C/D: Plan B, "Sick to Def"

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didn't you guys hear? black metal is the new grime.

tpp (tpp), Saturday, 15 July 2006 17:54 (seventeen years ago) link

six months pass...
Hahaha, I'm currently transcribing an interview a friend did with Mr B, and after going on this fifteen minute "Fuck Westwood, how dare he play crunk and not proper rap music like some whiteboy doofus from North London with a fucking guitar", she asks him "So who is supporting groundbreaking important rap music these days?"

Without a pause, Plan B's answer: "Jo Whiley".

What an utter utter fuckwit.

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 12:56 (seventeen years ago) link

Westwood is by his own admission pretty mainstream on his radio show, though ("I can't go Deep South").

Marcello Carlin (nostudium), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 13:00 (seventeen years ago) link

he has two great songs (the first two on the album), the rest is pretty shit. he has some great ideas for songs (honour killings, etc etc) but the production is so bland, the R&B craig david-style choruses are lame, and it all adds up to some sort of kt tunstall of uk hip hop mess. ive heard some of his 'straight up hip hop' songs with epicman as well, and those didnt work too well either. i predict he will be singing and leaving rapping behind in no time. there isnt much future in a guy with an acoustic guitar in hip hop (it seems 679 really thought there was somehow). and rightly so (this is a guy that blended coldplay with rick ross on his myspace and thought it was a good idea after all).

titchyschneider (titchyschneider), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 13:01 (seventeen years ago) link

For all of Westwood's many many crimes, I'd say he has his finger a little closer to the hip-hop pulse than Shoeless Jo Whiley

xp

Dom Passantino (Dom Passantino), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 13:02 (seventeen years ago) link

he has two great songs (the first two on the album)

is one of these the one that was on the first run the road? that was good.

antidote against poisoning (lex pretend), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 13:03 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah

titchyschneider (titchyschneider), Wednesday, 7 February 2007 13:05 (seventeen years ago) link

two years pass...

lol

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wauIGhax9xg

i knew he would end up singing

didnt know he would end up sounding so much like lenny kravitz though

that rap in the middle is just shit though

fucking terrible

he should just do one or the other

no one wants to hear kidulthood in the middle of their mark ronson album

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 4 February 2010 20:48 (fourteen years ago) link

one month passes...

i keep seeing this twat acting badly in films about 'broken britain' (well london). why does no one see the fake-ness?

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Wednesday, 17 March 2010 21:02 (fourteen years ago) link

holy shit what the fuck

BIG HOOS aka the steendriver, Wednesday, 17 March 2010 21:12 (fourteen years ago) link

two months pass...

oh god im my own worst enemy

the fucking trailer for plan b's godawful new album kept coming up on spotify

and eventually i kind of semi-wondered what the concept was at the heart of his concept album

...

resisted this kind of weird morbid-curiosity thing for weeks, but eventually looked on wiki

it's about a bloke who's wrong done up for rape

oh, great

transient truff (history mayne), Tuesday, 1 June 2010 11:34 (thirteen years ago) link

i predict he will be singing and leaving rapping behind in no time.

Titchy = (Pre-coalition) Vince Cable of ILM

Wenlock & Mandelson (Tom D.), Tuesday, 1 June 2010 11:39 (thirteen years ago) link

its about rape? ugh/lol. apparently it was originally going to be a conceptual DOUBLE album but the label but the smack down.

id like his new reinvention a lot more if he just stopped rapping completely. its like having kidulthood stuck in the middle of alfie or something.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Tuesday, 1 June 2010 12:15 (thirteen years ago) link

She Said is quite nice. For about twenty listens. Then the rap begins to annoy. Then the rest. I did send the youtube link to my dad. It's very much in the style my dad likes. But I bet he was convulsing by the time the rap bit came on.

Nathalie (stevienixed), Wednesday, 2 June 2010 13:53 (thirteen years ago) link

The last track, "What You Gonna Do" Strickland is in court again as new evidence has been brought up on his case. The album finishes with the listener not sure of whether he is sent back to prison or released, leaving it open to interpretation.

Clever. Very clever.

woof, Wednesday, 2 June 2010 13:59 (thirteen years ago) link

nine months pass...

When he won the award for Best UK male (clear and obvious winner), he was saying his next album was going to be hardcore rap again, the next one "reggae, maybe" and that he'd never make another 'soul' album.

And I was saying "OK, bye then..."

Mark G, Tuesday, 15 March 2011 10:27 (thirteen years ago) link

eleven months pass...

The video, the beat, the inevitable Daily Mail furore and the fact that a mainstream platinum-selling pop star is doing this *at all* all considerably outweigh the fact that Plan B still can't really rap.

Homosexual Satan Wasp (Matt DC), Tuesday, 13 March 2012 20:12 (twelve years ago) link

Heart's in the right place but it's not a patch on Alles Neu.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DD0A2plMSVA

Une semaine de Bunty (ShariVari), Tuesday, 13 March 2012 20:14 (twelve years ago) link

that ill manors song sounds like Danny Dyer wrote it.

owenf, Tuesday, 13 March 2012 20:42 (twelve years ago) link

seriously impressed by this song/video! i'd never been into plan b before (lol reading the first bit of this thread) plus i had a bit of kneejerk suspicion re: people fêting rappers the minute they agree with them politically BUT this is seriously good as well as politically necessary. really impressed with the way he crams in & connects so many references into the verses, and how he's so knowing about the media lens and how things are perceived. it's so much more than sloganeering but it's viscerally angry as well.

think i saw someone on twitter point out that the leningrad sample is a good connection to another city under siege...

lex pretend, Friday, 16 March 2012 13:34 (twelve years ago) link

"we got an eco-friendly government, they preserve our natural habitat / built an entire olympic village around where we live without plling down any flats"

lex pretend, Friday, 16 March 2012 13:41 (twelve years ago) link

keep on believing what you read in the papers
"council estate kids", "scum of the earth"
think you know how life on a council estate is
from everything you've ever read about it or heard
well it's all true, so stay where you're safest
no need to set foot out the 'burbs
truth is here we're all disturbed
we cheat and lie, it's so absurd
feed the fear, that's what we've learned
fuel the fire, let it burn

^^AMAZING

lex pretend, Friday, 16 March 2012 13:46 (twelve years ago) link

great stuff from DL too http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2012/mar/15/plan-b-ill-manors

lex pretend, Friday, 16 March 2012 13:47 (twelve years ago) link

The Siege of Leningrad, also known as the Leningrad Blockade (Russian: блокада Ленинграда, transliteration: blokada Leningrada) was a prolonged military operation resulting from the failure of the German Army Group North to capture Leningrad—now known as Saint Petersburg—in the Eastern Front theatre of World War II. The siege started on 8 September 1941, when the last land connection to the city was severed. Although the Soviets managed to open a narrow land corridor to the city on 18 January 1943, lifting of the siege took place on 27 January 1944, 872 days after it began. It was one of the longest and most destructive sieges in history and overwhelmingly the most costly in terms of casualties

I'm going to allow this! (LocalGarda), Friday, 16 March 2012 15:25 (twelve years ago) link

caualties and losses

Red Army:[6]
1,017,881 killed, captured or missing
2,418,185 wounded and sick

Civilians:[6]
642,000 during the siege, 400,000 at evacuations

sounds similar to modern day London yes.

I'm going to allow this! (LocalGarda), Friday, 16 March 2012 15:26 (twelve years ago) link

I really enjoyed this song. I'm with Lex in thinking his rapping is actually pretty good. I had no idea he had become so hated, guess I missed this thread until now.

viborg, Friday, 16 March 2012 15:59 (twelve years ago) link

"become so hated"? i thought everyone hated the guy from day 1

a hoy hoy, Friday, 16 March 2012 16:05 (twelve years ago) link

he had a couple of promising joints really early on but yeah swiftly turned pretty shit

lex pretend, Friday, 16 March 2012 16:06 (twelve years ago) link

Ok, well I obviously got to the station too late to jump on the hate train. That previous album really does suck based on the songs posted here. The song he did with Jose Gonzalez was tolerable but I can't really think of any other material of his I actually like.

viborg, Friday, 16 March 2012 16:15 (twelve years ago) link

that ill manors song sounds like Danny Dyer wrote it.

not that bad, basically like a prodigy b-side. thought that then saw a remix by them in the youtube side bar. british limp bizkit.

I'm going to allow this! (LocalGarda), Saturday, 17 March 2012 01:35 (twelve years ago) link

Growing up, Plan B felt outcast from the rest of the school pupils.[4]

"We weren't working class but we weren't middle class, we were in the void in-between. I've always felt like a social outcast."
—Plan B, The Telegraph (15 June 2006)[4]

who can forget the repeated stonings of the not middle class not working class

I'm going to allow this! (LocalGarda), Saturday, 17 March 2012 12:49 (twelve years ago) link

I'm just going to stick this here:

http://www.thelineofbestfit.com/2012/03/plan-b-is-not-your-saviour/

I mean, the first paragraph was obv what caught my attention in terms of "why oh why yet AGANE is The Left lionising yet another career rape apologist?"

BUT as much as I hate "takedown" interweb culture, the author goes on to say some pretty incisive things about Plan B's responses to the riots, both now and at the time, and how they play into some Liberal myths which could be pretty dangerous? I don't know. It seemed a pretty good counterpoint to me, because the writer isn't attacking Plan B or the working classes, he's attacking the myths that Liberals are buying into, by lionising this guy? Interesting to me, anyway.

Masonic Boom, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 11:39 (twelve years ago) link

Seems like a counterpoint to some of his commentary about the riots at the time, rather than the song itself. Which is fair enough, but it's not what people like DL were talking about, i think.

The message of the song, for me, is that if you treat people like criminals, they'll act like criminals. If those in power take away social amenities and employment then they can expect their lives to be impacted in a different, but connected, way to the lives of the people they are affecting. The safety of the comfortably off is dependent on not treating everyone else like scum. That seems to acknowledge that the riots were political, in at least one sense, and that the issues are structural - not simply a question of people not having the right role models or attitude to 'wealth creation', etc. idk.

Une semaine de Bunty (ShariVari), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 11:52 (twelve years ago) link

"It is the destruction of capital that will end poverty."

I for one am shocked that Plan B's single does nothing to bring about a Marxist revolution.

Weirdly Brendan O'Neill's Spiked piece yesterday accused Plan B of doing exactly the opposite - ie excusing the riots - but at least both writers can agree that Guardian-reading liberals are to blame.

And I have been called "The Appetite" (DL), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:00 (twelve years ago) link

Yeah, I completely get why people would dig the song, and consider it a salient and to-the-point response to the riots.

But when it goes beyond that, and people start giving the guy Guardian columns and TED keynote speeches, I think it's appropriate to ask "what is this guy about?" and look at the, erm, questionable parts of his message rather than that whole "Lo! Behold the Voice Of The Riots!" DL is a Guardian writer so I can see why he's butthurt.

I just have a zero tolerance no-rapists, no-rape-apologists policies which means that me and the bulk of "The Left" parted company a long time ago, but hey. I'm glad to just see someone actually mention it. Because it gets too easily swept under the rug too often if people like the other parts of a guy's message, because, like, the whole "treating women as human beings" is not ~really~ part of the whole left wing "treating human beings as human beings" thing, right.

But whatever, Posts Very Much In Character.

Masonic Boom, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:08 (twelve years ago) link

i actually had no idea that's what plan b's last album centred around (iirc i half-heard the lead single and didn't like it musically so avoided hearing any more). why didn't i see more commentary on it at the time? (that's directed, i guess, at people who did hear it and did write about it.) even trying to avoid it i managed to pick up that it was a "theatrical" "in-character" work so that's his get-out clause but we all know it's not really a cast-iron one that shouldn't be interrogated.

would quite like to hear that album to see for myself i guess, but i have a massive backlog of stuff i do want/need to hear. what's plan b said about it in interviews? and indeed what's his attitude towards women been "irl"?

it doesn't change my view of "ill manors", and that post is way weaker when it attempts to criticise plan b for not toeing the anti-capitalist dogmatic line. it puts a lot of words into his mouth, which is a pretty typical political blog strategy. and the entire thing seems to be unaware of adapting your message depending on who you're talking to: cf the video of pauline pearce yelling at the rioters for being selfish dickhead thugs (rightly), but when she was taken to the tory conference emphasising that the problem is systemic and political. both of these things can be true!

lex pretend, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:20 (twelve years ago) link

In a lecture for TED and The Observer last week he encouraged people to ignore the government and instead each find one person that they can help.

oh how AWFUL of him. i already know that the concept of actually reaching out to disadvantaged kids on a one-to-one irl basis is anathema to most in the "young hipster left" bubble, thanks.

lex pretend, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:23 (twelve years ago) link

Thanks for putting it so well lex re: the anti-capitalist dogma. The rape-allegation plot device on the last album bothered me too but I don't know deep it goes. It struck me more as a crass device to get the character wrongly convicted rather than an issue he was particularly exercised about. I don't recall reading any interviews where he was pressed on it so I don't know. It's certainly not the main theme of the record - just the song She Said:

http://www.lyricsreg.com/lyrics/plan+b/She+Said/

It's certainly worth flagging up and interrogating but I'm not persuaded it means people on the left should disregard everything else he does.

And I have been called "The Appetite" (DL), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:32 (twelve years ago) link

hmmmmmm can't say that's helpful in a climate so skewed against victims of sexual assault and if i was writing about it i'd point that out, but at the same time false accusations are things that happen so i'm not sure it's fair to label plan b a rape apologist for that. it's limited & blinkered in its unthinking reflection of the male fear of getting falsely accused of rape, and it's unempathetically up its own privilege, but it's not a song worthy of outrage really.

lex pretend, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:43 (twelve years ago) link

also i'm not sure the response of "the left" to plan b is to make him their new hero so much as to point out "here's the first mainstream song that really captures and conveys something important about the riots, it's worth paying attention to"

lex pretend, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:45 (twelve years ago) link

Exactly. It seems weird to me in 2012 that people can't grasp that you can acclaim a musician for one powerful political record without giving them a free pass. In hip hop that's kind of a given, and She Said is a long way short of, say, Black Korea.

And I have been called "The Appetite" (DL), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:54 (twelve years ago) link

It struck me more as a crass device to get the character wrongly convicted rather than an issue he was particularly exercised about. I don't recall reading any interviews where he was pressed on it so I don't know. It's certainly not the main theme of the record - just the song She Said:

mmm, the biggest hit off the album? Which sounds, at first, like a classic soul number heading for the Valentine Day comps...

It gets the character 'wrongly convicted', and shows him to be a bit of a git as well, true. There were other ways to do this, mind.

Mark G, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 12:54 (twelve years ago) link

Totally. There were other ways. The issue isn't whether it was a terrific idea but how much bearing it should have on what he does subsequently.

And I have been called "The Appetite" (DL), Wednesday, 21 March 2012 13:00 (twelve years ago) link

Well, allowing for the fact that PlanB did not do this 'irl', and this discussion probably should be on the "Strickland Banks" thread, yeah.

Mark G, Wednesday, 21 March 2012 13:04 (twelve years ago) link

man i was flipping channels eating breakfast this AM and palladia was showing the 2011 isle of wight festival and there was this fat mook lookin' motherfucker trying to act all slick in a business suit (but you could still tell he probably like limp bizkit and shit)...i was like what the fuck is this shit? jesus, it was like the nickelback of style council or something, barfffffff on england

konybrony (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Monday, 26 March 2012 17:10 (twelve years ago) link

one month passes...

hardman lyricist puts out leaden, unintelligible soundtrack to graphically violent movie, pleads for mutual understanding, asks what you are looking at, you fucking rich boy

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 11 May 2012 13:44 (eleven years ago) link

i feel bad because it seems like his heart is often in the right place but he gets tangled up in this weird macho thing

also his music, at least live, just gets lost in its own frug

TracerHandVEVO (Tracer Hand), Friday, 11 May 2012 14:11 (eleven years ago) link

i feel bad because it seems like his heart is often in the right place but he gets tangled up in this weird macho thing

Most emo/aggro music anywhere to thread?

Ned Raggett, Friday, 11 May 2012 14:23 (eleven years ago) link

one year passes...

Britain's new #1 sounds like the guy found a copy of Defamation lying around and thought, well, if he's not using it anymore then I will.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CfihYWRWRTQ

Deafening silence (DL), Monday, 8 July 2013 14:37 (ten years ago) link

one year passes...

wait a minute -- is this thread about the same plan b who did this ridiculous song? i had completely forgotten about it until just now and realized i could look it up. what a shitty song!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2eAcCPJwCB8

La Lechera, Thursday, 17 July 2014 17:15 (nine years ago) link


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