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3rd Bass - Pop Goes The Weasel

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Uploaded by on Feb 12, 2009

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3rd Bass was an American hip-hop group that rose to fame in the late 1980s and early 1990s, and was notable for being one of the first successful interracial hip-hop groups.

MC Serch (Michael Berrin), Prime Minister Pete Nice (Peter J. Nash), and DJ Richie Rich (Richard Lawson) were the three founding members of the group. Richie Rich was a local D.J., while Nice was an English major at Columbia University and hosted a hip hop show on WKCR. Serch performed at clubs and block parties, and released a single called "Hey Boy" on independent label Idlers.

Record producer Sam Sever (real name Sam Citrin) convinced Nice and Serch to work together in 1987. Sever, Prince Paul, and The Bomb Squad produced their 1989 debut, The Cactus Album, a critically-acclaimed debut LP that went gold and contained a minor hit in "The Gas Face." The accompanying video, which featured a bevy of humorous cameo appearances that included Gilbert Gottfried, Flavor Flav, Salt-n-Pepa, and Erick Sermon, garnered respectable MTV airplay, and the single peaked at #5 on Billboard's Top Rap Singles chart, though it failed to crack the Billboard Hot 100.

As reported in many interviews, Serch had tried (unsuccessfully) to join up with fellow New Yorkers, the Beastie Boys. Upon signing with Def Jam, 3rd Bass inherited their label's feud with the Beasties. The Cactus Album was released shortly after the Beastie Boys riding high on the success of Licensed to Ill walked out of their contract with the label. In addition to containing multiple potshots directed at M.C. Hammer (who was called "M.C. Household Tool" in the liner notes), Cactus also attacked the Beastie Boys and their defection to Capitol Records.

3rd Bass's 1991 follow-up, Derelicts of Dialect, had a new target in fellow white rapper Vanilla Ice, who was the focal point of several tracks on the album, most notably "Pop Goes the Weasel." The track depicted Ice as a culture thief who watered down the sound of rap in order to pander to a mainstream audience, while depicting 3rd Bass as more respectful of the genre's traditions. Ice was also criticized therein for his refusal to credit artists whose music he had sampled (from the song Under Pressure by David Bowie and Queen) for his 1990 hit "Ice Ice Baby." The video featured punk rock icon Henry Rollins dressed up as Ice, who received a "beatdown" by 3rd Bass at the end. Fueled by the heavy backlash against Vanilla Ice at the time, "Pop Goes the Weasel" gave 3rd Bass their only Top 40 single (peaking at #29 on the Billboard Hot 100), and helped propel the album to gold status.

3rd Bass's final collaboration was the title track to the soundtrack of the 1992 film Gladiator. That same year - three years after The Cactus Album - the Beastie Boys retaliated against 3rd Bass on their new release Check Your Head; the track "Professor Booty" contained the lyric "...dancing around like you think you're Janet Jackson," which was a swipe at Serch's dancing in 3rd Bass's videos.

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  • Damn, that Brunette dancer is smokin'!! I think she just made me pop my weasel.

  • Im black but whites dont get enough credit for their mic skills

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  • they sampled peter gabriel sledge hammer for the chorus. man i remember seeing this i had it on cassette i tape recordered it off my tv on a hand held tape recorder!

  • This song brings back memories...great song graduated in "91

  • one of the first orginal whiteboys hip hop groups like beastie boys. just blaze!

  • So right, skill not color.

  • @colturn12 But as it happens, black people are more skilled at rapping than whites.

  • @axilmar skill not color

  • @TJHanna94 Mc serch is an exception, whites do not have mc skills usually. Mc serch was the only white rapper truly accepted by the black community back then.

  • 30 people dont get cookies

  • I love this song...sooooo funny

  • That's where Lil B got the cooking dance

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