Английская Википедия:Captain Rapp

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Шаблон:Infobox musical artist

Captain Rapp is the stage name of Larry Earl Glenn, an American hip hop/post-disco musician, producer and West Coast Rap pioneer.[1]

He is best known for his politically conscious song "Bad Times (I Can't Stand It)", which was a West Coast response to Grandmaster Flash's "The Message."[2][3]

History

Glenn's musical career started in 1981 when he was signed to a small indie label called Rappers Rapp Records. His first record, party-oriented, "Gigolo Rapp" was a minor hit on the East Coast yet the record failed in his home state.[1]

In 1983, his most successful single "Bad Times" came out on Saturn Records and reached number 23 on Billboard Dance Charts.[4] The single was arranged and performed by emerging Contemporary R&B moguls Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis.[1] with Rich Cason.

In 1992, Glenn recorded a sequel to his previous hit single, titled "Bad Times, Part 2: The Continuance."[1]

Themes

"Bad Times" lyrically touches sensitive topics, including unemployment, child sexual abuse, AIDS, Salvadoran Civil War and even nuclear war, in contrast to uptempo synth-funk melody and soulful vocals.[5]

The song is a West Coast variant of "The Message" whereas the title is lampooning a name of the most sampled song in hip-hop history, "Good Times" by Chic.[2][3]

Discography

Charts

Year Song Label Chart positions[4]
U.S.
Dance
U.S.
R&B
1981 "The Gigolo Rapp" (with Disco Daddy) Rappers Rapp
1983 "Bad Times" Saturn #23
1984 "When Doves Cry Rapp" Rappers Rapp
1985 "Bite Em" Evejim
1985 "Agony" Evejim

Singles

"Bad Times"
12" / SAT-2003[6]
  1. "Bad Times (I Can't Stand It)" – 6:57
  2. "Bad Times (I Can't Stand It)" (Part 2) –5:34
  3. "Bad Times (I Can't Stand It)" (Part 3) (instrumental) –5:50
  • Label: Saturn
  • Written-by: Larry Earl Glenn
  • Guest singer: Kimberly Ball

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Authority control