"Pop Muzik" is a 1979 song by
M, a project by English musician
Robin Scott, from the debut album New York • London • Paris • Munich. The single, first released in the UK in early 1979, was bolstered by a music video (directed by
Brian Grant) that was well received by critics. The clip featured Scott as a DJ singing into a microphone from behind an exaggerated turntable setup, at times flanked by two female models who sang and danced in a robotic manner. The video also featured Brigit Novik, Scott's wife at the time, who provided the backup vocals for the track.[6]
The single's B-side, "M Factor", was featured in two different versions. The original cut appeared on the first UK and European releases of the single, while a slightly remixed version appeared on the single released in the United States and Canada. "Pop Muzik" reached number 1 on the US
Billboard Hot 100, the Australian
ARIA Singles Chart, and number 2 in the
UK Singles Chart.
Concept and chart performance
The song was initially recorded in R&B and funk styles before a friend of Scott suggested using synthesisers.[7] He describes the genesis of "Pop Muzik":
I was looking to make a fusion of various styles which somehow would summarise the last 25 years of pop music. It was a deliberate point I was trying to make. Whereas rock and roll had created a generation gap, disco was bringing people together on an enormous scale. That's why I really wanted to make a simple, bland statement, which was, 'All we're talking about basically (is) pop music.'[8]
Cash Box described it as a "quirky Euro-pop number," stating that "the nonsensical lyrics create a catchy cadence."[9]Record World described it as a "totally infectious body-mover."[10]
The single was released in the UK first, peaking at number 2 on 12 May 1979,[8] unable to break
Art Garfunkel's 6-week stint at number one with "
Bright Eyes". In August of that same year, it was released in North America, where it eventually climbed all the way to number 1 in Canada on 27 October[11] and in the US on 3 November.
Along with Scott, other musicians who played on the track were his brother Julian Scott (on bass), then unknown keyboardist
Wally Badarou, Canadian synthesiser programmer
John Lewis, drummer
Phil Gould (who later became one of the founding members of the group
Level 42),
Gary Barnacle and Brigit Novik, the backing vocalist, credited as "Brigit Vinchon" on the records and sleeves.
The image of the baby on "Pop Muzik"'s single disc is of Robin Scott's daughter, Berenice. She became a singer, piano/keyboard player and composer and involved in projects with her father's friends Phil Gould and Wally Badarou.[citation needed]
Additional musicians on the album included drummer
Phil Gould,
Gary Barnacle on saxophone and flute, and
David Bowie (a friend of Scott and a resident of Montreux at the time) who provided occasional handclaps.
The album was also released in the United States on
Sire Records with a different track listing but it was not commercially successful, compared to the album's success in Europe.
Other formats
The UK
12-inch single version was notable for the
A-side having a double groove so that the two tracks ("Pop Muzik" and "M Factor") both started at the outer edge of the record and finished in the middle (with a long silence at the end of "M Factor" since the track was the shorter of the two). This resulted in a random selection of the two tracks, depending on which groove the needle landed in the lead-in. To further market this idea, the UK record sleeve stated "B side included on A side, full length disco mix of Pop Musik on Seaside". 'Seaside' (in other words "C side") was a simple play on words as the letter C, apart from being the logical next "side" after the A and B sides, is pronounced the same way as the English word "sea".
The song was remixed and re-released in 1989 where it reached number 15 in the
UK Singles Charts.[12]
Original 7" single released by
MCA Records and
EMI in Europe.
Pop Muzik – 3:21
M Factor – 2:30
Original 7" single with Prize message
Original 7" single released by
MCA Records and
EMI in Europe, and had a special 'Prize Message' at the end of the A-side which said "It's a Winner!" Presenting the record at the retailer entitled you to a small cash prize/ Free gift.
Pop Muzik – 3:29
M Factor – 2:30
Long version single
Released in both 7" and 12" vinyl single formats in the United States by
Sire Records, and as a 12" vinyl in France by
Pathé MarconiEMI, all featuring a longer version of the song
Pop Muzik (Long Version) – 4:58
M Factor – 2:30
Netherlands 12" single
12" single released in the Netherlands by
MCA Records. The B-side "M Factor" was featured on the A-side of the vinyl on this release, with a remix of the title song on the B-side.
Pop Muzik
M Factor
Pop Muzik (Long Version)
Sweden 7" 1989 release
7" single released in Sweden in 1989 by Freestyle Records
Pop Muzik (Edited 1989 Remix) – 3:10
Pop Muzik (Original 7" Version) – 3:20
Sweden 12" 1989 release
12" single released in Sweden in 1989 by Freestyle Records
Pop Muzik (Extended 1989 Hip Hop Remix) – 5:40
Pop Muzik (7" Version) – 3:20
Pop Muzik (Edited 1989 Dub Remix) – 3:20
Pop Muzik (Original 12" Version) – 5:00
Pop Muzik (Edited 1989 Remix) – 3:10
Germany 12" 1989 release
12" single released in Germany in 1989 by
ZYX Records
Pop Muzik (The Hip Hop Club Remix) – 5:38
Pop Muzik (The Hip Hop Remix) – 3:20
Pop Muzik (Original '79 Mix) – 3:21
Germany CD 2001 release
CD single released in Germany in 2001 by
ZYX Records
Pop Muzik (Britannia '89 Remix) – 3:11
Pop Muzik (Cabinet Remix) – 7:38
Pop Muzik (Original Version) – 3:21
Cover versions
Male vocal and instrumental band All Systems Go entered the
UK Singles Chart on 18 June 1988. It reached number 63, and remained in the chart for 2 weeks.[50]
In 1997,
U2 remixed the song to use as the opening track for their
PopMart Tour. The remix features an upbeat tempo and use of synthesizers. In the live version, Robin Scott's vocals were used. The song was released on the "
Last Night on Earth" single and
Bono's vocals replaced Scott's. The only part of the song Bono added was the line "dance to the PopMart, top of the food chain." Andrew Unterberger of Stylus Magazine said the cover was "hardly the most musically accomplished thing U2 did in this period, but I can't think of a better choice to introduce this period of their career."[51] It is also a featured track on
PopMart: Live from Mexico City.
In 2000, a music promoter turned recording artist by the name of Marcus was signed by
Clive Davis to
J Records. The following year he released a cover version with a slightly different spelling: "Pop Musik." The chorus hook from the original song was used ("pop, pop, pop music"), but the lyrics were changed to talk about top pop artists of the day like
Britney Spears,
Backstreet Boys,
Will Smith,
NSYNC, and even
Marilyn Manson. The song was produced by
P.M. Dawn and was released as a CD Single in spring of 2001. The song was included on a BMG Music compilation CD, Cool Traxx! 3, which also featured hit songs from many of the artists that Marcus sings about in his remake.
Billboard said of the song, "This is G-rated fun that could connect with the younger side of the top 40 demographic, and it could charm the ears of programmers looking for an instant reaction record— but, boy, does its novelty affect wear thin after only a few lessons…" [52]
^
abEddy, Chuck (2011). Rock and Roll Always Forgets: A Quarter Century of Music Criticism.
Duke University Press. p.
243.
ISBN978-0-8223-5010-1. the weird chart-topping new wave disco single by one-letter-named one-hit-wonder M (real name: Robin Scott) finished second on another chart in 1979