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Cha Cha Cha (song)

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Wikipedia article


{{Infobox song

| name = Cha Cha Cha

| cover = File:Cha Cha Cha MC Lyte Single.webp

| alt =

| type = single

| artist = MC Lyte

| album = Eyes on This

| B-side = Housepower

| released = September 8, 1989

| recorded = 1989

| studio =

| genre = Golden age hip hop

| length = 3:02

| label = First Priority, Atlantic Records

| writer = Freddie Byrd

| producer = King Of Chill

| prev_title = I'm Not Havin' It

| prev_year = 1989

| next_title = Stop, Look, Listen

| next_year = 1990

| misc =

}}

'Cha Cha Cha' is the lead single from MC Lyte's second album 'Eyes on This'. Produced by King Of Chill, who also has songwriting credits, it was released on September 8, 1989.

The song stayed 18 weeks on the recently created Billboard Hot Rap Singles and became one of the first songs to peak at  1 on that chart, staying there for two weeks in December 1989. Although MC Lyte had already reached #1 on Rap chart a few months earlier with the collaborative single "Self Destruction", this was the first time that a woman had achieved it as the lead artist. In turn, it would also become Lyte's first appearance on the 'Billboard' Hot R&B/Hip-Hop (then called "Billboard Hot Black Singles"), peaking  35.

In 2008 "Cha Cha Cha" was  54 on VH1's '100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop' list and Lil' Kim performed a rewritten version on her mixtape, 'Ms. G.O.A.T.'Thomas, p. 192.

Conception and composition



Although the song's credits only feature King of Chill as the songwriter, MC Lyte stated that they wrote the song together:

Also comment about the lyrics:

Samples

The song contains samples of Four Tops's "I Can't Live Without You" bass part, Kraftwerk's "The Man-Machine" lead synth part, Funkadelic's "Good Old Music"'s drum, Cerrone's "Rocket in the Pocket"'s drum, and The Fearless Four's "Rockin' It" hook. The song also has a vocal interpolation of herself on "Kickin' 4 Brooklyn" from her debut album.

Music video



The music video for the song, directed by Tamra Davis, was filmed in August 1989 on Randall's Island, New York City. In the video, shot almost entirely in black and white, Lyte is shown alongside her bodyguard, her DJ K-Rock, and her dancers Leg One and Leg Two.

It was included on her compilation video album 'Lyte Years' (1991).

Appearances



"Cha Cha Cha" was included in his compilation albums The Very Best of MC Lyte (2001), 'The Shit I Never Dropped' (2003), 'Rhyme Masters' (2005), 'Rhino Hi-Five: MC Lyte' (2007), 'Cold Rock a Party - Best Of MC Lyte' (2019) and on the EastWest Maxi-Single "Lyte Of A Decade" (1996).

In the fall of 1991 she performed the song at the Pay-per-view TV concert ' Sisters In The Name of Rap'.

The song was performed by Da Brat and Remy Ma at the MC Lyte tribute at the 2006 VH1 Hip Hop Honors.

The song was also featured on the soundtrack of the video game 'Grand Theft Auto IV' on the fictional in-game station "The Classics 104.1".

In October 2008 she performed "Cha Cha Cha" at the BET Hip Hop Awards.

In October 14, 2014, MC Lyte performed this song to President Barack Obama in the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the legislation that created the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Legacy and influence



In his book 'Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture' (2007) writer Mickey Hess commented on the song "is an early example of her competing not as a female MC, but as an MC. In this song, she includes the audience as part of her battle strategy. Unlike some of her other songs in which she attacks a rapper or a crew of rappers, this song is a general warning to her competition. Considered an ultimate dis song, Lyte references hip hop and lyricism as if it is a science, a complex skill that few have mastered. The song does not have violent images, yet delivers punishment. The defeat for competitors is in the realization that they are not smart enough to outwit her."

In 2009, PopMatters's Quentin B. Huff reviewed the song in his note "I still love H.E.R. (and so should everyone else)", commenting:

Jack White revealed the song as the primary inspiration behind his 2014 Grammynominated song "Lazaretto".

In October 2019, on the 30th anniversary of its release, 'Albumism's Jesse Ducker reviewed "Eyes of This," in which he commented that "Cha Cha Cha" is one of the best songs Lyte has ever released. Though the beat intentionally evokes old school hip-hop, sampling The Fearless Four's "Rockin' It" synthesizer-based loop and the drum/guitar break from Cerrones "Rocket In the Pocket", it still feels futuristic even three decades later."

Accolades



Samples

*In 1999, it was sampled by Ugly Duckling on "Get on This" from their EP 'Fresh Mode'.

*In 2002 "Cha Cha Cha" was sampled in 7L & Esoteric's second EP release, 'Dangerous Connection', on a track called "Word Association".

*In 2003 it was interpolated by Da Brat on the track "Who I Am" from her fourth album 'Limelite, Luv & Niteclubz'.

*In 2004 it was interpolated by Shawnna on the track "Kick This One" from her debut album 'Worth tha Weight'.

*In February 2008, Rick Ross makes an interpolation to Cha Cha Cha in his collaboration with T-Pain on "The Boss", in which he says '"I'm the biggest boss that you seen thus far"' in reference to the line'"I'm the dopest female that you ' ve heard thus far"'.

*In June 2008 Lil' Kim rewrites "Cha Cha Cha" for her song "Ms. G.O.A.T." from her homonym mixtape album. Among the modifications that his version had, in the first verse Lil 'Kim sings '"Do my thing with an '89 swing/The dopeness I write, I guarantee delight/To the hip-hop maniac, the Uptown brainiac/In full effect, MC Lyte is back"' changing it to '"Shake my thing all the boys start to sing/Shawty is a ten, think about me in his dreams/Nymphomanic, head like a brainiac/For those who slept Lil' Kim is back"'.

Single track listing



7" Vinyl

A-Side



# "Cha Cha Cha" (3:00)

B-Side



# "Housepower" (3:50)

12" Vinyl

A-Side



# "Cha Cha Cha" (3:00)

# "Cha Cha Cha" (Instrumental) (3:00)

B-Side



# "Housepower (12" Mix)" (11:42)

Cassette

A-Side



# "Cha Cha Cha" (3:00)

# "Housepower" (11:42)

B-Side



# "Cha Cha Cha" (3:00)

# "Housepower" (11:42)

Personnel



Credits are taken from the liner notes.

*Producer, Mixed By, Lyrics By, Music By King of Chill

*Mastered By Dennis King (D.K.)

*Executive-Producer Nat Robinson

Charts



See also



* List of Billboard number-one rap singles of the 1980s and 1990s

References



Category:Songs written by MC Lyte

Category:MC Lyte songs

Category:1989 singles

Category:Music videos directed by Tamra Davis

Category:1989 songs

Category:Atlantic Records singles

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