The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)

"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" is a house music track by The Bucketheads, released in 1995. "The Bomb!" was later dubbed into the project's sole album All in the Mind. It was a commercial hit in the UK in spring 1995, reaching number 5 on the singles chart, while it peaked in the US at number 49 on the Billboard Hot 100.

"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)"
Single by The Bucketheads
from the album All in the Mind
Released1995[1][2]
Recorded1994
GenreHouse[2]
Length
  • 14:51 (original version)
  • 3:24 (radio edit)
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez
The Bucketheads singles chronology
"Whew"
(1994)
"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)"
(1995)
"Come and Be Gone"
(1995)
Music video
"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" on YouTube

Background and release

Produced by Masters at Work member Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez, and featuring samples from Chicago's "Street Player" from their 1979 album Chicago 13,[3] the subtitle of the song is a mondegreen; the actual lyrics taken from the sample are "Street sounds swirling through my mind..." Also sampled is "The Preacher Man" (1993) by Green Velvet.[4] The accompanying video was featured on the Beavis and Butt-head episode "Prank Call," on January 28, 1996. The track once served as the entrance music for former World bantamweight and featherweight boxing champion Prince Naseem Hamed, and is featured on the soundtrack for the 2010 film The Switch.

Critical reception

AllMusic editor John Bush wrote that the song is a "great-sounding fusion of disco-funk and house that works well" on his review of the All in the Mind album.[5] Larry Flick from Billboard described it as "an unassuming li'l jaunt back in time that is packed with more than a savvy twist or two."[6] He added it as "retro-happy".[7] John Hamilton from Idolator called it a "eccentric" dance track.[8] John Kilgo from The Network Forty noted it as "a perfect "roll down your windows and crank up the sound" tune".[9] Charles Aaron from Spin said that the song as "more than a Box novelty, "The Bomb!" is essential '90s funk, a house party on the last car of the D to the A train winding its way from Brooklyn up to Manhattan's disco meat-packing district with conductor Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez mixing electro, hip-hop, house, and Chicago (the group)."[10]

Chart performance

"The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" was very successful on the charts on several continents, reaching number-one on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play in the United States. In Europe, it was a Top 10 hit in Belgium, France, Iceland (number 2), Ireland, Scotland, Sweden, Switzerland and the United Kingdom. In the latter, the single peaked at number 5 in its second week at the UK Singles Chart, on March 5, 1995.[11] But on the UK Dance Chart, the song was a even bigger hit, reaching number 2. Additionally, it peaked within the Top 20 in Austria, Finland, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain, as well as on the Eurochart Hot 100, where "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" hit number 12 in July 1995. Outside Europe, it also went to number 8 on the RPM Dance/Urban Chart in Canada, number 11 in Australia, number 21 in New Zealand and number 49 on the US Billboard Hot 100. It was awarded with a silver record in France, with a sale of 125,000 singles.

Music video

The music video for "The Bomb!" was directed by Guy Ritchie and Alex De Rakoff on a budget of roughly £1,000, being one of their first music video recordings shot on a Super 8 film camera, inspired by some of the Beastie Boys' music video recording styles.[12][13] It was filmed in London, as can be discerned from the side of the road being driven on with the car's steering wheel on the right side of the car and double-decker buses, and first aired in March 1995.

The video starts off with a black man with an afro waking up because of an alarm clock alongside two blonde haired White women with wavy hair and the other with straight hair, the latter of which gets her hair done into pigtails. After they all get themselves ready to go out to have fun, they walk out of the home and the blonde with pigtails is seen driving through London in a Volkswagen Superbug, which the man with an afro later drives while nodding to the blonde with pigtails, who quickly turns away. The gang are seen walking together through a market area and later go into a record shop where the man with an afro finds a record within the store's inventory of this exact song. They all later leave the record store, walk more through the market area, then the man with an afro departures from the two blondes via a kiss on their cheeks, later entering a nightclub called Carwash.[14] The video was uploaded to YouTube on May 13, 2013. As of November 2020, it has more than 5.8 million views.[15]

Impact and legacy

Mixmag ranked the song number 60 in its 100 Greatest Dance Singles Of All Time list in 1996, adding,

"A quarter of an hour's worth of mirrorball mayhem, Kenny 'Dope' Gonzales' The Bomb is the ultimate disco cutup track. Shatteringly simple, the genius of The Bomb lies in the way it builds up your anticipation with a protracted burst of hard jacking drums and atonal honking before the perfect disco sample soars away into the distance. A massive hit when Positiva licensed it in early 1995, The Bomb kick-started the trend for raiding old disco 12s. Dozens of producers followed its lead, but none of them ever equalled the definitive original article."[16]

DJ Magazine ranked it number 95 in their list of Top 100 Club Tunes in 1998.[17]

Slant Magazine ranked the song 65th in its 100 Greatest Dance Songs list in 2006.[18]

The Guardian featured the song on their A history of modern music: Dance in 2011.[19]

MTV Dance placed "The Bomb!" at #10 in their list of The 100 Biggest 90's Dance Anthems Of All Time in November 2011.[20]

Idolator ranked the song number 34 in their ranking of The 50 Best Pop Singles of 1995 in 2015.[21] John Hamilton commented,

"Who would have predicted that The Karate Kid, Part II balladeer and former lead singer of Chicago, Peter Cetera, would experience a mid-’90s career renaissance as a house music diva? (Not even Miss Cleo!) But that’s exactly what happened when noted remixer/producer Kenny "Dope" Gonzales lifted a vintage slice of Chicago’s "Street Player", dressed it with a funky kick, edited the hell out of the horn section and Cetera’s vocals and turned it all out as "The Bomb!""

BuzzFeed listed the song number 44 in their The 101 Greatest Dance Songs Of the '90s list in 2017.[22]

Mixmag ranked the song as one of The 20 best US rave anthems of the '90s in 2019, adding,

"The Bucketheads is a disco-sampling solo project from NYC dance music legend Kenny "Dope" Gonzalez who is also revered for his work as one half of Masters At Work alongside Louie Vega. Sampling the band Chicago's 1979 track 'Street Player', Kenny Dope created a slick piece of house that forces hands in the air everywhere."[23]

Slant Magazine placed the song at number 48 in their list of The 100 Best Dance Songs of All Time in 2020.[24]

Accolades

Year Publisher Country Accolade Rank
1996 Mixmag United Kingdom "The 100 Best Dance Singles of All Time" 60
1998 DJ Magazine United Kingdom "Top 100 Club Tunes" 95
2006 Slant Magazine United States "100 Greatest Dance Songs" 65
2011 The Guardian United Kingdom "A history of modern music: Dance" *
2011 MTV Dance United Kingdom "The 100 Biggest 90's Dance Anthems of All Time"[25] 10
2015 Idolator United States "The 50 Best Pop Singles of 1995" 34
2015 Robert Dimery United States "1,001 Songs You Must Hear Before You Die, and 10,001 You Must Download (2015 Update)" 1-1001
2017 BuzzFeed United States "The 101 Greatest Dance Songs Of the '90s" 44
2019 Mixmag United Kingdom "The 20 best US rave anthems of the '90s" *
2020 Slant Magazine United States "The 100 Best Dance Songs of All Time" 48

(*) indicates the list is unordered.

Track listings

CD single
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (radio edit) – 3:22
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" – 14:51
CD maxi - UK
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (radio edit) – 3:22
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" – 14:51
  3. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (Armand Van Helden re-edit) – 8:03
CD maxi - U.S.
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (radio edit) – 3:24
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (Kenny Dope remix) – 4:32
  3. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (jinxx remix) – 5:02
  4. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (bonus beats) – 5:06
7" single
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (radio edit) – 3:22
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (Armand Van Helden re-edit) – 8:03
12" maxi 1 - UK
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" – 13:58
  2. "I Wanna Know" – 7:15
  3. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (radio edit) – 3:22
12" maxi 2 - UK
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" – 14:51
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (Armand Van Helden re-edit) – 8:03
  3. "I Wanna Know" – 7:15
12" maxi - US
  1. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (original mix)
  2. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (Johnick Radio Edit)
  3. "The Bomb! (These Sounds Fall into My Mind)" (bonus beats)

Charts and sales

References

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