Crowd Participation
Recasting 'New Jack City'--The Soundtrack!
So, instead of recasting the film, our crew decided to do an Extreme Makoever: Soundtrack Edition, choosing five of the more well-known songs from the tracklist, recasting the original crooners with artists from (mostly) today, just to see who best could keep the songs alive. Some of our picks will surely surprise you (shock, even), which is more than fine. We had fun doing it, and look forward to hearing your choices as well.
Christopher Williams: "I'm Dreamin'"
Harlem: Anthony David. The song needs a strong voice, of course, and AD's got the chops. Plus, with Funk Puddin looming, ready to pounce on as many covers as he can, Ant knows he better get on this before it's scooped up.
ill Mami: This song MUST be done by someone lightskinneded and cute. My pick is Eric Benét.
Viv: Hmmm...if we're gonna go with light, bright and
cute (of utmost importance), and nice on the vocals, Eric Roberson would kill
this. He would probably even re-enact some of the scenes from the
movie. Triple threat.
Butta: I would enlist Jaheim for this joint. His voice has that same gruff "come here, woman!" quality that CDub possessed.Ro: Angie Stone. When I re-listened to this, hers was the first voice that popped into my mind. And with no gender-reversal on the lyrics for intrigue and authenticity.
Color Me Badd: "I Wanna Sex You Up"
Harlem: Joe, Musiq & Common. The original was so blunt, so cheesy that it worked on so many levels. Add the fact that the four most non-threatening men in the world were singing about sex *snicker* and it was a song that the whole family could enjoy. I think "Sex" needs to be umm, sexed up a bit, and Joe, on the comeback trail, and Musiq, reclaiming his credibility, would probably play well trading verses in an updated version. Throw in some Common for a few bars, and I smell a hit.
ill Mami: Dru Hill---for so many obvious reasons.
Unless Jodeci can be resurrected from the dead...with Mr. Dalvin, of
course.
Viv: Can someone resurrect Guy? This song wouldn't be
complete without a "dumb b*tch" tacked on at the end. Make it more
current so it can be getting some airplay.
Butta: I wouldn't pick a group to re-up this track because it's not necessary. Instead I'd pick a single artist to handle this one: D'Angelo. I know that he's trying to get away from the whole sex symbol debacle from the Voodoo era, but in the event he gets his mind right, he would do some thangs on this track.
Ro: Oh, D'Angelo. There wouldn't even have to be a video so you'd be comfortable. You just play that piano, baby, backed sleepily by ?uestlove on drums. We'll just listen.
Keith Sweat: "Tellin' Me No Again (There You Go)"
Harlem: Anthony Hamilton. Sure, nobody can whine like Keith, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Hamiltone could bring a remake more of a husky presence, letting the lady know that 'no' is not the correct answer, instead of begging her not to say it again.
Butta: I wouldn't pick a group to re-up this track because it's not necessary. Instead I'd pick a single artist to handle this one: D'Angelo. I know that he's trying to get away from the whole sex symbol debacle from the Voodoo era, but in the event he gets his mind right, he would do some thangs on this track.
Ro: Oh, D'Angelo. There wouldn't even have to be a video so you'd be comfortable. You just play that piano, baby, backed sleepily by ?uestlove on drums. We'll just listen.
Keith Sweat: "Tellin' Me No Again (There You Go)"
Harlem: Anthony Hamilton. Sure, nobody can whine like Keith, but that's not necessarily a bad thing. Hamiltone could bring a remake more of a husky presence, letting the lady know that 'no' is not the correct answer, instead of begging her not to say it again.
ill Mami: Aaron Hall. Simply for the gruffness and
demanding vocals he always provides. Plus, this could be a good way to
stage his comeback.
Viv: Probably my favorite song on this soundtrack, and while nobody will ever steal the crown from the "Kang of Whining and Begging," I could definitely get behind Anthony or Aaron. Stepping outside the box a bit, I could also see Calvin Richardson pulling this off. He voice does have a bit of that "please baby please" quality to it.
Butta: I think that Raheem DeVaughn would put his thang down on this joint right here. Plus Lord knows that he would hit more notes than Keith Sweat ever could.
Ro: Big yes on Anthony Hamilton. He would take this from being a mildly compelling request to a deal-sealing standard. With him on this song, nobody is leaving. Nobody.
Johnny Gill: "I'm Still Waiting"
Harlem: Maxwell. This was a "Maxwell song" even before dude ever started recording. Imagine ole boy flexing his vocal muscles all over this joint that, to be honest, Johnny Gill killed. It would be in good hands with Mr. Ascension. (Note: I thought about Bilal for this one, but his histrionics would probably make me yearn more for the original every time he sang it.)
ill Mami: Totally agree with Harlem. As long as Maxwell is in the cage like in the Johnny video, but shirtless and singing falsetto.
Viv: I'll ignore Harlem talking slick about Bilal...for now. I gotta step outside the box a bit and go with underrated soul singer V. He has been backing Jill Scott on her Real Thing tour, absoultely killing some of the classics. He's got the velvety vocals needed on this one.
Butta: My choice to redo this track would be Eric Roberson. He would take this song and straight take it to church. And Johnny's crescendo toward the end? Erro got that.
Ro: Though ill Mami's concept for a video gets my vote, I ultimately have to go with Raphael Saadiq. He'd be able to re-interpret the song's new jack flavor without loosing its sensibilities entirely. I think his slightly higher, tinnier vocal range would be great here.
Troop/LeVert/Queen Latifah: "For the Love of Money (Living for the City)"
ill Mami: I think Bilal would be a good choice
simply because this song lends itself well to much histrionics and
melisma. I also think throwing someone unexpected like N'dambi would be
interesting and take the song to the back of an alley, much like how
this song was depicted in the movie.
Butta: I would make this a more hip-hop centric song and have Talib Kweli, Common, Kanye West and Lupe Fiasco pass the mic to each other. And who would handle the vocals? None other than Cee-lo. He would bring the funk that this jam needs.
Ro: Butta has gold with this one. I want to hear that. Cee-lo would be beyond perfect. For fun I would throw Miss Jack Davey amid his harmonies to keep it extra interesting. I can also envision the Cool Kids and Wale spitting a verse or two.
Butta: I would make this a more hip-hop centric song and have Talib Kweli, Common, Kanye West and Lupe Fiasco pass the mic to each other. And who would handle the vocals? None other than Cee-lo. He would bring the funk that this jam needs.
Ro: Butta has gold with this one. I want to hear that. Cee-lo would be beyond perfect. For fun I would throw Miss Jack Davey amid his harmonies to keep it extra interesting. I can also envision the Cool Kids and Wale spitting a verse or two.
Tags: ?uestlove, anthony hamilton, audio, blackstar, cee-lo, christopher williams, color me badd, common, cool kids, eric benét, eric roberson, guy, jaheim, jodeci, joe, johnny gill, keith sweat, maxwell, miss jack davey, mos def, musiq, n'dambi, new jack city, raheem devaughn, soundtrack, talib kweli, wale
Comments
I see Al B Sure re-doing the Color Me Badd song...
parsif | September 29, 2008 8:03 PM | PermalinkI don't know how I ended back on this older post, but I'd love to see Soulbounce do another "recasting" again.
And I, too, think Butta's idea for "For the Love of Money" would be SICK.
heyhey | September 15, 2008 3:42 PM | PermalinkYa'll should do more of these "soundtrack recastings". It's nice to see the staff's differences in ideas and such =]
Bree | August 27, 2008 2:07 PM | Permalink