This may be single most mind-blowing video of 2012… Surely, this is why the Interwebs were invented.
Archive for the Music Category
‘Baby Got Back,’ Sung By THE MOVIES
Posted in General Interest, Music on August 16, 2012 by RickNewsThose Sophisticated Yurrupeans
Posted in Music on June 29, 2012 by RickNewsThis video proves that White Trash isn’t only found in America…
Lemme See Yo’ Crack, Homeslice
Posted in Music on June 27, 2012 by RickNewsHere is the greatest music video about “rock”…
This Is The Greatest Music Video…
Posted in Music on June 13, 2012 by RickNews…of this week.
The “artist” is the fashion-disabled, portly Max Harris. The voice? Autotune.
Enjoy.
They Found The Bridge!
Posted in Music on May 29, 2012 by RickNewsThe Red Hot Chili Peppers’ breakout hit song was 1992’s “Under the Bridge.” In it, they sing about shooting up heroin under, well, a bridge. Yet, singer/songwriter Anthony Keidis has steadfastly refused to divulge the location of said structure.
Yet, using 21st-century detective work, an intrepid reporter has located said bridge. (Hint: it’s in Los Angeles.)
Read the story here.
This Is Summer 2012’s Hottest Video
Posted in General Interest, Music on April 20, 2012 by RickNewsHere’s what is sure to be the hottest song of Summer 2012: “Hot Problems,” by the supergroup, Double Take.
Ladies and gentlemen–thank me now, for I have shown you the future of entertainment.
Kangols, Cazals, and Breakdancing!
Posted in General Interest, Music on March 5, 2012 by RickNewsGraffiti Rock was the title of a TV show that never went beyond pilot status, back in 1984. While it didn’t make it to the airwaves, it’s an amazing treasure trove of period fashions and dances.
People really dressed like this in the 1980s and acted like robots on the dance floor. There’s even a live performance by Run-DMC.
Word.
Blow Your Mind With Coolness
Posted in Music on March 2, 2012 by RickNewsTromba Fredda is a 1963 short film by Enzo Nasso, starring Chet Baker. In it, you’ll see one of the coolest dudes ever blowing his horn.
Music
Posted in Music on February 2, 2012 by RickNewsJohn Kongos – “Kongos”
It’s great to discover “new” music, especially when that music is over 40 years old; it’s even more special when one discovers it via a 20 year old song. Recently I was listening to the Happy Mondays’ song, “Step On,” which was released in 1990.

For those of you who aren’t familiar with the Manchester group of the late-1980s and early-‘90s, their album, “Pills, Thrills and Bellyaches” is the greatest record of the 1990s, period. The Mondays are credited with spreading the vibe of Ecstasy-fueled raves at the Hacienda all over Europe and the world. Front man Shaun Ryder was called a “great poet” by none other than Sir Paul McCartney and the former Beatle couldn’t be more accurate. Happy Mondays split in the mid-‘90s, then reformed in the early in the new century. Their most recent album was released in 2007.
Yet, it’s the Mondays’ song, “Step On,” that I’m here to talk about. While searching the Web for lyrics, I discovered that this was, in fact, a remake of a 1971 song called, “He’s Gonna Step On You Again,” by a South African named John Kongos. I’d never heard of the man, so I Wiki’d him. Kongos was born in 1945 and was SA’s first “rock star.” Yet, I still hadn’t heard his original version of the song. A quick trip to iTunes cured that and I was surprised. The “original” was a lush, beat-filled song, complete with fuzzy electric guitars. It’s also important to note that “He’s Gonna Step On You Again” is considered to be the first-ever song using a “sample” of another song—it’s in the Guinness Book of World Records for this very reason. In this ditty, the drum beat is sampled from traditional African musicians.
I thought of what life must have been like in South Africa, over 40 years ago and Kongos’ “mixing” of African music with Western rock n’ roll seems like a risky and possibly dangerous undertaking. With an overwhelming anti-black attitude in that nation and the Boers’ steadfast resistance to racial “intermingling,” it must’ve been the most rebellious thing that a bespeckled white guy could’ve done at the time.
Perhaps, then, a rebellious thing to do nowadays is to discover 40 year old music that simply makes the listener feel good.