Groove Is in the Heart: Difference between revisions
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| Format = [[7" single]], [[12"|12" maxi]], [[CD maxi]], [[Audio cassette|cassette]] |
| Format = [[7" single]], [[12"|12" maxi]], [[CD maxi]], [[Audio cassette|cassette]] |
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| Recorded = Spring 1990 |
| Recorded = Spring 1990 |
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| Genre = [[ |
| Genre = [[Disco]], [[House music|house]] |
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| Length = 3: |
| Length = 3:55 |
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| Label = [[Elektra Records|Elektra]] |
| Label = [[Elektra Records|Elektra]] |
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| Writer = Dmitry Brill, [[Towa Tei|Chung Dong Wha (Towa Tei)]], [[Lady Miss Kier|Kierin Kirby]], [[Herbie Hancock]], [[Q-Tip (rapper)|Kamaal Fareed]], [[Deee-Lite]] |
| Writer = Dmitry Brill, [[Towa Tei|Chung Dong Wha (Towa Tei)]], [[Lady Miss Kier|Kierin Kirby]], [[Herbie Hancock]], [[Q-Tip (rapper)|Kamaal Fareed]], [[Deee-Lite]] |
Revision as of 04:57, 13 September 2011
"Groove Is in the Heart" | |
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Song |
"Groove Is in the Heart" is a song by dance music band Deee-Lite from their debut album, World Clique. Released as a single in late 1990, it was a hit in many countries, including in Australia where it was a number-one hit.
Background
"Groove Is in the Heart" is a funky, cheerful [citation needed] love song that compares the new feelings of infatuation with hearing a good ("groovy") song. Essentially a house music track, it also features elements of disco, funk and hip-hop. The backing track was built around many samples, primarily the main riff from Herbie Hancock's track "Bring Down the Birds" from the Blowup soundtrack, Vernon Burch's "Get Up", which provided the drum track and also formed the basis for the infamous breakdown featuring a slide whistle, and the horn riff from Eddie Jefferson's "Psychedelic Sally". Parliament-Funkadelic legend Bootsy Collins played bass guitar and provided guest vocals, and the rap is provided by Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest.
Chart performances
Slant Magazine ranked the song second in its 100 Greatest Dance Songs list, adding: "No song delivered the group's world-conscious Word as colorfully and open-heartedly as "Groove Is in the Heart," which flew up the Billboard charts while goosing stuffed shirts".[1]
An immediate smash in nightclubs, the song crossed over to pop radio and after going to number one on the U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart, it eventually hit number four on the Billboard Hot 100. It managed to peak at number-one for one week in Australia in November 1990.
In the UK, the record was equally popular and was released as a double A-side with "What Is Love", and, with the UK single released with the subtitle "peanut butter mix" (which omitted the contributions by Bootsy Collins and Q-Tip) it eventually reached number two during September 1990. Its placing second was due to a rule instituted in the UK Singles Chart in the 1980s, which settled any "ties" over chart positions due to equal sales: the single with sales that had increased most from the previous week would reside above the other. In September 1990, "The Joker" by the Steve Miller Band and "Groove Is in the Heart" sold enough copies to be the joint number-one, but because of the ruling, Deee-Lite was relegated to the number two spot and "The Joker" topped the chart; this was the first and only time that this ruling had ever been implemented, and the overriding factors which led to the ruling being implemented in this case was that "The Joker" had been one position lower in the chart the previous week than "Groove Is in The Heart" despite the latter having been ahead in midweek sales for that week, and "The Joker" was therefore deemed to be the bigger-selling of the two. Following the controversy and complaints from Deee-Lite's record company, WEA, the rule was scrapped and joint positions were once again allowed, although "The Joker" went on to remain at the Number One spot for three further weeks and thereafter convincingly outsold "Groove Is in the Heart".
Music video
The song was accompanied by a psychedelic music video, with Deee-Lite, Q-Tip, Maceo Parker and Bootsy Collins superimposed over a cartoonish background of various shifting shapes and colors. The video opens and closes with quotes by the band: Lady Miss Kier has an opening dialog consisting of "faux-French" originally spoken in the song's AA-side, "What Is Love?",[2] and the ending features Collins saying, "I just wanted you to know that groove is in the heart, and Deee-Lite have definitely been known to smoke... on stage, that is!" and Lady Miss Kier exclaiming "Deee-groovy!"
Cover versions
Rick Braun released a smooth jazz cover of "Groove Is in the Heart" on his album Yours Truly (2005, ARTizen Music Group).
Samples used
This is an incomplete list of samples used in the song.[3][4]
- Bel-Sha-Zaar with Tommy Genapopoluis and the Grecian Knights - "Introduction" from the album The Art of Belly Dancing, 1969 (intro music, vocal sample: "We're going to dance, and have some fun")
- Herbie Hancock - "Bring Down the Birds" from the soundtrack album Blowup, 1966 (bassline)
- Vernon Burch - "Get Up" from the album Get Up (drums, crowd noise, slide whistle)
- Ray Barretto - "Right On" from the album Barretto Power, 1972 (cowbell)
- Theme from the TV series Green Acres (vocal sample: looped "I" sample ("I-i-i-i-i-i"), sung by Eva Gabor)
- Ralph MacDonald - "Jam on the Groove" from the album Sound of a Drum, 1976 (percussion)
- Billy Preston - "Uptight" from the album The Wildest Organ in Town!, 1966 (breakbeat under rap by Q-Tip)
- The Headhunters - "God Make Me Funky" from the album Survival of the Fittest, 1975 (drum roll)
The tambourine that is prominent throughout the entirety of the track is a looped sample performed by Tina Turner after she had briefly visited the studio whilst recording.
Use in other media
Note that this list is incomplete.
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Track listings
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Personnel
- Produced and arranged by Dee-Lite for Sampla-Delic Productions
- Recording and mixing engineer : Mike 'Tweekin' Rogers at D.N.D.
- Additional engineer : Bob Power at Calliope
- Dubbed by Tom Steele and Rick Essig at Frankford/Wayne Mastering Labs, 1697 Broadway, NYC 10019
- Original version from the album World Clique
- Executive producer and hooker upper : Bill Coleman
Charts
Peak positions
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Year-end charts
Certifications
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Chart successions
References
- ^ "100 Greatest Dance Songs". Slant Magazine. 30 January 2006. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ^ liner notes.
- ^ [1].
- ^ [2]
- ^ a b c d e ""Groove Is in the Heart", in various singles charts". Lescharts. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
- ^ a b "Single top 100 over 1990" (pdf) (in Dutch). Top40. Retrieved 12 April 2010.
- ^ German Singles Chart Charts-surfer.de (Retrieved April 10, 2008)
- ^ "Irish Singles Chart, database". irishcharts. Retrieved 12 April 2010.
- ^ ""Groove Is in the Heart", UK Singles Chart". chartstats. Retrieved 12 April 2010.
- ^ a b c Billboard Allmusic.com (Retrieved April 10, 2008)
- ^ 1990 Australian Singles Chart aria.com (Retrieved August 19, 2008)
- ^ "Billboard Top 100 - 1991". Retrieved 2009-09-15.
- ^ U.S. certifications riaa.com (Retrieved August 19, 2008)