MC Hammer
There had been hit rap singles and albums before him,
but MC Hammer was the man who truly brought rap music to a mass pop audience.
Armed with a flamboyant wardrobe (particularly his trademark baggy parachute
pants) and a raft of sampled hooks lifted straight from their sources,
Hammer's talents as a dancer and showman far exceeded his technique as
an MC. Still, he had an ear for catchy source material, and that helped
his second album, Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em, become the best-selling
rap album of all time. Even if he was never able to duplicate that level
of success, and even if his street credibility was virtually non-existent,
Hammer still broke down numerous doors for rap music in the mainstream,
demonstrating that hip-hop had the potential for blockbuster success in
the marketplace.
H ammer recorded his first album titled Feel My Power in 1987. After impressing
a Capitol Records executive with his already elaborate live show, he was
signed to a multi-album deal, the first of which was a revamped version
of Feel My Power retitled Let's Get It Started. Producing an R&B hit
in "Turn This Mutha Out," Let's Get It Started went double platinum.
Still, nothing could have foreshadowed the phenomenon of Please Hammer
Don't Hurt 'Em, the 1990-released follow-up. Its first single, "U
Can't Touch This," blatantly copped most of its hooks from Rick James'
funk classic "Super Freak," yet Hammer's added catch phrases
(and young listeners' unfamiliarity with the original song) helped make
it a smash. "U Can't Touch This" dominated radio and MTV during
1990 in a way few rap singles ever had, and won two Grammys (Best R&B
Song, Best Solo Rap Performance); save for a quirk in its release format
-- it was only available as a 12", which cut down on its sales --
it would easily have been the first rap single to top the Billboard pop
chart. The next two singles, "Have You Seen Her" (a flat-out
cover of the Chi-Lites' '70s soul ballad) and "Pray" (built
on the keyboard hook from Prince's "When Doves Cry"), followed
"U Can't Touch This" into the Top Ten, eventually pushing sales
of Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em past the ten-million mark and making it
the number one album of the year.
Hammer dropped the "MC" from his name and used more live instrumentation
on his 1991 follow-up album, Too Legit to Quit. While it sold very well
(over three-million copies) and produced a sizable hit in the title track.
Hammer scored his last big hit with "Addams Groove," the theme
to the film version of The Addams Family, and then paused to reconsider
his approach. In 1994, he returned with The Funky Headhunter, a harder-edged,
more aggressive record that went gold. Hammer released a new album, the
patriotic-themed Active Duty, through his own WorldHit label in late 2001.
~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide
Contact
a MC Hammer Agent now to book
MC Hammer to appear at your next corporate, private
or special event!
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