SubscribeLate one night this summer, after one too many Hefeweisens, I found myself surrounded by a group of Spaniards in a Berlin bar trying to figure out the mystery of that unintelligible chorus [to Aserejé]. In a flash of recognition, a childhood memory came back to me of one of the first hip-hop hits to make it on to the charts — "Rapper's Delight" by the Sugar Hill Gang. Over a beat sampled from Queen, the gang proclaims, "I say-a hip hop, hippie to the hippie, to the hip hip-hop, and you don't stop the rocking, to the bang bang boogie, say up jump the boogie to the rhythm of the boogie, the beat." Las Ketchup had apparently tried to lift their lyrics from these old school rhymes, but without the basic understanding of English which would be required to do so successfully.
The 2002 hit "The Ketchup Song" (known in Spanish as "Asereje"), is about a guy who loves this song but doesn't understand the lyrics, so he makes up his own. What he makes up translates into the lyrics of "The Ketchup Song."The chorus is thus the Sugarhill Gang tune converted into pseudo-Spanish, while the verses are in proper Spanish and tell the story of Diego trying to make out the words.
just Throw your hands up in the airwas used in The Bloodhound Gang's "Fire Water Burn" (among others), which was in itself a list of rock and hiphop clichés.
And party hardy like you just dont care
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posted by pracowity at 1:31 AM on February 28, 2005