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Technotronic

 
Artist: Technotronic
Technotronic

Group Members:

Jo Bogaert

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Performed Songs By:

Thomas DeQuincy, Patrick DeMeyer, Jo Bogaert
See Technotronic Lyrics
  • Formed: 1988, Belgium
  • Genres: Electronica
  • Representative Albums: "Pump Up the Jam: The Album," "Greatest Hits," "Trip on This!: The Remixes"
  • Representative Songs: "Pump up the Jam," "Move This," "Get Up (Before the Night Is O"

Biography

Of the many studio-based dance music projects which dominated the charts during the early '90s, few were so popular, or such an improbable success story, as Technotronic. Emerging from Belgium -- never a musical hotbed in the first place -- the multicultural group helped push the deep bass grooves and insistent beats of house music out of the club scene and into the pop mainstream; ironically, they did so largely by hiding behind the photogenic visage of an African-born fashion model who, it was later revealed, did not even perform on their records. In reality, Technotronic was the brainchild of Jo Bogaert (real name Thomas de Quincy), an American-born philosophy teacher who relocated to Belgium in the late '80s in the hopes of mounting a career as a record producer. Bogaert's intent was to fuse house with hip hop, and towards that aim he sent demos of his work to a variety of rappers, including the Welsh-born MC Eric and a Zairean-born teenager named Ya Kid K (nee Manuela Kamosi), at the time a member of the Belgian rap group Fresh Beat Productions.

Technotronic's first single, 1989's "Pump Up the Jam," was a smash hit across Europe and eventually the U.S. While the record featured the raps of Ya Kid K, she was nowhere to be seen in the accompanying video, which instead featured Zairean-born fashion model Felly lip-synching the lyrics; little did fans realize that not only was Felly nowhere near the studio at the time the single was recorded, in truth she did not even speak a word of English. She was also featured on the cover of Technotronic's debut LP, Pump Up the Jam: The Album, further blurring the lines between truth and fiction; in the end, Bogaert admitted that Felly's services had been engaged purely to establish the group with "an image." When Technotronic toured in support of the 1990 hit "Get Up! (Before the Night Is Over)," Ya Kid K and MC Eric were alone behind the microphone, and Ya Kid K was also rightfully featured in the song's video. The LP Trip On This: The Remixes soon followed, and in 1992 Ya Kid K went solo, albeit with Bogaert still in the producer's seat; her debut album, One World Nation, scored with the hit "Move This," originally a Technotronic cut released as a single after finding success in a cosmetics commercial. The 1995 Technotronic comeback attempt Recall was not a success. ~ Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide
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Wikipedia: Technotronic
Top
Technotronic
Origin Belgium
Genres Electronica
House
Dance-pop
New Beat
Years active 1988–2005
Labels SBK/EMI Records
ARS Entertainment Belgium
Associated acts Ya Kid K
Réjane Magloire
Members
Jo (Thomas DeQuincey) Bogaert
Manuela "Ya Kid K" Kamosi
Eric "MC Eric/Me One" Martin
Former members
Réjane "Reggie" Magloire
Melissa Beckford
Desiree "Daisy Dee" Rollocks
Colin "Einstein" Case
Charles Fitzgerald "Black Diamond" Davis
Patrick DeMeyer
Monday Osaigbovo "Monday Midnite" Agbonze
Helen Mwangi-Taylor

Technotronic was a studio-based Belgian music project formed by Jo Bogaert (alias Thomas DeQuincey, born 1954, Aalst, Belgium) in 1988, who had already made his musical mark in the beginning of the 1980s as a part of a cover band and as a solo artist under various new beat projects, including The Acts of Madmen and Nux Nemo. Together with Ya Kid K (born Manuela Barbara Kamosi Moaso Djogi, January 26, 1973, Kinshasa, DR Congo), he produced the hit single "Pump Up the Jam" which was originally an instrumental. An image for the act was later put together utilizing Congolese-born fashion model Felly Kilingi as its album/single cover art and supposed singer in the music video.

Contents

"Pump Up The Jam"

The track that would become "Pump Up The Jam" began life as "Technotronic" (which in turn became the project's official name), an original instrumental Bogaert released under the name "The Pro 24s". Based on Farley Jackmaster Funk's "The Acid Life," this instrumental initially included vocal samples from Eddie Murphy's "Delirious" live set and was months later replaced by newer music, along with lyrics and vocals from Ya Kid K. prior to the song's international release in September 1989.

It became an unexpected international smash, eventually hitting #2 on the American Hot 100 charts in late 1989/early 1990, becoming the first ever house record to break through to the pop mainstream. It not only introduced a new sound based on New Beat, a dance genre developed around the Belgian music scene, but it was also one of the first songs to pioneer the short-lived "hip-house" genre, a fusion of house and elements of hip-hop.

Discography

The success of the project's first single led to the debut of Pump Up The Jam—The Album, which featured tracks by Ya Kid K and MC Eric (born Eric Martin, August 19, 1970, Cardiff, Wales) as well as a live opening-act slot for Madonna and appearances on Saturday Night Live, The Arsenio Hall Show, and It's Showtime at the Apollo, among others. It was at this time that Ya Kid K stepped forward as Technotronic's actual vocalist after it was revealed that Felly was merely lip-synching, à la Milli Vanilli, to the vocals of "Pump Up The Jam."

Three follow-up singles, "Get Up! (Before The Night Is Over)," a #7 hit in the US and a #2 hit in the UK; "This Beat Is Technotronic" (US Dance #3, UK #14); and "Move That Body" (UK #12), also hit the Top 10 in many countries, and the album eventually climbed into the Top 10 of the Billboard 200 in the USA.

In 1990 Kamosi also contributed vocals on the single "Spin That Wheel", as part of Technotronic's "side project" Hi Tek 3 for the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles movie soundtrack.

A megamix was released compiling many of Technotronic's previous hits. Released as a single, it peaked at #6 in the UK and #1 on the Eurochart Hot 100.

Three years after its initial success, the song "Move This" (also featuring Kamosi) from its debut album became popularized through its use in a Revlon television commercial (and also used again in a recent Garanimals children's clothing commercial) and became their third Top-10 hit in the United States, peaking at #6. With renewed interest in the album, it was repackaged in 1992 with the same track listing, but this time it featured Ya Kid K on the cover.

Technotronic has sold approximately 14 million albums and singles worldwide.

20th Anniversary (1989-2009)

MC Eric and Ya Kid K. have recently reunited and are now touring countries in Europe and South America as a part of commemorating Technotronic's 20th Anniversary, performing their classic hits as well as new material. Technotronic has also made plans to tour parts of Australia in 2010.

Albums

Singles

  • 1988 "Technotronic" (as The Pro 24s) ("Pump Up The Jam" original instrumental version)
  • 1989 "Pump Up The Jam" (as Technotronic featuring Felly) (UK #2, Ger #2, US Hot 100 #2, Dance/Club Play #1)
  • 1990 "Get Up ! (Before the Night Is Over)" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K) (UK #2, Ger #2, Ireland #2, Hot 100 #7, Dance/Club Play #2)
  • 1990 "This Beat Is Technotronic" (as Technotronic featuring MC Eric) (Ireland #5, ger #10, UK #14, Dance/Club Play #3)
  • 1990 "Spin That Wheel" (as Hi-Tek 3 featuring Ya Kid K) (Feb: UK #69; September re-release: UK #15)
  • 1990 "Rockin' Over the Beat" (UK #9, Ger #18, Ireland #11, Hot 100 #95)
  • 1990 "Megamix" By The Unity Mixers (Patrick Samoy & Luc Rigaux) (# 1 in Europe, #6 UK, Ger #9)
  • 1990 "Turn It Up" (as Technotronic featuring Melissa and Einstein) (Ireland #26, UK #42, B #21)
  • 1991 "Move That Body" (as Technotronic featuring Reggie) (Ireland #3, Ger #19, UK #12, CH #10)
  • 1991 "Work" (as Technotronic featuring Reggie) (Ireland #12, UK #40, CH #24)
  • 1991 "Money Makes The World Go Round" (as Technotronic featuring Reggie)
  • 1991 "Voices" (promotion-only release)
  • 1992 "Move This" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K) (Hot 100 #6)
  • 1993 "Hey Yoh, Here We Go" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K)
  • 1994 "One + One"
  • 1994 "Move It To The Rhythm" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K) (Hot 100 #83, Dance/Club Play #3)
  • 1995 "Recall" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K)
  • 1995 "I Want You By My Side" (#31 B)
  • 1996 "Pump Up The Jam--The '96 Sequel" (UK #36)
  • 1996 "Crazy"
  • 1998 "Get Up—The ’98 Sequel" ( Ger #91)
  • 1998 "Pump Up The Jam" (as D.O.N.S. featuring Technotronic) (Ger #25)
  • 1999 "Like This" (as Technotronic featuring Monday Midnite)
  • 2000 "The G. Train" (as Technotronic featuring Monday Midnite)
  • 2000 "The Mariachi" (as Technotronic featuring Ya Kid K) (#1 MEX)
  • 2001 "Runaway Blues"
  • 2002 "The Circle Unbroken"
  • 2005 "Pump Up The Jam 2005" (as D.O.N.S. featuring Technotronic) (UK #22; Ireland #25)

Technotronic tracks are featured on the soundtrack of the following films:

Trivia

  • Patrick De Meyer, a well-known Belgian producer who had success with other bands, including T99 and Jarvic 7, played additional synthesizers on "Pump Up the Jam," as well as contributed production to and did programming work on other releases.
  • "Weird Al" Yankovic did a polka version of "Pump up the Jam". It is included in his 1992 medley "Polka Your Eyes Out".
  • In a Season 2 episode of Roseanne, Dan catches his daughter Becky dancing to "Pump up the Jam" while wearing headphones.
  • In a Season 11 episode of Big Brother U.S., Jeff is made fun of when he incorrectly spells 'Technotronics' during a Power of Veto competition.

See also

References

  1. Pump Up the Jam: The Album Sleeve notes.

External links

  1. Technotronic at Discogs

 
 
Learn More
Fred Savage: Saturday Night Live (TV Episode) (1990 Comedy TV Episode)
Pump Up the Jam: The Album (1989 Album by Technotronic)
Power Rotation, Vol. 2 (1996 Album by Various Artists)

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