Jump Around

"Jump Around" is a song by the American hip hop group House of Pain, produced by DJ Muggs of the hip hop group Cypress Hill, who has also covered the song. It became a hit in 1992, reaching number 3 in the United States. A 1993 re-release of the song in the United Kingdom, where the initial release had been a minor hit, peaked at number 8. "Jump Around" was featured at position 580 on Q Magazine's 1001 Best Songs Ever,[2] number 24 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of the 90s,[3] number 66 on VH1's 100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop, number 325 on Blender's 500 Greatest Songs Since You Were Born and number 47 on NME's 100 Best Songs Of The 1990s. The song is popular among dancehall DJs and is widely regarded in the United Kingdom as a club classic.

"Jump Around"
Single by House of Pain
from the album House of Pain
ReleasedMay 5, 1992 (1992-05-05)[1]
Recorded1992
GenreHip hop
Length3:37
LabelTommy Boy
Songwriter(s)Lawrence Muggerud, Erik Schrody, Earl Nelson, Bobby Relf
Producer(s)DJ Muggs
House of Pain singles chronology
"Jump Around"
(1992)
"Shamrocks and Shenanigans (Boom Shalock Lock Boom)"
(1992)

Development

DJ Muggs has stated that he originally produced the beat for Cypress Hill, but rapper B-Real did not want to record at that time. It was subsequently offered to Ice Cube, who refused it, before finally being taken and used by House of Pain.[4]

Samples

The song features a distinctive horn fanfare intro, sampled from Bob & Earl's 1963 track "Harlem Shuffle". The song also samples "Popeye the Hitchhiker" by Chubby Checker, but it is best known for a high-pitched squealing sound that appears at the beginning of almost every bar—66 times in the course of the recording.

The origin of the squeal has been the subject of debate. American blogger Anil Dash and musician Questlove of hip-hop band The Roots have insisted on Prince's "Gett Off" as the source.[5] A Newsweek reader performed a spectrogram analysis, which revealed that the sample more closely matches "Shoot Your Shot", and House of Pain member Everlast himself told Questlove that it is a horn making the squeal and not Prince. However, Anil Dash claims the band has denied that the sample is Prince to avoid paying royalties to the singer. A similar squeal can also be heard throughout the track "Gotta be a Leader," by the group Guy.[6] For his part, DJ Muggs says the sample came from neither Prince nor Junior Walker.[7]

Critical reception

About.com's Bill Lamb said that "after one time of hearing this riveting blend of rap and rock, you will likely never forget the sampled saxophone squeal from Jr. Walker and the All Stars that leads off every bar."[8] He also wrote that "for a brief period of time in the 1990s, it seemed that the marriage of edgy rock and hip-hop could actually become a thing. 'Jump Around' is proof that the union could either be incredibly infectious or annoying, depending on one's tolerance for the incessant siren that accompanies the pounding beats."[9] AllMusic editor Rob Theakston described the song as a "dynamite classic".[10] He also added that the "anthem" that got the Irish boys rolling in the first place "still sounds as timeless and energetic nearly a decade along".[11] J.D. Considine for Schenectady, New York's The Daily Gazette noted it as "springy" in his review,[12] and Scott Sterling from The Michigan Daily called it the "most happening track" on the House of Pain album.[13] Bill Wyman from Entertainment Weekly said, "It’s a charging dance number based on a sampled snatch of bagpipe."[14] Another editor, Leah Greenblatt wrote that "the first and only members of hip-hop's Irish-American Thug Life Hall of Fame earned their spot in that (imaginary) pantheon with this killer blast of rapid-fire rap bravado."[15] Brian A. Samson from Gavin Report commented that "this uptempo single provides listeners with what H.O.P. calls "fine malt lyrics." Laced with squeaky buzzes that sounds like of a clarinet played by a novice, the beats should provide for some head-noddin' action."[16]

Across the Atlantic, Dublin-based Evening Herald called it a "compelling single."[17] The Irish Independent said that with it, the group "made a fairly groovy record."[18] NME described the song as "irresistible, the ultimate easy floorfiller, and floor-destroyer."[19] Record Mirror stated that it is an "excellent debut", adding, "built on a chugging Caribbean rhythm, 'Jump Around' features a strong Heavy D-like rap and its popularity is ensured by a chanted chorus with the buzz word 'Jump'. With a sleeve festooned with shamrock leaves and an Irish flag, it seems Tommy Boy may have beaten Talkin' Loud in the race to give us Irish rap."[20] Editor Andy Beevers called it "an infectious bouncy track", adding that lyrically, "their invitation to jump is as aggressive as Kris Kross's was cute."[21] Rupert Howe from Select magazine described it as a "Kris-Kross-with testosterone smash" and added that it is "an impossibly simple freestyle skank that stormed the US billboard big-time."[22]

Chart performance

"Jump Around" was a major hit on the chart globally. In the United States, it peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100, while reaching number 5 on the Billboard Hot Rap Songs and number 17 on the Billboard Billboard Dance Club Songs. In Canada, the single hit number 7 on the RPM Dance/Urban Chart and number 45 on the RPM Singles Chart. In Europe, it managed to climb into the Top 10 in Ireland, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. In the latter, "Jump Around" peaked at number 8 in its second run on the UK Singles Chart, on May 23, 1993.[23] Additionally, it was a Top 30 hit in Belgium and Sweden, as well as on the Eurochart Hot 100, where it hit number 30 in June 1993. In Oceania, the single peaked at number 15 in Australia and number 31 in New Zealand. It earned a gold record in Australia and the UK, with a sale of 35,000 and 400,000 singles. In the US, it earned a platinum record, when 1 million units were sold there.

Music video

The music video for "Jump Around" was filmed during the 1992 New York City Saint Patrick's Day parade. Portions were shot on the parade route as well as in Central Park and Old Town Bar and Restaurant. New York Yankees super fan and Yankee Stadium regular Freddy Schuman can be seen in the parade crowd, ringing his signature shamrock pan near the end of the video.

The video ends with a dedication to the memory of Matt Champy, a friend of the band who died in 1992. "Jump Around" was uploaded to YouTube in July 2017. By September 2020, the video had more than 52.2 million views.[24]

Track listings

  1. "Jump Around (Master Mix)" – 3:37
  2. "Jump Around (DJ Bizznizz Remix)" – 4:06
  3. "Jump Around (Pete Rock Remix)" – 3:56
  4. "House of Pain Anthem (Master Mix)" – 2:35

Charts and certifications

University of Wisconsin–Madison

Students in sections O & P jumping around and dancing in 2014

At home football games at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, students "Jump Around" to the song between the third and fourth quarters. The tradition grew out of the men's varsity swim team members playing it over a portable CD player and broadcasting via a smuggled-in megaphone to sections O and P during the games to rile up those sections. This began in 1992, well before the official start. In March 1997, at a Fraternity party at Delta Tau Delta at midnight the song was played with the football team and members of the future stadium employees and it became the midnight anthem for every party until the end of that year. The "official" start was on Saturday, October 10, 1998, at the Badgers Homecoming game against the Purdue Boilermakers.[52] After no offensive points were scored in the third quarter, and en route to their second 6–0 start of the modern football era, one of the Badgers' marketing agents, who was in charge of sound, piped the song through the loudspeakers.[53] It stirred up fans and players and eventually became a tradition.[53]

However, on September 6, 2003 (the Badgers' first home game of the season), with construction of skyboxes surrounding Camp Randall Stadium, UW officials decided to cancel the "Jump Around" due to worries about structural integrity. Stadium security and the local police department had been informed of this decision but no notification had been given to the fans.[54] When news surfaced on Monday, September 8, that this event was not a technical or human malfunction, but rather a decision by campus officials, the students launched a protest. Petitions circulated and students pushed back against administration. Structural engineers confirmed that the stadium would suffer no structural damage caused by the vibrations created by jumping. Two days later, Chancellor John D. Wiley announced that the "Jump Around" tradition would resume.[55] The song's title is displayed on unofficial Wisconsin Badgers clothing and apparel, along with the credit/debit cards of the university's employee/student/alumni credit union.

Professional wrestlers JC Ice and Wolfie D, collectively known as PG-13 used a censored version of the song as their entrance to the rings.

References

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  2. "Q - 1001 best songs ever (2003)".
  3. "100 Greatest Songs of the '90s". Archived from the original on 2012-02-14.
  4. Simpson, Interviews by Dave (2019-02-12). "How we made Cypress Hill's Insane in the Brain". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 2019-04-23.
  5. "Prince's 'Gett Off' and the 24-year mystery of a hip-hop sample". Newsweek. 2016-05-16. Retrieved 2020-12-27.
  6. Zach Schonfeld (May 16, 2016). "PRINCE'S 'GETT OFF' AND THE 24-YEAR MYSTERY OF AN ICONIC HIP-HOP SAMPLE". Newsweek.
  7. "House of Pain Look Back at 20 Years of 'Jump Around'". SPIN. February 24, 2012.
  8. "Top 10 Pop Songs of 1992". About.com. May 24, 2019. Retrieved March 21, 2020.
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