Take it from a not too old radio guy, you youngins don't realize how strong Hip-Hop and Grunge was back in the late 80's and throughout the 90's. Some of us had to fight management to get this stuff on the air. They just didn't get it. I'm glad it's not being forgotten.
This song is a banger no doubt, but House of Pain, especially Everlast, aka Whitey Ford are a bunch of posers, and no one was trying to keep this song off the radio, it was a certified one hit wonder.
@@sunshynff actually there was a "No Rap Trend" running through radio at this time. How do I know? I worked at one. Quite a few radio consultants thought music like this would not appeal to advertisers. It may be true for some but not for all. Having lived through that period I can tell you that there was underline racism attached to that thought. When MTV Raps aired, it started to go mainstream there was really no stopping this genre from 1995 and beyond. The other side of the coin there was backlash from some in the Hip-Hop community the did not want to go mainstream and crossover became a dirty word. You see how well that worked out. Lastly I will say this, that old school songs and artist contributions like this are still going strong with the younger generations and the new guys out now need to learn something from them.
@@darkknightnj ....Actually no, there was not a "no rap trend" at this time, how do I know?? Well, a whole bunch of reasons actually, where do I start..... I worked as a sound engineer apprentice at Smith Lee Studios at the time, and was an intern at a radio station, and played in a band, and I also participated in the PMRC protests that came to a head in 1993, less than a year after this song dropped. Remember the PMRC fiasco, Parents Music Resource Center led by Tipper Gore, wanted to ban rap and heavy metal songs, Rob Halford of Judas Priest had to give that long grueling congressional testimony, and RATM showed up at 1993's Lalapalooza naked with PMRC written across their chests. Oh, there's more.... House of Pain's "Jump Around" peeked at #3 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #7 on the U.S. Billboard Rap chart, #8 in the U.K., top 10 in the Netherlands and Ireland and #15 in Australia, in May of 1992. Furthermore........ “Ice Ice Baby”, Vanilla Ice, November 3rd, 1990 “Good Vibrations”, Marky Mark, Oct 5th, 1991 “Set Adrift on Memory Bliss”, P.M Dawn, November 3rd, 1991 (first hip-hop group fronted by all people of color to hit #1) “Here Comes the Hotstepper”, Ini Kamoze, Dec 17th, 1994. (First Jamaican artist to go to #1 with a rap/dancehall track.) "Big Poppa", Notorious B.I.G., Dec 24th, 1994 “Gangsta’s Paradise” Coolio f. LV, September 9, 1995: (First solo black artist to have a #1 rap song on the chart “The Crossroads”, Bone Thugs N Harmony, May 18th, 1996 “How Do U Want It”, 2Pac, July 13th, 1996 “Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down”, Puff Daddy, Mase March 22nd, 1997 “Mo Money Mo Problems”, Notorious BIG, August 30th, 1997 “Gettin Jiggy With It”, Will Smith, March 14th, 1998: Fun fact: the lyrics were written by Nas ***ALL THE ABOVE SONGS FROM ICE ICE BABY DOWN REACHED #1 ON EITHER THE TOP 100 OR RAP CHARTS OF BILLBOARD AND ALL WERE PLAYED ON TOP 40 TERRESTRIAL RADIO, INLCUDING JUMP AROUND ***** (This is not a full list, and if I included top 5s or top 10s I'd have to leave 3--4 more comments 😂😂) You see how well that worked out when you actually know what you're talking about?? Lastly I will say this, what da-fk you know about old school music, I cut my teeth on Sugarhill Gang, Kool Moe Dee and Run DMC, I was one of the first in line to buy Beasties debut album Licensed To Ill in 1996, and again one of the first in line to buy NWA's debut Strait Out of Compton and Public Enemy's sophomore album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back in 1988. I'm well aware of the issues young bucks in today's industry lack, and where they fall short of the greats from back in the day, but I'm also aware of many artists today that are very slept on, artists that are true students of hip-hop culture, and do it justice quite well, you should broaden your horizons. Now go on and kick your little can on down the road junior, the grown ups are still talkin' here.
Just Imagine, you're a young man in your late teens, early twenties, at a big house party with all your friends, and then this song comes on. It was always awesome.
Every club we went to would play this song at some point in the evening. Hundreds of people would be jumping. The floor would be shaking, bottles,glasses, and tables. Nnnnooooooo one was sitting when this song came on. I'm surprised the dance floors never collapsed. It was that crazy 😂😂😂. Good times.
Oh yeah, this banger came on and floors across the world were gonna be tested for their load bearing capacity. Adelaide, South Australia, 1992, middle of a rave club and they drop this classic; boom the entire place starts jumping. It was amazing.
@@randomtruths3400 The birth of rap was somewhere between the Sugar Hill Gang, who were all from Englewood, New Jersey, and DJ Kool Herc, who was from the Bronx, New York back in the early 1970s. We can all agree that Sugar Hill was the birthplace of commercial rap, as DJ Kool Herc was likely the first popular person known as a grassroots rapper. I agree that rap is 100% a NYC thing. I remember how hard of a time MTV was trying to sell it to white buyers back in the early 80's. The breakthrough was the crossover with Aerosmith and RUN-DMC. That opened the floodgates to rap. My older brother was such a metalhead. Said to me as we were watching the walk this way remix.) "they just killed Rock & Roll." Moving forward Hip-Hop has been the king of American Music.
The music vibe (lyrics, musical track, visuals, gear, etc. in HOP’s Jump Around is pure New York regardless of where it was recorded, where who recoded it was from, etc. But more importantly, it is universally one of the dopest rap songs from the dopest era of rap. I lived in Brooklyn when this song hit. It was banging in all five boroughs against any rap song by any group, solo rapper, etc. Big ups to Everlast and HOP.
I remember the song is awesome no matter who wrote it but you know being in Boston and playing this in the clubs everyone knew the video it was automatically assumed at first that they were from Boston because they look like a bunch of Boston guys. The urban graphics look just like they could have been a bunch of the other videos that were filmed locally. 30 years later and still awesome
People sure did. I was 17 when I saw them perform in Manhattan . They did 2 videos for this song.. The original radio one & a remix. I was at the show that they used clips from to do the video for the remix. It was nuts. The pit with everyone slam dancing. I went home looking like I was jumped lol The good old days lol
I saw Snoop Dogg do a medley of rap classics live and it included "Jump Around". You know that it's one of the legendary rap songs then. It doesn't matter what your skin color is, how much money you have in the bank, or what you believe in; you hear those opening notes and you know what's coming. It's a universal jam.
"I'm sure this song has got a lot of people trampled"!!! That is one of the funniest reactions I've ever heard in over 5 years of watching reaction videos!!.
I’m hysterical watching all of your videos. Let’s go! This was the 80s and 90s. The world has nothing on our music. We ruled the planet 30-40 years ago.
He went to high school with Ice Cube and MC Ren, that's where he got a little cred, and met up with Ice-T, who took Everlast under his wing. He also made the mistake of dissing Eminem in the early 2000s because he though Em snubbed him at a concert. Em released two diss tracks on him, his first as a signed artist, the first one was ok, Everlast's response was garbage and Em's second diss was featuring D-12 and part of it used Tupac's "hit em up" beat, and he crushed Everlast bad, it was brutal, and pretty much killed Everlast's career, for at least a decade.
I personally know of two bars from back in the day that had to take this off the jukebox because everytime it came on the entire place would get on their feet and start bouncing until the walls were shaking and the floor joists about to collapse. Good times.
i love watching the younger gen realize our hip hop wasnt playing the thing i like about old hip hop vs new is the new guys to many sound the same while the old heads everyone had a style that belonged to them
@@michaelweigand9346Muggs was the man with the soul assassins with HOP, Funkdoobiest and Cypress Hill. He even gets a mention with “Muggs let’s the funk flow”
kriss kross producer stole the ''jump" idea from house of pain and released it first ...and in the end of the house of pain jump track they diss the guy who leaked the house off pain demo to kriss kross producer a guy named joe
I've commented that on one of his videos that if he wants to get into some more good oldies, Kris Kross Jump would be a good one for him, that was before seeing this 😂
The music vibe (lyrics, musical track, visuals, gear, etc. in HOP’s Jump Around is pure New York regardless of where it was recorded, where who recoded it was from, etc. But more importantly, it is universally one of the dopest rap songs from the dopest era of rap. I lived in Brooklyn when this song hit. It was banging in all five boroughs against any rap song by any group, solo rapper, etc. Big ups to Everlast and HOP.
This song will always be a banger! I’ve been commenting on your reactions about Queen songs. Just an FYI - Queen does not care about reactors playing their music They actually encourage it ❤❤
The lead rapper (everlast aka Eric) is my former neighbor. Real cool, down to earth dude. This song was banging in the clubs back in the day. This jam and Kriss Cross, jump, jump had folks out on the floor working it out.
Can confirm. Met him when I was working at a club in Pittsburgh. Nicest dude. Chill af. And let me tell you, when he played this I was walking the crowd and the floor was literally bouncing😅
Ain't heard this song in a very long time, when I saw the title I was like "if that's the song I'm thinking it is, he's gonna have a ball" and it was the song I thought it was, and you had a ball with it like I thought too 😂
This is how old I am, when this song played during my high school dances, people would freak out and start dancing. You’re giving me memories, I mean I still remember how I used to dance to this song!
Used to play this tune when they opened up the big ramp at our long departed indoor roller rink. We all knew this song meant crazy motherlovers tryna hang from the rafters 😂🙈👌🏻💥🔥💪🏻
Man, I just found your channel, and I love that the music I grew up with is making a resurgence. I'm 40 and very much into metal and industrial these days, but this is a great trip down memory lane. Love your energy!
Lots of jumping at the club!!! My car key jumped out of my pocket jumping to this song!!....car window was smashed....after my buddy tried to use his head a few times. lol...of course CAA pulls in just after the smash!! Memorable night @ The NY Thruway in Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada....in 1990 something......I still jump to this song but can never forget that night....
Boogie! I really like this platform. I'm 49yo born and raised New York City via Jamaica W.I. I respect you and your respect for those who came before your time. I enjoy watching you embrace the good music of the past. Keep up the good work.
I just found your channel and I’m loving watching you you react to all the music I listened to when I was a kid and teenager. I’m 45 and it’s so fun to watch younger people love the old music as much as we did when it came out!
welcome to the party kid!!! That's right they don't make 'em like this anymore jump around baby!!! btw your vids might get deleted for copyright issues if you don't block out the video, at least partially put a filter over the vid and talk over it more...hell sing along if ya want ✌❤
When we used to get ready for our rugby league games back in the 90's the boys always a tape deck in the changing rooms & the sounds were always pumping, for some it was a form of relaxation for others it was form of getting g'd up before going out & getting hammered, when the song dropped the whole f..king team even the coach were doing the pogo & we went out & thrashed the other side 56-6...lol, it's always been thee main go to song when getting for a footy game
House of Pain outta L.A. DJ Muggs KILLED this classic beat and Everlast wrote a timeless track. His work in La Coka Nostra and WarPorn Industries is a must check as well. 💪💪
They are NOT from NY. They're from LA. This song was produced by DJ Muggs from Cypress Hill. Everlast (the rapper) was a part of Ice T's collective called Rhyme Syndicate.
Saw them live twice, both times at the Brixton Academy London in the mid 90’s along with Cypress Hill & Funkdoobiest! The Academy is one of the best music venues in the world so you know it went off when they performed this song!
the rapper on this track is everlast. he came up in ice-t's group rhyme syndicate before going solo. he joined this group but was unsatisfied so he quit and went back to a solo career.
This song may have sampled "Gett Off" by Prince (a great intro to the Prince rabbit hole), but it also might be sampled from Junior Walker's "Shoot Your Shot."
That's Everlast and he was rapping with Ice T before this. He also released a solo album where he played guitar and was rock songs. "What it's like" was a good bluesy song
imboogie-merchandise.creator-spring.com/?_gl=1*1my3kz5*_gcl_aw*R0NMLjE3MzM2NDE1MTUuQ2owS0NRaUFyN0M2QmhEUkFSSXNBT1VLaWZnZTZaZ1o2UlBpTUpCRXA2Sm9lSWNlOE53QUdKbG5ESjJHLXBVNHh3Tm1wZHc2TXhHMWRkUWFBc3hXRUFMd193Y0I.*_gcl_au*MjEyMTI4NjcwNi4xNzMzNjQxNDk3*_ga*MjEyNDA1MjY0MC4xNzMzNjQxNDk3*_ga_G3GKJFR6Z9*MTczNTY0NTU1NC4xLjAuMTczNTY0NTU1NC42MC4wLjI5ODMwNTM4Ng..&_ga=2.150417014.1722146026.1735411628-2124052640.1733641497&_gac=1.158367048.1733641508.Cj0KCQiAr7C6BhDRARIsAOUKifge6ZgZ6RPiMJBEp6JoeIce8NwAGJlnDJ2G-pU4xwNmpdw6MxG1ddQaAsxWEALw_wcB
We used to literally "jump" in the clubs when this was played....I miss the days
These are the vibes GenX grew up on. No wonder they don't F around.
Exactly
And this is a feel good, party song
Next up - BonerCrusher "Never Scared"
Facts
Gen X here. Man we rolled to music like this and we were fearless. Like what? Say something lol
This song was an absolute banger back in the day, imagine being in high school when this came out!
Imagine me being in my living room right now as a 40 year old mom :)
@@kellygw2317 gross
Yes to both😂
You should look up WIsconsin football JUmp Around. They do it in their football games and it is NUTS. The WHOLE STADIUM goes off.
Yes it was. I was in high school when this came out lol
I am a retired 62 year old white dude. Back in the Day I used to " Jump Around".
Same age and same reaction to the song
Still do
Here's another absolute banger... Insane in the Membrane - Cypress Hill
Oh that is a chune…
Oh yeah, big love for that too
😅 I was singing that last night Stoned AF 🤣
Almost any Cypress Hill is fire.
No joke loc!
Rob Base & DJ EZ Rock - It Takes Two 🔥 🔥🔥
Yes, for sure!
Classic
@@cbretschneider
I know I said that because I want him to hear it
Was not allowed to play it in youth club because I played it too much
Yes please!!
@DJ_Katone Exactly
Take it from a not too old radio guy, you youngins don't realize how strong Hip-Hop and Grunge was back in the late 80's and throughout the 90's. Some of us had to fight management to get this stuff on the air. They just didn't get it. I'm glad it's not being forgotten.
Thank you for your service
Yeah man thank you for fighting for the music that defined us
This song is a banger no doubt, but House of Pain, especially Everlast, aka Whitey Ford are a bunch of posers, and no one was trying to keep this song off the radio, it was a certified one hit wonder.
@@sunshynff actually there was a "No Rap Trend" running through radio at this time. How do I know? I worked at one. Quite a few radio consultants thought music like this would not appeal to advertisers. It may be true for some but not for all. Having lived through that period I can tell you that there was underline racism attached to that thought. When MTV Raps aired, it started to go mainstream there was really no stopping this genre from 1995 and beyond. The other side of the coin there was backlash from some in the Hip-Hop community the did not want to go mainstream and crossover became a dirty word. You see how well that worked out. Lastly I will say this, that old school songs and artist contributions like this are still going strong with the younger generations and the new guys out now need to learn something from them.
@@darkknightnj ....Actually no, there was not a "no rap trend" at this time, how do I know?? Well, a whole bunch of reasons actually, where do I start..... I worked as a sound engineer apprentice at Smith Lee Studios at the time, and was an intern at a radio station, and played in a band, and I also participated in the PMRC protests that came to a head in 1993, less than a year after this song dropped. Remember the PMRC fiasco, Parents Music Resource Center led by Tipper Gore, wanted to ban rap and heavy metal songs, Rob Halford of Judas Priest had to give that long grueling congressional testimony, and RATM showed up at 1993's Lalapalooza naked with PMRC written across their chests.
Oh, there's more.... House of Pain's "Jump Around" peeked at #3 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and #7 on the U.S. Billboard Rap chart, #8 in the U.K., top 10 in the Netherlands and Ireland and #15 in Australia, in May of 1992. Furthermore........
“Ice Ice Baby”, Vanilla Ice, November 3rd, 1990
“Good Vibrations”, Marky Mark, Oct 5th, 1991
“Set Adrift on Memory Bliss”, P.M Dawn, November 3rd, 1991 (first hip-hop group fronted by all people of color to hit #1)
“Here Comes the Hotstepper”, Ini Kamoze, Dec 17th, 1994. (First Jamaican artist to go to #1 with a rap/dancehall track.)
"Big Poppa", Notorious B.I.G., Dec 24th, 1994
“Gangsta’s Paradise” Coolio f. LV, September 9, 1995: (First solo black artist to have a #1 rap song on the chart
“The Crossroads”, Bone Thugs N Harmony, May 18th, 1996
“How Do U Want It”, 2Pac, July 13th, 1996
“Can’t Nobody Hold Me Down”, Puff Daddy, Mase March 22nd, 1997
“Mo Money Mo Problems”, Notorious BIG, August 30th, 1997
“Gettin Jiggy With It”, Will Smith, March 14th, 1998: Fun fact: the lyrics were written by Nas
***ALL THE ABOVE SONGS FROM ICE ICE BABY DOWN REACHED #1 ON EITHER THE TOP 100 OR RAP CHARTS OF BILLBOARD AND ALL WERE PLAYED ON TOP 40 TERRESTRIAL RADIO, INLCUDING JUMP AROUND ***** (This is not a full list, and if I included top 5s or top 10s I'd have to leave 3--4 more comments 😂😂)
You see how well that worked out when you actually know what you're talking about?? Lastly I will say this, what da-fk you know about old school music, I cut my teeth on Sugarhill Gang, Kool Moe Dee and Run DMC, I was one of the first in line to buy Beasties debut album Licensed To Ill in 1996, and again one of the first in line to buy NWA's debut Strait Out of Compton and Public Enemy's sophomore album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back in 1988. I'm well aware of the issues young bucks in today's industry lack, and where they fall short of the greats from back in the day, but I'm also aware of many artists today that are very slept on, artists that are true students of hip-hop culture, and do it justice quite well, you should broaden your horizons. Now go on and kick your little can on down the road junior, the grown ups are still talkin' here.
The singer of this group went on to have a solo career, he called himself Everlast.
for the record he never smoked crack lol
Everlast was actually a solo artist first, then formed "House of Pain"
Don't forget DJ Lethal after HoP went to support Limp Biskit
@chrisd913 yes sir...he was down with Ice T's Rhyme Syndicate
@@chrisd913 Before being a solo artist he was part of Ice-T's 'Syndicate'.
Just Imagine, you're a young man in your late teens, early twenties, at a big house party with all your friends, and then this song comes on. It was always awesome.
Every club we went to would play this song at some point in the evening. Hundreds of people would be jumping. The floor would be shaking, bottles,glasses, and tables. Nnnnooooooo one was sitting when this song came on. I'm surprised the dance floors never collapsed. It was that crazy 😂😂😂. Good times.
Oh yeah, this banger came on and floors across the world were gonna be tested for their load bearing capacity. Adelaide, South Australia, 1992, middle of a rave club and they drop this classic; boom the entire place starts jumping. It was amazing.
Welcome to the glory days of not just Hip Hop but music in general.
The band House of Pain were from California. The song Jump Around was inspired by Boston Irish hip-hop.
But, they did have a little New York in their history: DJ Lethal (Brighton Beach), Everlast (Long Island), and Danny Boy (Brooklyn).
🍀
@@randomtruths3400 The birth of rap was somewhere between the Sugar Hill Gang, who were all from Englewood, New Jersey, and DJ Kool Herc, who was from the Bronx, New York back in the early 1970s. We can all agree that Sugar Hill was the birthplace of commercial rap, as DJ Kool Herc was likely the first popular person known as a grassroots rapper. I agree that rap is 100% a NYC thing. I remember how hard of a time MTV was trying to sell it to white buyers back in the early 80's. The breakthrough was the crossover with Aerosmith and RUN-DMC. That opened the floodgates to rap. My older brother was such a metalhead. Said to me as we were watching the walk this way remix.) "they just killed Rock & Roll." Moving forward Hip-Hop has been the king of American Music.
The music vibe (lyrics, musical track, visuals, gear, etc. in HOP’s Jump Around is pure New York regardless of where it was recorded, where who recoded it was from, etc. But more importantly, it is universally one of the dopest rap songs from the dopest era of rap. I lived in Brooklyn when this song hit. It was banging in all five boroughs against any rap song by any group, solo rapper, etc. Big ups to Everlast and HOP.
I remember the song is awesome no matter who wrote it but you know being in Boston and playing this in the clubs everyone knew the video it was automatically assumed at first that they were from Boston because they look like a bunch of Boston guys. The urban graphics look just like they could have been a bunch of the other videos that were filmed locally. 30 years later and still awesome
Onyx - Slam got people hurt, too.😂
That needs a reaction too
People sure did. I was 17 when I saw them perform in Manhattan . They did 2 videos for this song.. The original radio one & a remix. I was at the show that they used clips from to do the video for the remix. It was nuts. The pit with everyone slam dancing. I went home looking like I was jumped lol The good old days lol
I remember when Slam come on in a packed nightclub, you had to jump at Slam because the motion of everyone else forced you to.
ATTACK OF THE BALD HEADS!!!
Damn right it did lol. i still remember where i was when I heard it for the first time lol
Our music just hit different back then. You danced your ass off back in the day. Especially the late 80s through the 90s.
Club was bouncing in the 90”s. Miss it!!!!!
He'll yeah! 100+ people in the club jumping in unison was crazy 😂
Those were the days!💯
I’m 50. I really miss the 90
I saw Snoop Dogg do a medley of rap classics live and it included "Jump Around". You know that it's one of the legendary rap songs then. It doesn't matter what your skin color is, how much money you have in the bank, or what you believe in; you hear those opening notes and you know what's coming. It's a universal jam.
"I DON'T KNOW WHAT HAPPENED!!!" is the best take on the state of the music being pushed out today Young Soldier! SALUTE!!💯💯💯
This song use to bang hard in the clubs, people would go wild .😂👍💯
Hell yeah, this came out when I first started clubbing in New Zealand. As soon as it came on the floor was going nuts
*used to
still till this day!
"I'm sure this song has got a lot of people trampled"!!! That is one of the funniest reactions I've ever heard in over 5 years of watching reaction videos!!.
I’m hysterical watching all of your videos. Let’s go! This was the 80s and 90s. The world has nothing on our music. We ruled the planet 30-40 years ago.
It was the Pinnacle of culture. It's all been downhill from there, see you all in the afterworld, friends.
We did!😉
Hallerluyer🙏🏽🙏🏽
We ruled the clubs and the streets for sure, the world would be a whole different place today if we ruled it then!
@@g.dubyou6263 absolutely
This song never gets old
The lead guy is Everlast. While he was born on Long Island, NY, he actually goes back to the Los Angeles rap scene as part of Ice-T's Rhyme Syndicate.
Also was part of La Coca Nostra.👍🏻
@@AliceBaker-ke1pl Yes. Facts.
He went to high school with Ice Cube and MC Ren, that's where he got a little cred, and met up with Ice-T, who took Everlast under his wing. He also made the mistake of dissing Eminem in the early 2000s because he though Em snubbed him at a concert. Em released two diss tracks on him, his first as a signed artist, the first one was ok, Everlast's response was garbage and Em's second diss was featuring D-12 and part of it used Tupac's "hit em up" beat, and he crushed Everlast bad, it was brutal, and pretty much killed Everlast's career, for at least a decade.
❤Public Enemy - Fight the Power ✊🏾💪🏾
“She watch channel Zero” - _PE featuring Slayer,_ tho
Your reactions are the best it’s about time a young person respects old school rep the greatest of all time
There was a lot of throwing your hands up in the 90's.
This is a certified old school banger 🏆👍
I personally know of two bars from back in the day that had to take this off the jukebox because everytime it came on the entire place would get on their feet and start bouncing until the walls were shaking and the floor joists about to collapse. Good times.
🤣🤣
i love watching the younger gen realize our hip hop wasnt playing the thing i like about old hip hop vs new is the new guys to many sound the same while the old heads everyone had a style that belonged to them
this song made every party epic lol lol in the bars, in the clubs, at the house party lol in the car lol
This track is older than you and still gets folks in a jumping mood!
This song came out in 92 and it's stlll played today at football games and probably even on the radio
They bump this at the grocery store, in the elevator, everywhere.
Best music was from 90' thank God I was born 1980!!!
Back in the early nineties when clubs were everywhere and this came on the whole floor was going crazy. We had such awesome stuff back then
This song will always be a vibe! No matter what mood I'm in, this song gets me jumping!
Love your reactions! Keep up the good work! Dont let the bastards get you down !
CYPRESSHILL-HAND ON THE PUMP!!!
Yes! "Sawed of shotgun, hand on the pump..."
A to the mother luvin K, homeboy...
DJ Muggs gave them this beat, cuz he thought they were doing too many songs that sounded the same. So it’s actually a collab with Cypress Hill
Whew hell yeah
@@michaelweigand9346Muggs was the man with the soul assassins with HOP, Funkdoobiest and Cypress Hill. He even gets a mention with “Muggs let’s the funk flow”
If you were there, back in the day, you knew this song. Every age, race, creed, color.
I danced in my chair right along with you! That was enjoyable.
There was about an entire decade when songs were obsessed with getting people to "jump!" Kriss Kross says hello.
Let’s not forget Van Halen’s “Jump”. We need to bring jumping back.
kriss kross producer stole the ''jump" idea from house of pain and released it first ...and in the end of the house of pain jump track they diss the guy who leaked the house off pain demo to kriss kross producer a guy named joe
I've commented that on one of his videos that if he wants to get into some more good oldies, Kris Kross Jump would be a good one for him, that was before seeing this 😂
Thiggity-thiggity-Thanks for the reminder!
he 💀
They play this after the third quarter of every Wisconsin home football game. The stadium goes nuts.
Camp Randall!!!!
House of Pain is from LOS ANGELES. This same groove was used a year later on CYPRESS HILL:s Insane in the membrane."
House got that sample from divine styler saying nothing which both was apart of rhyme syndicate
@@martymcflie3211 Word Power!
The music vibe (lyrics, musical track, visuals, gear, etc. in HOP’s Jump Around is pure New York regardless of where it was recorded, where who recoded it was from, etc. But more importantly, it is universally one of the dopest rap songs from the dopest era of rap. I lived in Brooklyn when this song hit. It was banging in all five boroughs against any rap song by any group, solo rapper, etc. Big ups to Everlast and HOP.
"I gotta go get me some water" made me laugh.
The dance floor was packed when this came on in the club!
This was when rap was rap they kept it real no BS
Started watching at 60 views and 20 likes. Ended with 185 views and 61 likes. You're cooking with fish grease now! Congrats.
This song will always be a banger! I’ve been commenting on your reactions about Queen songs. Just an FYI - Queen does not care about reactors playing their music They actually encourage it ❤❤
The lead rapper (everlast aka Eric) is my former neighbor. Real cool, down to earth dude. This song was banging in the clubs back in the day. This jam and Kriss Cross, jump, jump had folks out on the floor working it out.
Can confirm. Met him when I was working at a club in Pittsburgh. Nicest dude. Chill af. And let me tell you, when he played this I was walking the crowd and the floor was literally bouncing😅
I love your reactions and the joy to the music i grew up with in the 80s and 90s...by far the best period in hip hop
Lead singer later had a hit with "what it's like" under the name Everlast
White trash beautiful is fantastic, too. Actually, my favorite.
He also sang on Santana’s song “Put Your Lights On”. Both great tunes!
NYC is where hip hop began bro
Cali is where it was perfected.
@@ZenSponge cali is where literally nothing ever was perfected
I'm on the west coast and NO they didn't perfect shit 😂
@@notimportant3686💯
@@ZenSpongeabsolutely not 😂
Dj Quik "Tonite "🔥
2nd II None - If you want it
@@danielwalker1538 I thought about that one too
And DJ Quik ended up dissing Everlast on the Menace To Society soundtrack
House of Pain has a banger called "Who's The Man" that in my opinion does not get enough love.
Over 30 years and this song is still Hype AF! Huge hit in Boston back in the day!
Ain't heard this song in a very long time, when I saw the title I was like "if that's the song I'm thinking it is, he's gonna have a ball" and it was the song I thought it was, and you had a ball with it like I thought too 😂
I was in college when this came out. Ended every party with it. It was awesome!
Ok now you need to react to Everlast's What it's Like (he's the MC in this song) totally different vibe but amazing song
This is how old I am, when this song played during my high school dances, people would freak out and start dancing. You’re giving me memories, I mean I still remember how I used to dance to this song!
Used to play this tune when they opened up the big ramp at our long departed indoor roller rink. We all knew this song meant crazy motherlovers tryna hang from the rafters 😂🙈👌🏻💥🔥💪🏻
Public Enemy - night of the living bassheads
see i was thinking Fear Of A Black Planet. Maybe By The Time I Get To Arizona....with that kick drum and the distortion. bruh that shi FIYAH!
Great song of my time.
I don’t know how this popped up in my feed but you are hilarious! Love the enthusiasm keep it up!
"This motherLOVER" is a breath of fresh air💙
Man, I just found your channel, and I love that the music I grew up with is making a resurgence. I'm 40 and very much into metal and industrial these days, but this is a great trip down memory lane. Love your energy!
This song always gets me moving!
“Ain’t No Future In Yo Frontin”
-MC Breed
Let’s get it !!! 🔥🔥🔥
That's a good one. I know that song word for word
This!!!!
memory unlocked. was there a mixtape with EPMD right after this? my mind goes right to Relax your mind and let your conscience be free.
A WGCI 107.5 Chicago stroke from back in the day. 🤍🖤
Can't tell you how many times I jumped to this BITD at Axis in Boston.
OMG saaaame!
i was workin there when this came out. well, at avalon.
Lots of jumping at the club!!! My car key jumped out of my pocket jumping to this song!!....car window was smashed....after my buddy tried to use his head a few times. lol...of course CAA pulls in just after the smash!! Memorable night @ The NY Thruway in Fort Erie, Ontario, Canada....in 1990 something......I still jump to this song but can never forget that night....
Nice & Smooth - "Sometimes I Rhyme Slow"...🎄
sometimes i rhyme quick
Boogie! I really like this platform. I'm 49yo born and raised New York City via Jamaica W.I. I respect you and your respect for those who came before your time. I enjoy watching you embrace the good music of the past. Keep up the good work.
Back in the day everybody was on the dance floor jumping to this song. It was epic.
Dude you got me over here about to cry laughing. But I do feel bad for some of you young guys that missed out on these hits!!!!!
I just found your channel and I’m loving watching you you react to all the music I listened to when I was a kid and teenager. I’m 45 and it’s so fun to watch younger people love the old music as much as we did when it came out!
Every time this came on in the bar, you could pretty much bet that there wasn't a bum in a chair. Specifically every time the chorus hit.
Infectiously catchy!
Dj Quick "Tonite" FOR REAL, FOR REAL!!! ❤ 🙏🏿
This is how old I am, when this song played during my high school dances, people would freak out and start dancing.
welcome to the party kid!!! That's right they don't make 'em like this anymore
jump around baby!!!
btw your vids might get deleted for copyright issues if you don't block out the video, at least partially
put a filter over the vid and talk over it more...hell sing along if ya want ✌❤
What a reaction! And this song ” Jump around” sooo simple but simply irresistable💜
Much love from the Irish! Great reaction!
When we used to get ready for our rugby league games back in the 90's the boys always a tape deck in the changing rooms & the sounds were always pumping, for some it was a form of relaxation for others it was form of getting g'd up before going out & getting hammered, when the song dropped the whole f..king team even the coach were doing the pogo & we went out & thrashed the other side 56-6...lol, it's always been thee main go to song when getting for a footy game
House of Pain outta L.A.
DJ Muggs KILLED this classic beat and Everlast wrote a timeless track. His work in La Coka Nostra and WarPorn Industries is a must check as well. 💪💪
This the EXACT reaction I get every time this absolute BANGER start playing
Keep on that grind. We all here for it.
I saw Everlast twice in the late 90s in Dallas. He performed this song both times, and the crowds ate it up. It was awesome.
They are NOT from NY. They're from LA. This song was produced by DJ Muggs from Cypress Hill. Everlast (the rapper) was a part of Ice T's collective called Rhyme Syndicate.
That makes so much sense that it was produced by the guy from Cypress Hill!
Muggs is from Queens. Look it up.
And Everlast is from LA. The SF Valley to be exact...
@dwyermckeith5423 I know Muggs is from Queens. I remember him from the 7A3. But we ain't talking about him. This is about House Of Pain.
He was born in Nassau County, NY where he lived until he was 11.
@@borisdodgingbullets Why are we still talking about Muggs?
And the whoooole club was jumpin
Saw them live twice, both times at the Brixton Academy London in the mid 90’s along with Cypress Hill & Funkdoobiest!
The Academy is one of the best music venues in the world so you know it went off when they performed this song!
Faith No More had a great show at Brixton around that time too
Oh my so so envious in a good way sounds so so much fun!
speaking as someone who was there at the time..the floor went mental..still a banging tune to this day
the rapper on this track is everlast. he came up in ice-t's group rhyme syndicate before going solo. he joined this group but was unsatisfied so he quit and went back to a solo career.
Consider checking out his "What It's Like" - such a good track.
Love this song and love your reactions!! Lol yaaass!
Beastie boys, BDP, House of Pain, digital underground, Eric B and Rakim. This is all the soundtrack to Gen X. We don’t F around
You cannot NOT move listening to this! Greetings from Sweden 😊🇸🇪
Kris Kross - Jump Jump
Kyper "Tic Tac Toe" and "What Gets Your Body Hyped" are dance floor faves!
Insane in the Brain - Cypress Hill
I was lucky enough to see this lot in 1994 at T in the Park festival in Scotland. The place was bouncing!
This song may have sampled "Gett Off" by Prince (a great intro to the Prince rabbit hole), but it also might be sampled from Junior Walker's "Shoot Your Shot."
Watching you enjoy this is like watching a friend try some food they never had and they love it. Glad you enjoyed it!
My God. I wish I could have included your reaction in my compilation of this song. 😅 Two minutes in and I'm loling already.
That's Everlast and he was rapping with Ice T before this. He also released a solo album where he played guitar and was rock songs. "What it's like" was a good bluesy song
No they are from Boston
New York and New Jersey formed in LA California
Nope, they're from LA
No they are from New York
Everlast is from New York. This video is in New York
The video may be shot in New York, but House of Pain is from LA. The song was produced by DJ Muggs.