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Rump Shaker (song)

"Rump Shaker"
Rump Shaker.jpg
Single by Wreckx-n-Effect featuring Teddy Riley
from the album Hard or Smooth
Released August 25, 1992
Format Vinyl, CD, cassette
Recorded April–May 1992
Genre Dirty rap, new jack swing
Length 5:13
Label MCA
Writer(s) Teddy Riley, Aqil Davidson, Pharrell Williams, David Wynn, Anton Hollins, Darren Curry, Markell Riley, Michael McEwan, Eldra DeBarge, Randy DeBarge, Etterlene DeBarge
Producer(s) Teddy Riley, Ty Fyffe, Aqil Davidson, Markell Riley 1, David Wynn
Wreckx-n-Effect singles chronology
"NewJack Swing"
(1989)
"Rump Shaker"
(1992)
"Knock-N-Boots"
(1993)

"Rump Shaker" is a song by American hip-hop group Wreckx-N-Effect. It was released in August 1992 as the lead single from their second album Hard or Smooth. It features production and guest vocals from Teddy Riley, brother of Wreckx member Markell Riley.

Due to the massive success of Whitney Houston's version of "I Will Always Love You," the song would advance to No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100, and No. 2 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks. Nevertheless, it peaked at No. 1 on the Hot Rap Singles, and No. 9 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play.

The chorus of the 2008 single, "Paper Planes" by British musician M.I.A. was widely speculated to be based on the chorus, although the song's writers are not credited.

"Rump Shaker" is built on a saxophone sample from the 1972 song "Darkest Light" by Lafayette Afro Rock Band and a drum sample from "Midnight Theme" by Manzel. Other samples include "Scratchin'" by the Magic Disco Machine and "Blues and Pants" by James Brown (the vocal "come on!"). Riley's "Rump Shaker (Teddy 2)" remix adds a bass and piano sample from "Blind Alley" by The Emotions. Additionally, Teddy Riley's verse includes an allusion to the 1982 song "I Like It" by DeBarge, with the lines, "I like the way you comb you hair, I like the stylish clothes you wear, it's just the little things you do...".

The song opens with Teddy Riley chanting the chorus "All I wanna do is zooma-zoom-zoom-zoom in a poom-poom." Subsequent verses are rapped by Aqil Davidson, Teddy Riley, and Markell Riley. Teddy Riley's verse is notable for being written by his young protégé Pharrell Williams, later to achieve fame as a member of The Neptunes and a solo artist. It was rumored that Pharrell, along with fellow future-Neptune Chad Hugo, contributed additional production work, but producer Ty Fyffe stated in a 2011 interview that he and Teddy Riley alone produced the song and that Pharrell's only contribution was lyrical.


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