Anfield Rap

"Anfield Rap (Red Machine in Full Effect)" was a song released by members of Liverpool F.C. before the 1988 FA Cup Final against Wimbledon F.C.. The song reached number 3 in the UK Singles Chart. The song was co-written by Paul Gainford, Liverpool midfielder Craig Johnston, rapper Derek B[1] and Mary Byker from Gaye Bykers on Acid.[2]

"Anfield Rap (Red Machine in Full Effect)"
Single by Liverpool F.C.
Released2 May 1988
Songwriter(s)Paul Gainford, Derek B, Derek B and Mary Byker
Liverpool F.C. singles chronology
"Sitting on Top of the World"
(1986)
"Anfield Rap (Red Machine in Full Effect)"
(1988)
"Pass & Move (It's the Liverpool Groove)"
(1996)

Style

The song is a parody of a number of hip hop tracks, notably the intro from LL Cool J's "Rock the Bells" and Eric B. & Rakim's "I Know You Got Soul" (which sampled the opening drum roll from Funkadelic's "You'll Like It Too"). The song also featured the guitar riff (and the Ahhhhh-ahhhhh-ahhhhh element) from "Twist And Shout" by The Beatles who hailed from Liverpool.

Participants

The track featured John Aldridge and Steve McMahon, who (along with Gary Ablett) were the only native Liverpudlians in the regular line up at the time, making fun of the accents of the other players. The other players featured were John Barnes, Bruce Grobbelaar, Craig Johnston, Kevin MacDonald, Gary Gillespie, Steve Nicol, Ronnie Whelan, Alan Hansen, Ray Houghton, Jim Beglin, Nigel Spackman and Jan Molby, along with manager Kenny Dalglish. One verse of the song was performed by then-ITV football commentator Brian Moore. There were also archived voice clips from the club's former manager Bill Shankly.

Reception

Reviewing the history of sports songs in 2012, BBC reporter Mark Savage credited the song as "the worst offender... an inexplicably awful track".[3]

References

  1. "Anfield Rap co-writer Derek B dead at 44 - Football Banter". MirrorFootball.co.uk. Retrieved 2012-01-09.
  2. "Interview with Graham Crabb from Pop Will Eat Itself". Phoenix FM. Retrieved 2014-05-08.
  3. Mark Savage (24 July 2012). "Why are sport songs so hard to get right?". BBC. Retrieved 6 August 2012.


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