

Then he gets even more explicit with "feel free, drop your pants, check your ha-ir," probably referencing the trend of sagging pants popularized by rappers and basketball players and eventually taken up by almost all young men for a period of time in the 1990s. Just kick it, said I just want to chill, just kick it, said I just wanna chill, just kick it, just kick it. The song includes that refrain, "And the colored girls go, doo, doo, doo," deploying the image of Black women on the streets of New York as part of what gives it "flavor." As you'll see, much of the response in "Can I Kick It?" happens musically, but this is probably the most explicit point in the lyrics.įirst, Phife refers to "the rhythm we gave ya," probably referencing the rock and roll rhythms adopted by whites from Elvis Presley on forward.

We're not sure exactly what Tip's tongue-in-cheek jitterbug reference is trying to say, and it's probably best not to read too much into it, but the historical parallel is certainly clever.Īs we mentioned before, Phife and Tip are responding to and sampling Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side," the one where he invites audiences to check out the world of poverty and prostitution in New York City. Your right hand is held low on the girl's back, and your left hand down at your side, enclosing her hand." ( Source) You have to sway, forwards and backwards, with a controlled hip movement, while your shoulders stay level and your feet glide along the floor. I suppose I always felt these motions are somehow obscene. "The hardest thing to learn is the pelvic motion. Here's a description written in 1939 by a middle-class white man who went into a Black neighborhood in Philadelphia to try to learn the jitterbug: And giving suburban kids a new form of rebellion. "Freaking"-a dance form which, it should clearly be acknowledged, is popular across races-has caused a lot of alarm for parental types in the 21st century.īut back in the inter-war era, it was the jitterbug, a dance that originated in Black parts of Philadelphia, that was giving parents alarm. No one ever knows for sure with the Abstract Poet-that's Q-Tip's nickname-but it sure is a cool line. It could also be a double entendre suggesting that A Tribe Called Quest are the new funk police, "the fuzz" of Afrocentric music. "Funk fuzz" probably refers to that form of distortion used in funk music that involves a "fuzzbox," an old-school instrument that creates a heavy, fuzzy sound, so distorted you almost can't hear the notes. "Wipe your feet on the rhythm rug" might be an innocent metaphor for dancing or just a fun figure of speech, but it also suggests that the people being addressed are trampling their musical predecessors, wiping their muddy feet on the rhythms of the past. Over the years, many Black artists have pointed out the origins of rock and roll in Black communities and bemoaned the fact that by the 1960s, all the most popular rockers were white, with Black artists re-segregated into the broad "R&B" category. In these lines, Q-Tip invokes rock and roll, the prodigal son of the blues that became a major site for white artists to imitate styles and beats that originated in Black communities. And please follow our blogs for the latest and best Korean KPOP music, songs, pops and ballads."Can I Kick It?" is shaped around a mixing of samples from funk, soul, and rock and roll records from the 1970s, beginning and ending with a recognizable sample from Lou Reed's "Walk on the Wild Side." A Tribe Called Quest uses samples and wordplay to poke fun at Reed's appropriation of African-American music and culture. I can’t understand it by speaking EnglishĪll you are, all of you are superstitious Hint : Just type in some music lyrics, song title, artist, etc. She’s She TryNA Movin ‘likes stage backdancer It was your friend’s girlfriend’s righteousness Yeong-eoleul sseoseo mos al-a meoggess-eo I might just kick it, kick it You wanna lick it, lick it I love to stick it, stick it From London to L. Nan bad-assji kkangpaedeul hante da noemul Nan jeongchiin gat-ae nan mal-eul neom jalhae Nan jeonbu da meog-eoss-eo ni yeoja beolyeoss-eo

Ridel) Produced by Ace, Ron Fair and Stefanie Ridel (Moonshine Track Design ASCAP, SJR Music/SONY ATV ASCAP) It's My Party Performed by Prima J Written by Stefanie Ridel (as S. I deul jeonbu da aidol animyeon yeonseubsaeng Kick It Performed by Prima J Written by Ace, Stefanie Ridel (as S. Or Disclosure: As an Amazon Associate and an Apple Partner, we earn from qualifying purchases Other Popular K-POP Songs: $aGak - 정신이 이상해 (Feat. Hit dem folks, In the seoul I milly rock We just stoned but I feel that highįind more lyrics at You can purchase their music thru
