TOTP 07 FEB 1991

After last week’s car crash of a show and Anthea Turner’s Klu Klux Klan / WTF?! moment, the BBC have got Bruno Brookes on hosting responsibilities this time around. Now Bruno wasn’t immune from the odd gaff himself but he plays it pretty safe for the whole 30 minutes (yes we are back to the full running time again). I wonder if the need for a no controversy show had been impressed upon him by the TOTP producers?

We start with Kim Appleby who is on the follow up trail as she seeks to consolidate on the rather unexpected success of her No 2 hit “Don’t Worry”. Unexpected? Is that fair? Well, when Kim launched her solo career she hadn’t been in the UK charts since the last Mel & Kim hit “That’s The Way It Is” back in early ’88 – an eternity in the world of pop music. Would she have retained her original fan base? In addition, she’d achieved success as part of a duo with her sister, a brand and image that, backed by the dominance of SAW, had won over audiences pretty easily. That combination was now gone after the tragic early death of Mel Appleby – would music fans accept a solo Kim? Indeed, did they want a solo Kim? “Don’t Worry” had succeeded on the strength of it being a quality pop tune delivered by an endearingly enthusiastic yet self doubting Kim. Now the heat was on to prove she could do it again.

The route she and her record label took to replicate that success was to replicate “Don’t Worry” – second single “G.L.A.D” is very similar with one difference – the addition of a rap courtesy of Aswad’s Brinsley Forde. That’s not him top there on stage with Kim though, that’s…actually who is that? Opinion on Twitter is divided. Red Dwarf actor Danny John-Jules maybe? Or Manchester author and poet Lemn Sissay perhaps? Neither seems likely. If I had to guess, I would say Austin Howard from Ellis, Beggs and Howard of “Big Bubbles, No Troubles” fame – at least there’s a music connection there and the timing would be about right.

I thought “G.L.A.D” was pleasant but not as good as its predecessor but its No 10 final chart position was very…erm…respectable. Subsequent single releases though suffered from that dirty trick of diminishing returns and Kim would never return to the Top 10. Perhaps the success of “Don’t Worry” was too much too soon. Would she have been better off with “G.L.A.D” and its attendant level of success as her debut single and “Don’t Worry” as the follow up? We’ll never know I guess. What we do know is what “G.L.A.D” stood for – Good Lovin And Devotion – innit?

Another new song as we see the return of a singer who became a massive star in the second half of the 80s but who had herself been on the brink of tragedy. On 20 March 1990, Gloria Estefan‘s tour bus was rear ended by an 18 wheeler truck causing Gloria to break a vertebra in her back and leaving her close to death. “Coming Out Of The Dark” was the first song she released to the public after the accident and was inspired by that event. As such, it’s hard to be critical of it – how can you deny someone writing a song about their own horrible experience? Not only was it presumably cathartic to Gloria but no doubt it has also been taken to the hearts of many a person struggling to overcome whatever curveballs life had thrown at them. And it sounds so uplifting with that gospel choir raising the spirits. And yet, I have to say that it does sound very similar to all her previous huge ballads doesn’t it? “Can’t Stay Away From You”, “Anything For You”, “Don’t Wanna Lose You”, “Here We Are”…they all conform to a formula. OK, “Coming Out Of The Dark” is differentiated a bit by that gospel element – I’ll give it that. The single was yet another No 1 for Gloria in the US but it struggled to a peak of No 25 over here but parent album “Into The Light” was a platinum seller in the UK.

Bruno Brookes does reference Gloria’s accident in his segue but straining under the responsibility of not saying anything controversial he goes too far the other way and says this:

“Of course Gloria’s back now to perfect health… which is nice”

Which is nice?! Bruno channeling his inner Fast Show there…

An interesting choice of words in Bruno’s next intro as he references one Nigel Wright and describes him as the man responsible for the likes of Bombalurina and Yell. ‘Responsible for’ implies an element of blame here it seems to me and for once Bruno is right – Bombalurina and Yell were certainly not acts to be celebrated. Brookes goes on to say that this Wright bloke is also responsible for the next act which is The UK Mixmasters and a track called “Night Fever Megamix”. I don’t need to explain this one do I? It pretty much did what it said on the tin. Yes, having just had a Grease mega mix in the Top 5, what was the obvious move to cash in on this trend? A Saturday Night Fever medley of course! Was this John Travolta month or something? The single contained five Bee Gees disco anthems all featured in the film plus “Disco Inferno” by The Trammps. The whole thing was a…ahem…tragedy, just a horrible Jive Bunny style desperate cash grab. The video follows that template as well just being a montage of some vintage Harold Lloyd style clips and very early cartoon animations. Hell, even the act’s name is a direct rip off – surely they could have put some more imagination into it than just calling themselves The UK Mixmasters?

If you wanted to hear the Bee Gees at their disco-tastic. best, then you would just buy the Saturday Night Fever soundtrack no? Even the usually gullible UK record buying public rumbled this one and it would go no further in the charts than No 23.

What have they done to the chart run down?! They’re only name checking this records in the Top 40 that are going up or are new entries?! Why?! How much time can that have saved them to ignore singles going down the charts? Surely not enough to squeeze in another whole song? The completists on Twitter were in uproar about this change and whilst I’m hardly apoplectic with rage myself, I do think they have a point unlike this change which does seem to be pointless. Anyway, on we go and one of the lucky artists to be going up the charts is Oleta Adams with “Get Here”. We had, of course, been introduced to Oleta via her work with Tears For Fears on their “The Seeds Of Love” album and more specifically the “Woman In Chains” single. Roland Orzabal kept up the connection by producing third album “Circle Of One” from which “Get Here” came. I’m not sure how I became aware of this but I soon found out that the song was actually originally written and performed by Brenda Russell of “Piano in the Dark” fame. I dug out Brenda’s version at work one day and guess what, Oleta’s version sounds almost exactly the same!

OK, Oleta’s version has a less laid back feel to it and she’s gone a bit Whitney Houston on the vocals to make it sound more dramatic but even so.

After discussing some of the improbable songs blacklisted by the BBC in the wake of the Gulf War crisis, it turns out that “Get Here” would also become associated with the conflict but in a positive way as it was adopted as an anthem for US troops missing their families. There’s even a lyric in it which says “You can reach me by caravan Cross the desert like an Arab man”. I have to say that it does seem ludicrous that the BBC deemed “Boom Bang-a-Bang” by Lulu as unpalatable and banned it but “Get Here”, with its Gulf war links, was not seen as a problem.

Anyway, I can’t deny that it’s a sincerely nice song and I liked it enough at the time. It went Top 5 in both the US and the UK while Oleta’s “Circle Of One” album would soar to No 1 over here. For a time she looked like being the next big soul/pop singer but subsequent releases would never get her here again.

It’s The Simpsons next with “Do The Bartman”. This is the second time it’s been on the show already and it hasn’t even got to No 1 yet and it’ll spend 3 weeks at the top of the charts so we haven’t finished with this nonsense by a long chalk.

The parent album “The Simpsons Sing The Blues” understandably didn’t get much airplay on the shop stereo of the Our Price store I was working in so I’ve never understood until now that it featured The Simpsons voice actors actually doing versions of proper blues songs originally recorded by blues legends like Albert King and Billie Holiday! The album went Top 10 in the UK and Top 3 in the US. It would soon became the fastest-selling album to emerge from a TV show since the Miami Vice soundtrack in 1985. If it wasn’t mutant ninja turtles clogging up the charts it was this lot! Doh!

Next a man who I developed an irrational hatred of back in 1991 for no discernible reason and of which I am now perplexed and indeed embarrassed by. Quite why the amiable Kenny Thomas and his inoffensive mainstream soul singles promoted such indignation and contempt within the 22 year old me, I do not know. Let me watch his performance of his single “Outstanding” back and see if it rekindles anything. See you in 3 minutes or so….

…no, no idea why I was so outraged at his commercial success. I mean, he has a decent enough voice and his lack of an image (plain dark suit over a black shirt) suggested that he wasn’t interested in being a pop star and was more about getting his music out there. Ah yes, the music. Well, “Outstanding” wasn’t actually his song although (as with The Simpsons earlier) I didn’t realise that until now. It was actually an old Gap Band song that had missed the charts back in ’82. Was it his sound that I objected so vehemently to? I can’t lie that I did find it fairly bland but it was hardly Jive Bunny grade crimes against music.

1991 would turn out to be Kenny’s annus mirabilis – “Outstanding” was a No 12 hit, his album “Voices” went Top 3 and follow up single “Thinking About Your Love” would make it to No 4. He continued to score smaller chart hits into the 90s but it had all pretty much run its course by the time Britpop came along. It turns out that Kenny is actually a completely stand up guy who has had to deal with his young daughter having a brain tumour (he has raised thousands of pounds for her ongoing treatment). He is currently the singer with 80s band Living In A Box replacing original vocalist Richard Derbyshire as the group continues to perform on the nostalgia circuit. In the unlikely event that Kenny is reading this, I apologise for my completely unwarranted dislike of you back in 1991…although I still think “Outstanding” is dull.

The TOTP producers are still committed to this best selling albums of the month feature so here’s the list for Jan 1991:

  1. Madonna – The Immaculate Collection

2. Elton John – The Very Best Of Elton John

3. Enigma – MCMXC A.D.

4. Whitney Houston – I’m Your Baby Tonight

5. Phil Collins – Serious Hits Live

Alongside the changes to the singles chart run own, there is a small tweak to this section as well as curiously there is no voice over from the host. I don’t really see why this change was made apart from for the obvious benefit of shutting Bruno Brookes up for a couple of minutes.

Next up are New Kids On The Block who, contrary to my recall, were still having hits after 1990. I thought that the spell they had held over the world’s female teenagers had ended Cinderella-esque as soon as the clock struck 12 to usher in a new year but no. Here they were back in our charts with a single called “Games”. This was taken from their “No More Games: The Remix Album” which, fairly obviously, was a collection of remixes of their previous hits. It wasn’t just an exercise in squeezing as much out of the cash cow as possible though. The band were sensing that their popularity may be on the wane and saw this album as a chance to beef up their sound and update their image. To this end, they promoted it under the ‘NKOTB’ acronym, thereby dispensing with the word ‘kids’ from their name. Alongside the image change came the for new sound which was meant to demonstrate a harder edge to them and realign them with a more mature fanbase. “Games” was a rap heavy funk work out with the lyrics written to prove the the boys were the real deal…

‘Cause we’re five bad brothers from the bean town land
No sell out
So get the hell out
We do it our way
Who gives a damn about what critics say?

Well, quite. They go on to say that they’re kicking ass and calling non-believers out there suckers! Ooh! Get them! I think they believed that this made them sound hard like Public Enemy but they were more Vanilla Ice than LL Cool J. The single did OK peaking at No 14 over here but it was also their first to miss the Top 10 in the UK. By Xmas they would be releasing a proper Best Of album called “H.I.T.S.” that would stall at No 50 in the charts. Roll on the end of the year.

From rap (sort of) to crap. There really is very little to commend “Wiggle It” by 2 In A Room for. A terrible, repetitive record promoted by a video which is basically some gratuitous arse shots of various women ‘wiggling it’ on a beach. Its legacy, if you can describe the following as such, was that it was covered by Alvin and the Chipmunks for their album “The Chipmunks Rock The House” and that it has featured on various compilation albums including one entitled “Strip Jointz: Hot Songs For Sexy Dancers” and one called simply “Monster Booty”. Their Mums must have been very proud.

“Wiggle It” peaked at No 3.

The last week at the top for The KLF with “3 a.m. Eternal”. After the infamous Anthea incident of last week, the clip the TOTP producers have chosen to show is from an earlier appearance and not the KKK / KLF one. Should we read anything into that? Did the BBC receive complaints? Or were they just trying to convince us all that it had never really happened in the first place by expunging it from the show’s history?

Whatever the truth, the BBC were definitely going to tread carefully in future. When the band released a limited edition mail order only single in January ’92 containing a new version of the song featuring heavy metal hardcore punk band Extreme Noise Terror called the “Christmas Top of the Pops 1991” version as they had hoped to perform it on the festive year retrospective, the Beeb declined. Undeterred, the band would create huge controversy when they performed it at the BRIT Awards ceremony in February 1992. Yep, it’s this one with the machine guns…

Quite extraordinary and quite the WTF?! moment. Although the declaration at the end of the performance by the band’s promoter Scott Piering that “The KLF have now left the music business”, it was treated as a prank at the time but 4 months later Bill Drummond and Jimmy Cauty confirmed that they had indeed retired from the music business and that their back catalogue would be deleted with immediate effect. Nearly 30 years would pass before the band would make versions of their music available to streaming services. Talk about courage of your convictions.

The play out video is a huge dance tune, one so big in fact that it has been a chart hit (in different mixes and for various artists) four separate times over the years. The Source were a songwriting team comprising Anthony B. Stephens, Arnecia Michelle Harris and John Bellamy and they collaborated with soul / disco legend Candi Staton to produce “You Got The Love” which floundered to a high of No 95 on its original release way back in 1986. Five years later and with a legendary house DJ and producer Frankie Knuckles adding some magic into the mix, it catapulted up the charts before resting at No 4. Six years later it went one better when a New Voyager mix brought it to a new generation of clubbers but it didn’t stop there as it even pulled in the sales into the new millennium when a Shapeshifters mix returned it to the Top 10. Got all that? Good because the story didn’t even end there as in 2009 it was covered by Florence and the Machine who scored a Top 5 hit with it. Phew!

It’s this 1991 version though that remains definitive for me. I remember covering downstairs on the singles floor one lunchtime and couldn’t believe the amount of 12″s of it that we were selling. Was it even released in a 7″ format? I can’t recall now. I was definitely not a dance head but even I could appreciate that this was a tune and it routinely appears in those Best Dance Singles of all time polls. How could it not?

For posterity’s sake, I include the chart run down below:

Order of appearanceArtistTitleDid I Buy it?
1Kim ApplebyG.L.A.D.I did not
2Gloria Estefan Coming Out Of the DarkNope
3The UK MixmastersNight Fever MegamixCertainly not
4Oleta AdamsGet HereLiked it but not enough to buy it
5The SimpsonsDo The BartmanExcuse me? NO!
6Kenny ThomasOutstandingI thought it was anything but back then – sorry Kenny!
7NKOTBGames I would have been ashamed
82 In A RoomWiggle ItHell no!
9The KLF3 am EternalThought I might have but it seems I didn’t
10The Source featuring Candi StatonYou Got The LoveSee 9 above

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m000wn3k/top-of-the-pops-07021991

TOTP 24 JAN 1991

A truncated edition of the show this week  – the BBC seemed to have lopped 5 minutes off it which means no play out video after the No 1 single and no Breakers. I’m guessing this is to do with additional news coverage of the continuing Gulf War. It is, however, back in its usual Thursday time slot. The host tonight is Simon Mayo who I am beginning to find increasingly smug and annoying – whether I felt like this at the time or not, I don’t know. 

There’s a definite theme of recycling in this TOTP as we start with a song that was originally a Top 10 hit for Patrice Rushen back in 1982. “Forget Me Nots” was given the UK electro dance treatment 9 years later by Tongue ‘N’ Cheek to very little effect and with very little just cause to my ears. This seemed to be a desperate attempt to grind out another Top 40 hit after their last single “Nobody” had failed to consolidate on their breakthrough hit “Tomorrow”. It doesn’t seem to add that much to the original but would be part of a brief movement of old songs given the dance treatment around this time (see also Quartz doing Carole King’s “It’s Too Late”). Although it secured them a No 26 hit, it would be the last time Tongue ‘N’ Cheek appeared in the Top 40 and they would split soon after. However, “Forget Me Nots” would go onto have a life way beyond its dalliance with Tongue ‘N’ Cheek. It was sampled by George Michael for his 1996 No 1 single “Fastlove” and also by Will Smith the following year for his chart topper “Men In Black”.

After the recycling of “Forget Me Nots” a few times over comes Robert Palmer doubling down on his green credentials by regenerating not one but two Marvin Gaye numbers into a whole new song of its own. “Mercy Mercy Me / “I Want You” would be Palmer’s last ever Top 10 hit in the UK and whilst his back catalogue includes some wonderful songs , I’m not sure if that ever translated into the chart success they deserved. Looking at his discography, he had 12 Top 40 Uk hits (if you include his work with The Power Station) of which 5 were Top 10. It’s not a bad haul but when you consider his music career spanned nearly 40 years and took in 14 studio albums until his death in 2003, it maybe doesn’t seem that much either. Throw in the possibility that, for many people, he’s just the “Addicted To Love” guy and it seems an outright injustice.

There always seemed to be more attention on his sartorial style than his music it seemed to me. For example, in 1989 he received two Brit Awards nominations but won neither yet he did top a Rolling Stone magazine poll for the best-dressed rock star of 1990. This is reinforced by Simon Mayo’s description of him in his intro as ‘Mr Suit’ and ‘Mr Smooth’ and even ‘a singing version of Robert Kilroy -Silk'(remember him?!). “Mercy Mercy Me / “I Want You” peaked at No 9 and I’m guessing this Robert’s final TOTP appearance. Thanks for the memories Bob.

Next a song that must have been the bane of many a young woman’s life back in 1991. How many of the nation’s female population had to endure having ‘wiggle it, just a little bit’ shouted at them as they went about their business by lairy neanderthal men around this time? I know of at least one who had this happen to them. 2 In A Room were the architects of this nonsense and “Wiggle It” would become a No 3 hit in the UK. Only in Australia did it chart so high on the national chart. Hmm.

Inevitably, the video features lots of bikini clad ladies…erm…wiggling it on the beach whilst a male counterpart (who looks very much like Jerry Seinfeld) gets the exact opposite treatment of being fully covered up by being buried in the sand. Once again, hmm. I genuinely thought until this moment that the lyrics were ‘wiggle it just a little bit, I wanna see you wiggle it just a little bit ACID GROOVE!’ but it turns out that they’re singing ‘as it grooves’ and not ‘acid groove’. I’m not sure which makes more sense to be honest but then how do you make any sense of this piece of garbage?

It may be a new decade but we haven’t left novelty records back in the 80s. After the ghastly Bombalurina last year comes The Simpsons with “Do The Bartman”. I’m pretty sure I didn’t know much about The Simpsons back in 1991. For a start it had only been on UK television for less than 6 months by this point and even then it was only on Sky which hardly any of us had. We certainly didn’t in our little rented flat. It would take another 6 years before the show became available on terrestrial TV. It seems unimaginable now, so much a part of our cultural lives have Homer, Bart, Maggie and the rest become but this was genuinely the case back then.

My first introduction to them being this record didn’t bode well. It didn’t even seem that funny to me but then I had never seen the show nor know its characters. And why were they all yellow? A bigger question was how on earth did it get to No1 in the UK? It wasn’t just a matter of taste – genuinely, how did a novelty record from an American TV show that most of the population almost certainly didn’t have access to top the charts? There was no internet or streaming services back then either remember. Most novelty records that have been successful have not been imports – “Ernie (The Fastest Milkman in the West)”, Orville The Duck, Grange Hill (a UK TV show of course)….I’m sure there must be loads of others. “Do The Bartman” seemed to be a different beast. It was taken from an album called “The Simpsons Sing The Blues” which would spawn another Top 10 hit in “Deep Deep Trouble” later in the year. Oh deep, deep joy.

I’ve still got very little to say about Off-Shore and “I Can’t Take The Power” not least because I hardly remember it. I did post the theory last time it was on about whether it was meant to be some sort of repost to Snap!’s ‘The Power” and that’s given a bit more credence by this tweet from @TOTPfacts:

And then this one aswell:

Listening to this back, it really is very repetitive. It’s just that cut and paste sample over and over again to an Italian House piano riff backing. It’s like they hardly put any effort into it at all and it doesn’t lend to self to a studio performance. No wonder TOTP had to intercut it with bits of the official promo video to make it even slightly watchable. Off-Shore – they couldn’t take the power but they did take the piss.

Simon Mayo seems to slip in an unofficial plug for a non BBC product at the song’s end when he says you can find the lyrics to the Off-Shore song in No 1 magazine. That wasn’t in the rules surely? He then follows it up with some cryptic clue about a vocal performance from a Radio 1 DJ on the next song which is “Can I Kick It?” by A Tribe Called Quest. According to Mayo, it’s Pete Tong who says A Tribe Called Quest towards the end of the song. Is that right?

*checks internet*

Huh – seems it is according to Wikipedia anyway:

In the official Boilerhouse mix of the song, the name of the band “A Tribe Called Quest”, is spoken by the British radio DJ Pete Tong

If you want a story about spoken word samples on “Can I Kick It?” though, this takes some beating:

Apparently it’s from the kids cartoon SuperTed in which Jon Pertwee voiced a character called Spotty although the twitteratti can’t agree for sure. Also, the comment about not believing Wikipedia puts some doubt on the Pete Tong claim for me. Anyway, all of this shouldn’t distract from how good the track is. Another example of recycling with its heavy use of Lou Reed’s “Walk On The Wild Side” it also, inevitably due to its title, led to it being used in many a footballing montage and indeed advertising campaign beginning with this one from Nike in 1992:

The success of “Can I Kick It?” led to a previous single from their album being re-released in “I Left My Wallet in El Segundo” which was pretty cool too but it failed to get anywhere near the Top 40 peaking at No 86. A Tribe Called Quest would not have another UK Top 40 single for five long years.

I’m not sure what was more shocking about Rick Astley‘s 1991 comeback – his new sound exemplified by the gospel tinged ballad “Cry For Help” or his long hair! I mean, just look at it! Where had that boy next door, preppy look gone?! Apparently he hadn’t had a haircut for over a year by this point – always ahead of the game Rick, modelling lockdown hair 30 years before it was a thing.

What about his song though? Sure it was different but was it any good? Well, I thought so and so did my wife who bought it. It was also a wise move in my book – if you’re the biggest pop star in the country and you just walk away from it for a whole two years without so much as a by your leave, then when you come back, you better have come up with something new in the intervening time. For my money, he would have looked ridiculous making a comeback with “Never Gonna Give You Up Part II”. “Cry For Help” was written by Astley with Rob Fisher (one half of both Naked Eyes and Climie Fisher) whilst all but three of the parent album album’s tracks were either written or co-written by him. That album was called “Free” and seeing as he had totally ditched his association with Stock, Aitken and Waterman for the project, you don’t need many guesses to work out what the title was referring to. The single and album would go Top 10 but it was a short lived revival. Subsequent singles failed to chart and although the album reached gold status, it was a far cry (for help) from his multi platinum SAW heydays.

I think I’ve worked out what has been annoying me retrospectively about Simon Mayo – it’s his continuous banging on about how any breaking chart hit had been the Breakfast Show ‘Record of the Week’. He makes that claim for Rick Astley in this show but has also done it loads of times previously. ‘Ooh look at me – I’m in it for the music really and not the fame and profile’ seems to be his message. Yeah, whatever mate.

Right, as its a shortened show, the final song of the evening is the No 1 and it’s not only new to the top spot but it’s gone straight in on its first week of sales. This had happened just a handful of times in the 80s and it still was hardly a regular occurrence by the early 90s. By the end of the decade however it would be a weekly occurrence due to heavy record company discounting. “Innuendo” was the title track of Queen‘s final album to be released in Freddie Mercury’s lifetime and it was pretty much…bonkers. I mean seriously, it sounded all over the place to me. Can you imagine the conversations in the jam session which led to its creation?

“I’ve got a great idea for a Boléro themed opening”

“Oh well, if we’re going down that route, I vote for a flamenco guitar breakdown but it has to be performed by Steve Howe from Yes”

“Look, you can have what you want in it but it must be 6 and a half minutes long”

Just your typical song composition really! Did I like it? Not much. Its complex structure brought inevitable comparisons with “Bohemian Rhapsody” but I’ve never been a fan of that either. Before the end of the year, Freddie would be gone and “Bohemian Rhapsody” would be at No 1 all over again. Oh and if I thought “Innuendo” was bonkers, then the point was really hammered home with the title of their next single -“I’m Going Slightly Mad”.

Order of appearance ArtistTitleDid I buy it?
1Tongue ‘N’ Cheek Forget Me Nots Nope
2Robert PalmerMercy Mercy Me / I Want YouNo but it’s on My Best of CD of his
32 In A RoomWiggle ItA massive no
4The SimpsonsDo The BartmanGive over
5Off-ShoreI Can’t Take The PowerNope
6A Tribe Called Quest Can I Kick It?Though I maybe did but apparently not
7Rick AstleyCry For HelpNo but my wife did
8QueenInnuendoNah

Disclaimer

I make no claim to the rights of this show and all ownership and contents including logos and graphics belongs totally to the BBC or copyright holder(s).

All opinions on the music and artists featured are my own. Sorry if you don’t agree.