33] Entertainment Weekly reviewer Mim Udovitch wrote that "[Vanilla Water ice] probably would have scored with his striking rap unmarried Water ice Ice Infant fifty-fifty if he hadn't been white. At that place's just something nigh the mode its claw – a sample from Queen and David Bowie's 'Under Pressure level' — grabs you and flings you lot out onto the dance floor."[34] Selina Webb from Music Week said, "As lacking in originality yet holding the aforementioned commercial appeal". She added, "The catchy function is borrowed from Queen'southward Under Pressure, the vocal is a cool white rap. Slightly more street cred than the New Kids, yet falling squarely into the same huge market."[35] A reviewer from The Network Xl said that "like Mellow Man Ace, the rap melts slowly and is equally much a mood piece as information technology is a cruising tune. A motocross champion from Dallas via Miami, the 22-twelvemonth-old Water ice says it'southward fourth dimension to chill out."[36]

Following the song's success, California rapper Mario "Chocolate" Johnson, an associate of record producer Suge Knight, claimed that he had helped in writing the song, and had not received credit or royalties.[37] Knight and two bodyguards arrived at The Palm in West Hollywood, where Van Winkle was eating. After shoving Van Winkle's bodyguards aside, Knight and his ain bodyguards sabbatum downward opposite Van Winkle, staring at him before finally asking "How you doin'?"[37] Like incidents were repeated several times before Knight showed up at Van Winkle's suite on the fifteenth floor of the Bel Age Hotel, accompanied by Johnson and a member of the Los Angeles Raiders.[37] Co-ordinate to Van Winkle, Knight took him out on the balcony by himself, and implied that he would throw Van Winkle off unless he signed the rights to the song over to Knight.[38]

Legacy [edit]

After audiences began to view Van Winkle equally a novelty act and a pop star rather than a legitimate rapper, his popularity began to refuse.[39] Detroit-based rapper Eminem states that when he offset heard "Ice Ice Babe", "I felt like I didn't want to rap anymore. I was so mad, because he was making it existent difficult for me."[40] Van Winkle lost some brownie among hip hop fans, but later began to regain some success, alluring a new audition outside of the mainstream audience that had formerly accepted him and and so rejected him.[39] "Ice Ice Infant" continues to be the song that Van Winkle is best known for internationally, although Van Winkle states that his American fans like his newer music amend.[41]

According to Rolling Rock, the "Ice Ice Baby"–"Under Pressure" controversy is a landmark music copyright example, since information technology "sparked discussion about the punitive actions taken in plagiarism cases". The magazine's Jordan Runtagh added: "Though [Vanilla Ice] paid the price, some fence that isn't plenty to make upward for the potential brownie lost by Queen and David Bowie, who are now linked to him through a collaboration they had no pick in joining."[17]

A alive version of the song appeared on the album Extremely Live.[42] "Ice Water ice Baby" was rerecorded in a nu metal version titled "Likewise Cold".[43] Originally intended to exist released every bit a subconscious rails or B-side, "Too Cold" was featured on Van Winkle's 1998 album Hard to Swallow, and received radio play in some markets. In 2000, a remix titled "Ice Ice Baby 2001" was released in Europe as a single, with a newly produced music video. The remix generated new international interest in Van Winkle'south music.[44]

VH1 and Blender ranked "Ice Water ice Baby" fifth on its list of the "fifty Most Awesomely Bad Songs Always".[45] It was also given the stardom by the Houston Press as being the worst vocal ever to emanate from Texas.[46] In 1999, the song's music video was "retired" on the MTV special 25 Lame, in which Van Winkle himself appeared to destroy the video'southward chief record. Given a baseball bat, Van Winkle ended up destroying the prove's gear up.[47] [48] However, in December 2007, VH1 ranked the song in 29th place of their 100 Greatest Songs of the 90'due south.[49]

In November 2011, MTV Dance ranked "Water ice Ice Baby" at No. 71 in their listing of "The 100 Biggest 90's Dance Anthems of All Time".[50]

In 1991, Alvin and the Chipmunks released a cover version entitled "Ice Water ice Alvin" for their anthology The Chipmunks Rock the Business firm.[51] "Weird Al" Yankovic included the chorus as the final song in "Polka Your Eyes Out", the polka medley from his 1992 anthology Off the Deep End.[52] In 2004, the song was featured in the film 13 Going on 30. In 2010, the song was featured in the Glee episode "Bad Reputation" equally performed by Will Schuester (Matthew Morrison).[53] In 2012, several references to the song were made in the picture show That's My Boy, where Van Winkle guest starred every bit himself - Donny Berger (Adam Sandler), an old friend of Van Winkle, asks him for coin, claiming he should be "loaded" with the royalties he receives from the song; however, Van Winkle tells him that "Queen took 50 pct, Suge took the other sixty percent, I f***ing owe money when that sh*t gets played, human being!" Afterward on, Berger and Van Winkle drive in Van Winkle's Ford Mustang 5.0, a reference to the car he collection in the music video (only not the same car), then heed to the song on Van Winkle's Walkman equally they run.[54] [55] [56]

Rails listings [edit]

1990 release [edit]

2001 remixes [edit]

12" maxi
  1. "Ice Ice Infant 2001" (Gigi D'Agostino remix)  – 7:17
  2. "Ice Ice Baby 2001" (Funky 9ers society dub)  – 4:53
  3. "Water ice Water ice Baby 2001" (House of Wax lodge-mix)  – half-dozen:06
  4. "Ice Ice Baby 2001" (Debart Mode re-e-mix)  – 6:42
CD maxi
  1. "Ice Ice Babe 2001" (House of Wax radio-mix)  – 3:36
  2. "Ice Ice Baby 2001" (Gigi D'Agostino remix-edit)  – three:45
  3. "Ice Ice Baby 2001" (Silverwater & Shaw remix)  – 3:42
  4. "Ice Ice Baby 2001" (Prepay remix)  – three:54
  5. "Ice Ice Infant 2001" (Steve Baltes remix)  – 3:53
  6. "Everytime (album version) (feat. 4BY4) – 3:58

2008 remixes [edit]

12" maxi
  1. "Ice Ice Infant 2008" (Mondo Electro remix)
  2. "Ice Ice Baby 2008" (7th Sky Business firm remix)
  3. "Ice Ice Baby 2008" (Rico NL Jumpstyle remix)
  4. "Ice Water ice Baby 2008" (Mendezz and Andrew remix)

Charts and sales [edit]

See also [edit]

  • U Tin't Touch This, 1990 sample of 1981 Super Freak
  • Nether Pressure (Ice Ice Baby)

References [edit]

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External links [edit]

  • "Ice Ice Baby" music video on YouTube

maestasphered1978.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ice_Ice_Baby

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