"Freak like Me" | ||||||||||
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File:Freak Like Me.jpg | ||||||||||
Single by Adina Howard | ||||||||||
from the album Do You Wanna Ride? | ||||||||||
Released | January 25, 1995 | |||||||||
Format | CD single, vinyl single | |||||||||
Recorded | 1994 | |||||||||
Genre | R&B, hip hop soul | |||||||||
Length | 4:13 | |||||||||
Label | East West, Lola Waxx | |||||||||
Writer(s) | Eugene Hanes, Marc Valentine, Loren Hill, William 'Bootsy' Collins, George Clinton Jr., Gary Lee Cooper, Alita Carter, Kim Spikes, Livio Harris | |||||||||
Producer | Mass Order | |||||||||
Certification | Platinum | |||||||||
Adina Howard singles chronology | ||||||||||
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"Freak like Me" is the first single from Adina Howard's 1995 debut album Do You Wanna Ride?. Like Howard's image, the song can be best described as hypersexual. It reached #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 and was certified platinum by the RIAA.
The song's chorus is a lyrical interpolation of the verses found in Bootsy Collins' "I'd Rather Be With You". While the lyrics in "Freak like Me"'s chorus are different from the Bootsy Collins song, they are sung in identical melody. The song's drum beat is sampled from Sly & the Family Stone's "Sing a Simple Song." The song returned to public awareness when covered by British pop group Sugababes in a production by Richard X.
The song and her hypersexual image is considered groundbreaking in the U.S. R&B/Hip-Hop scene, it portrayed female hip-hop singers more aggressive rather than coy in their sexuality, in a manner that was feminine unlike the female hip-hop artists of before who dressed in men's apparel to express their aggressive image (i.e. MC Lyte). This new, hypersexual image would pave the way for upcoming R&B/Hip-Hop female artists like Foxy Brown and Lil' Kim; in addition, it allowed other artists to become more comfortable in releasing more explicit lyrical content that their previous images would not be associated with. Examples of this are Toni Braxton's "You're Makin' Me High" and Monifah's "Touch It".
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The original music video was directed by Hype Williams.
Peak positions [link]
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End of year charts [link]
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"Freak Like Me" | ||||||||||
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File:Dontchafreaklikme.JPG | ||||||||||
Single by Sugababes | ||||||||||
from the album Angels with Dirty Faces | ||||||||||
B-side | "Breathe Easy" | |||||||||
Released | April 22, 2002 | |||||||||
Format | CD single, vinyl single, digital download |
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Recorded | London, England | |||||||||
Genre | Electronica, R&B, urban, mashup | |||||||||
Length | 3:14 | |||||||||
Label | Island | |||||||||
Writer(s) | Eugene Hanes, Marc Valentine, Loren Hill, William Collins, George Clinton, Gary Numan | |||||||||
Producer | Richard X | |||||||||
Certification | Silver (BPI)[2] | |||||||||
Sugababes singles chronology | ||||||||||
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In 2001, English girl group the Sugababes covered "Freak Like Me". Their version, however, used a completely different backing track (sampled from Gary Numan and Tubeway Army's "Are 'Friends' Electric?") and used the radio edit lyrics of Howard's song (the word "brother" is used instead of the word "nigga"). Numan was now credited as a co-writer of the song.
The Sugababes-recorded version was originally a bootleg mashup titled "We Don't Give a Damn About Our Friends," created by producer Richard X under the alias Girls on Top. Richard X created the mashup without the permission of the copyright holders of the songs, but it became a successful underground dance track. After failing to gain permission to use Adina Howard's vocals for a commercial release, the Sugababes were chosen by Richard X to record them instead.
The sound effect featured at the beginning of the song is the coin-insert tone from the popular 1981 video game Frogger. (The sound was also used to begin the song "Froggy's Lament," about the video game itself, on Buckner and Garcia's Pac-Man Fever album.)
The song appeared on the Sugababes' second studio album, Angels with Dirty Faces. It was produced by Richard X and received rave reviews from music critics. It was released as the first single from the album, in the spring of 2002 and reached number one in the United Kingdom (where it sold 275,871 copies), number two in Ireland, and number four in Norway. "Freak like Me" was the first single to feature vocals by Heidi Range, after the departure from the Sugababes of Siobhán Donaghy in 2001. The song also appears on Richard X's album, Richard X Presents His X-Factor Vol. 1.
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The music video was directed by Dawn Shadforth and Sophie Muller and was filmed in London. The video is set in a strange nightclub, and acts as an introduction for the recent addition of Heidi Range. It begins outside the nightclub with a man tumbling down the stairs, Keisha Buchanan in a long coat, seen only from below the knee, walking out of a door, over the man's body and up the stairs. Mutya Buena is seen standing on the stairs facing the direction where the man is lying. Inside, they spot Range dancing and flirting with many guys. They both quickly clash with her, and a fight between them ensues, which ends with Range falling to the floor unconscious. A man tries to help her up, but Buena grabs him by the neck and throws him away from her. Range then wakes up again soon after, and stumbles out of the club with another man, where they begin to kiss, until she suddenly bites hard into his arm.
Meanwhile, Buchanan takes a man outside, and she leads him into a dark alley, where they flirt briefly, before she scares him away. Buena then goes outside as well, and overpowers a man who towers over her. The music video ends with Buchanan and Buena accepting Range into the group, and dancing into the night. The demonstrations of supernatural strength shown throughout the video and Range biting the man on the arm are generally understood to imply that the woman are vampire-like "freaks", as the song suggests.
The video uses the We Don't Give a Damn Mix of the song, which is more faithful to the original mash-up.
British actor Julian Morris stars in the music video as one of the boys running from Buena.
On April 22, 2002, "Freak like Me" was released in the United Kingdom. The song became Sugababes' first number one single when it debuted at number one on the singles chart, remaining in the top ten for four weeks. The single remains one of the best selling singles released by the group, selling 265,000 copies since its release and being certified Silver.[3]
Outside of the UK, the song was also successful. While it reached the top ten in Ireland, Norway and Belgium, the song entered the top 30 of most of the charts it appeared on.
In Australia, "Freak like Me" became the fourth single by Sugababes to make the singles chart, reaching number forty-four. It would be their lowest-charting single in Australia until the release of "Shape" in 2003. In recent years the Sugababes song, Freak Like Me is referred as "Freak".
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These are the formats and track listings of major single releases of "Freak like Me."
Chart (2002) | Peak position |
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Australian Singles Chart[4] | 44 |
Austrian Singles Chart[4] | 22 |
Belgian (Flanders) Singles Chart[4] | 10 |
Danish Singles Chart[4] | 13 |
Dutch Top 40[4] | 31 |
German Singles Chart[5] | 26 |
Irish Singles Chart[6] | 2 |
New Zealand RIANZ Singles Chart[4] | 25 |
Norwegian Singles Chart[4] | 4 |
Romanian Top 100[7] | 28 |
Swedish Singles Chart[4] | 27 |
Swiss Singles Chart[4] | 11 |
UK Singles Chart[8] | 1 |
These are the official versions and remixes and the release they appear on, of:
"Freak like Me"
Version | Release appearance |
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Radio/Album Version | "Freak like Me" single Overloaded: The Singles Collection Angels with Dirty Faces Change [French Version] |
We Don't Give A Damn Mix | "Freak like Me" single Richard X Presents His X-Factor Vol. 1 |
Different Gear Mix | "Freak like Me" single Overloaded: The Remix Collection |
Video | "Freak like Me" single Overloaded: The Videos Collection |
Capoeira Twins Mix | "Freak like Me" single |
Jameson Mix | |
Girls On Top Dancehall Mix | "Round Round" single |
Brits 2003 Version | "Shape" single |
Maida Vale Session | Overloaded: The Live Collection |
"Breathe Easy"
Version | Release appearance |
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Single Version | "Freak like Me" single |
Acoustic Jam | Angels with Dirty Faces |
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Preceded by "The Hindu Times" by Oasis |
UK number one single Sugababes version April 28, 2002 - May 4, 2002 |
Succeeded by "Kiss Kiss" by Holly Valance |
The Strange Case Of... is the second full-length studio album by the rock band Halestorm, released on April 10, 2012. The album was produced by Howard Benson, who also produced the band's self-titled debut album. The first single and video from the album "Love Bites (So Do I)" won a Grammy Award for Best Hard Rock/Metal Performance. The song "Here's to Us" was performed on the US television show, Glee, with clean lyrics. Four of the album's songs were previously released on the sneak-preview EP Hello, It's Mz. Hyde. A deluxe edition of the album was also released containing three bonus tracks. A different version of the song "Here's to Us" featuring multiple guests including Slash was included on the reissue version of the standard and deluxe version of the album in 2013. In interviews about the album, Hale noted that the album was heavier than their previous album, but was significantly closer to the sound of them live.
The album debuted at No. 7 on Top Rock Albums and No. 15 on the Billboard 200, selling 24,000 copies in its first week. It has sold 387,000 copies in the US as of April 2015.
The Jim Rose Circus is a modern-day version of a circus sideshow. It was founded in Seattle by Jim Rose in the early 1990s. The sideshow came to prominence to an American audience as a second stage show at the 1992 Lollapalooza festival, then called the "Jim Rose Circus Sideshow", although they had made several TV appearances in the UK before this time. Rolling Stone magazine called the show an "absolute must-see act" and USA Today termed Rose's troupe "Lollapalooza's word-of-mouth hit attraction".
After Lollapalooza, in 1993 Jim Rose headlined seven world tours and released a self-titled video on Rick Rubin's American Recordings that quickly became a cult classic.
In 1994, the Jim Rose Circus was chosen to tour with Nine Inch Nails, Pop Will Eat Itself and a then-unknown Marilyn Manson, and later with KoRn and Godsmack. 1998 saw another world tour featuring female sumo wrestling, Mexican transvestite wrestling and chainsaw football. The show landed Rose and troupe in jail in Lubbock, Texas and for four months the show was banned from New Zealand. Rose claimed that it was one of his highest-grossing shows, reportedly netting over 4 million dollars.
Let me lay it on the line
I got a little freakiness inside
And you know that the man
Has got to deal with it
I don't care what they say
I'm not about to pay nobody's way
'Cause it's all about the dog in me
Mm-hmm
I want a freak in the morning
A freak in the evening just like me
I need a roughneck brother
Who can satisfy me just for me
If you are that kind of man
'Cuz I'm that kind of girl
I got a freaky secret everybody sings
'Cause we don't give a damn about a thing
'Cause I will be a freak until the day
Until the dawn and we can pump pump
All through the night 'till the early morn
Come along I'll take you around the 'hood
On a gangsta lean
'Cause we can pump pump any time of day
It's all good for me
Boy you're moving kind of slow
You got to keep it up now there you go
There's just one thing that a man must do
Mm-hmm
I'm packing all the flavor you need
I got you shook up on your knees
'Cause it's all about the dog in me
I want