Musical Youth "Pass The Dutchie" - Signature Songs That Are Actually Covers

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 180

  • @PaKnit.
    @PaKnit. Год назад +12

    One of my favorite channels

  • @juniorjames7076
    @juniorjames7076 Год назад +52

    If you grew up in Queens, NYC in the 1980s (the heart of the Caribbean community), you could hear this song from every backyard BBQ during the summer, and from every basement party jam!

    • @peanutbuttergirl6098
      @peanutbuttergirl6098 Год назад

      You didn't even have to be in Queens, I grew up in Connecticut in the 80s and you couldn't drive anywhere without hearing this song playing from every single car out in traffic. Every single car was playing this and afrika bambaataa... That's just the way it was 💖🤗

    • @DiabolikalFollikles
      @DiabolikalFollikles Год назад +1

      If you grew up anywhere in the cosmos…🎼

    • @muhigwalawrencelawrence-js2bb
      @muhigwalawrencelawrence-js2bb Год назад

      007 was a hit in Uganda by then,
      You could be put to prison by Obote regime because m7 was in the bush at that time

    • @ColtanFree
      @ColtanFree 4 месяца назад

      Stop it!......Flatbush, Brooklyn is the heart of the Caribbean community.

  • @tericarter2019
    @tericarter2019 9 месяцев назад +2

    My condolences to the 2 brothers that have passed away. I still love all of them and their records and songs.💗💗

  • @jaded5957
    @jaded5957 Год назад +42

    Great video. Even as a kid I suspected Dutchie was a drug reference, so seems weird being middle-aged and only now just finding out it was a pot reference of another kind.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +12

      Yeah its ironic that it went from being about Pot to about A Pot. And as food is also a common slang term for all kinds of drugs, the meaning barely changed. Some people still think dutchie is a reference to weed being decriminalised in Holland or Dutch Masters cigars being used to roll spliffs. Perhaps they should have gone with pass the mars bar? lol...

    • @IdeologieUK
      @IdeologieUK Год назад +1

      Just weed mate! We’re the same age and I personally had many occasions where I said ‘Pass the Duchie’ 😊

  • @norbertt.t6444
    @norbertt.t6444 5 месяцев назад +2

    Each and every day now i go back to my youth days of 198x and i listen to a song from idol group Musical youth . I remember exactly where i was when i heard them for the first time .

  • @shepkapungu2827
    @shepkapungu2827 Год назад +3

    Wooooow Dude 1982??????? ... I was 5years old in Zimbabwe when Musical Youth came out on TV top of the pops ... And i cant believe at 5years old i understood English and "Jamaican" patoi (sp) ... And sang along .
    And i felt like YES , i am of this Generation , and we rule the nation .WoW resonance...

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Thanks for watching! Glad you liked it. So they were on TV in Zimbabwe? Amazing! And you are much younger than kelvin was... definitely ur generation! Boom tings

  • @wwn1970
    @wwn1970 Год назад +3

    Nice narration style on your videos.

  • @brucemartin974
    @brucemartin974 Год назад +4

    Great clip. I was in London when the song was released. I enjoyed it so much that I bought the single and brought it back to Canada. I gave it to the local university radio station and they started playing it. This was before the song came out in North America so they had a first. Still love the catchiness of the tune.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      That's cool, so you may have had a part to play in their success in North America!

  • @watsonunlimitedmusic
    @watsonunlimitedmusic Год назад +3

    They used to play this music video on the break between Blue Peter. Growing up in the early 80s in the U.K. this was the pinnacle of cool - kids from the playground on tv. And they were good !!

  • @supramanrussmeister5906
    @supramanrussmeister5906 2 месяца назад +2

    Fantastic content, and Pass The Dutchie was an absolute smash it and summer sensation 🎉

  • @ngonor1241
    @ngonor1241 Год назад +16

    Really enjoying your channel, especially the copyright cases.
    On a side note, I saw Musical Youth in 1980 before they were famous. They were supporting my favourite band, The Beat (aka The English Beat) at a gig in Birmingham specifically for under 16s. I was 15 and was so impressed that these kids could play their instruments live at such a high standard. So I was not surprised when they made it.
    Another great video. Thank you.

  • @GoofRebelMusic
    @GoofRebelMusic Месяц назад +1

    Great video. I loved every second.
    I'm a reggae lover but never knew any of the story behind this song.

  • @davidellis7678
    @davidellis7678 Год назад +1

    Wonderfully done i for one love reggae music and singers dearly

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Thanks 😁
      Please do check out the other reggae videos on the channel if you haven't already. I'm half Jamaican so it's a subject close to my heart...many more to come soon.

  • @factoryfactory7142
    @factoryfactory7142 Год назад +3

    Stumbled across this channel, its ace! A good insight into the music biz!

  • @deanjones6976
    @deanjones6976 Год назад +1

    Love this. All the way here in Jamaica. Respect

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Thank you sir!
      Which part of JA you deya?
      My mother is from Morant Bay, St Thomas...

  • @bailey9746
    @bailey9746 Год назад +4

    Your reggae histories are fascinating, well researched and insightful. I've been obsessed with reggae for 30+ years and didn't know half the stuff you covered. Keep it going it's very appreciated 👍

  • @Gregorovitch144
    @Gregorovitch144 Год назад +6

    I still have an original 12" of the Mighty Diamond's Pass the Kouchie". Saw them live in London, Sly and Robbie in the engine room. Monster bass line. I thought Musical Youth were pretty cheeky doing their version of it at the time.

  • @hector131
    @hector131 Год назад +2

    Oh how I love RUclips suggestions algorithm sometimes!!!
    Thank you so very much for this gem.

  • @danielhoskins4690
    @danielhoskins4690 Год назад +1

    That was excellent. Great watch an I look forward to more!

  • @Vivalarosa45
    @Vivalarosa45 Год назад +4

    OMG! I remember singing this song way back in preschool. Both my parents approved, I have absolutely no idea what I was singing and it represented my step-father's culture so I would hear this song at family get-togethers. In some cases, my step-father and relatives knew the true nature of the song since they're from Jamacia but as for me, it's just a fun song to sing with the kids on TV. 😅

  • @heatherr0420
    @heatherr0420 Год назад +3

    I also will always remember the one guy, I forget which of them it was, saying how they may have been a one-hit wonder but they had that one hit and you couldn't take it away from them. I think he was commenting on how they did least be remembered for that one song. Over forty years later I still jam to it, a white girl from Suburban New Jersey despite not having anybody around from the country of Jamaica found on their own a love for reggae music. And no worries, I will always remember Musical Youth

  • @beverlyharriott1658
    @beverlyharriott1658 Год назад +1

    Love the energy

  • @DanielRuyters
    @DanielRuyters Год назад +2

    Loving those 80s songs. Pass the Dutchie is so catchy. Didn't know anything about the history of it.

  • @willallen7757
    @willallen7757 Год назад +2

    Here in the states we just thought a dutchie was a joint lol, and even started calling them that.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      I know right lol... well at least it did enough to get past the BBC censors. Wouldnt have been a hit without Radio 1 and BBC1 TV

  • @romeroharris8274
    @romeroharris8274 Год назад +4

    Believe it or not musical youth was responsible for bringing Reggae amongst youths in the USA to the mainstream so what it did was broaden our young minds to Reggae music .coz me and my loves Reggae and musical youth was responsible for ..much ❤ to the youth!

    • @ColtanFree
      @ColtanFree 4 месяца назад

      What they did was introduce the new sound of reggae which was transforming from the Bob Marley cultural style reggae to the new Dancehall style.

  • @SandraSealySeawomanBDS
    @SandraSealySeawomanBDS Год назад +2

    This is a brilliant vid. Did not realize it was a mishmash of covers but separately they DO sound familiar.
    The Caribbean is SUCH a rich source of musical creativity since forever and still is frfr.

  • @robwebnoid5763
    @robwebnoid5763 Год назад +1

    Yup, I remember this song.

  • @kodek1234
    @kodek1234 Год назад +1

    Can't wait for your follow up video man.

  • @fedoramcclaren4294
    @fedoramcclaren4294 Год назад +2

    The Youth Of Today album is one of my favourites to this day!!! Me mum used to play it ALL THE TIME!!!
    Although i am familiar with the U-Roy chune, it still didn't register that it was the same...a fool am i...lol

  • @MarkGelderland
    @MarkGelderland Год назад +11

    Being Dutch myself we were sure it was about smoking a joint, especially since the members of the band were so young we found that incredibly funny. NR1 hit in the Netherlands. Now to find out it wasn't about passing the joint on the left handside?! Wasn't the cookingpan reference made up later to be PC? like the Beatles did with Lucy in the sky with diamonds (nooo, has nóthing to do with lsd -yeah right lol).

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +4

      Nah I remember even at the time telling kids at school what a dutchie was. My auntie had the exact one in the picture in the video, just a slighter deeper size. She never really said dutchie tho she always said Dutch pot. Cos that's what's written on it. 🤷‍♂️ I was 5 when it came out tho...but when i got a bit older we still made it mean what the original song meant. Songs can mean whatever u want. 😌 all the lyrics still work both ways

    • @dunebasher1971
      @dunebasher1971 Год назад +1

      I was 11 years old when the song came out, and I clearly recall "dutchie" being widely explained as a cooking pot. The origin of the song as "pass the kutchie" didn't emerge until some time later.

    • @MarkGelderland
      @MarkGelderland Год назад

      @@dunebasher1971 The lyrics suggest otherwise though: ''As I pass the dreadlocks camp, I heard them say'' / ''It a go bun'' -means To Smoke a Joint

    • @eternalsence3033
      @eternalsence3033 Год назад +1

      @@MarkGelderland ye but thats just lyrics from pass the kouchie, they just changed the words referring to smoking

    • @themadsamplist
      @themadsamplist Год назад

      Yes 😁 Hier hetzelfde

  • @martinacold9255
    @martinacold9255 Год назад +3

    Missy said pass that dutch😂 her video was crazy. She did try to pay homage.

  • @hybridangel3403
    @hybridangel3403 Год назад +1

    Proud Brummie (of Birmingham) these boys from an the area my Dad lived in in Birmingham.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Half my family are from Handsworth, Nechells area...i used to have a studio by Hockley bypass.

    • @surunitemiakanni-oye4346
      @surunitemiakanni-oye4346 Год назад

      ​@@Traxploitation​ Handsworth revolution was necessary.

  • @oneidawolf776
    @oneidawolf776 Год назад +2

    Ahaha I always thought a dutchy was a dutch master. Thanks for the knowledge!

  • @dannyward673
    @dannyward673 Год назад +2

    Breaking Boundaries 👊🏼👊🏿 in the uk 🇬🇧 thank you Jamaica 🇯🇲🙌🏿🙌🏼🙌🏾🙌🏻🙌🏾

  • @marienbad2
    @marienbad2 Год назад +4

    Great video, it was real interesting to see where the different parts of the song came from. The guy being interviewed who said he just wanted to play football and eat - yeah, so accurate I feel it!
    I was dreading that this would be another of those band exploited by the manager or label videos so was glad to see it wasn't. And the idea of the deal with the club where they played for free and if the audience didn't like it they wouldn't pay but if they did they'd pay is just brilliant.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +5

      Glad you liked it.
      However, their story is unfortunately one of exploitation and tragedy. 😕 I left it out of this one as I just wanted to focus on the one signature song. I'm going to the story of what happened after, next.

    • @streamsandgalaxies
      @streamsandgalaxies Год назад

      @@Traxploitation Thanks for your channel & content! Pls do the Musical Youth story, looking forward to it, as sad as it was, more of those stories need telling!

  • @wrestlefigsuk
    @wrestlefigsuk Год назад +2

    These guys were from my city. When I was a kid I did athletics for my junior school, I won a medal, I came home and my mom said we were going to her friends, it was Patrick & Junior’s house, we went in and they offered me some pineapple rock sweets haha

  • @donutsrule7372
    @donutsrule7372 Год назад +2

    I have just found your channel.
    I love Musical Youth and still play their music.
    A friend at school told us it was a cover and what the song was really about, lol.
    Keep up the great work, I'm doing a binge watch now. :)

  • @b62boom1
    @b62boom1 Год назад +1

    What a class vid. I'm about to binge watch your channel! Thanks.

  • @laurijss
    @laurijss Год назад +2

    You forget to mention that in 2000 a french electronic dance music group Superfunk sampled intro line of this song in "The Young MC" whitch was a big hit in Europe's dance music scene at that time and charted in various countries 👍

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment
      There's lots of uses I didn't mention its been sampled around 100 times, I didn't forget tho. I just made a choice as to what was important for the story...reading a long list of songs that sampled it is kind of dull. 🤷‍♂️

  • @mainamaseeti
    @mainamaseeti Год назад +1

    Great video bro, nice narration, superb research!!

  • @zeusapollo8688
    @zeusapollo8688 Год назад +2

    Great breakdown.
    The Althea and Donna track uptown top ranking would be a good story

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      Good suggestion, and links to this track too as it was John Peel that brought that track to the UK public.
      But I'd go back and talk about the original Three Piece Suit...and I'm still in love with you 🤔
      Yeah really good suggestion! 👍
      Thanks.

  • @al201103
    @al201103 Год назад +2

    You just gained another sub. Great video, concise but the inclusion of actual interviews really helps a lot. Great to hear the story of this band - I had both albums as a kid and loved them!

  • @robmcd85
    @robmcd85 10 месяцев назад +1

    I’ve just stumbled across your channel today and really enjoying your videos. The way you boil down the issues or concepts and explain them clearly while keeping the content engaging and interesting is superb. You’ve a new subscriber!

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  10 месяцев назад

      Hi, thanks for watching and taking the time to comment, I really appreciate it. 😊
      It takes a fair bit of time to research and produce these episodes so it's always nice to hear positive feedback, it gives me the motivation to keep going. 😀
      So thanks again...and welcome 🙏

  • @japhy6536
    @japhy6536 Год назад +1

    so cool - thank you!

  • @timotheegoulet1511
    @timotheegoulet1511 Год назад +1

    "Wind out me wears" just realized hearing that from Althea & Donna's "Uptown Top Ranking"!

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Its "Wind up my waist" 😁
      But yeah you're right uptown top ranking has the same "gimme little bass make me wind up my waist" line. Well spotted!

  • @canadaclaret
    @canadaclaret Год назад +1

    I saw Musical Youth as an opening act for King Sunny Adé and his African Beats at the Montreux Jazz Festival. As the crowd entered, each patron was given a sampler pack containing 5 Marlborough cigarettes. Leroy Sibbles lived in Toronto when this version was big. My friend, Joey Sponga, a red--headed Italian from Friuli played bass in his band.

    • @abraxasjinx5207
      @abraxasjinx5207 Год назад

      King Sunny Adé is great! I have one of his records.

    • @canadaclaret
      @canadaclaret Год назад

      @@abraxasjinx5207 I saw him and his band two other times in Toronto and was at another awesome show that they were supposed to headline but it was cancelled part way through due to thunderstorms. 6 great acts, with Black Uhuru and King Sunny Adé the last two, after the likes of Rev Al Green and Eek-a-Mouse. The storm started during the fourth act and although he tried his best to carry on, despite getting shocks, they cancelled during Mr. Mouse's set.

  • @earlofcumbrae-Ground_Zero
    @earlofcumbrae-Ground_Zero Год назад +3

    Interesting ! I'm looking forward to the story of the members after the band split up... keep up the good work! Greetings from the French Alps. 💖🐕

    • @dunebasher1971
      @dunebasher1971 Год назад +2

      It's not a completely happy one, sadly. The band broke up acrimoniously. The Waite brothers are both dead; Patrick died of a heart condition when he was only 24, and Freddie Jr died last year after suffering mental health issues for some time. Kelvin Grant turned his back on the music industry for a very long time after being burned by exploitative managers.

  • @sonnieslyeopute9426
    @sonnieslyeopute9426 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great job man.

  • @k.t.5405
    @k.t.5405 Год назад +2

    As a kid, I remember constantly getting Musical Youth and Sonic Youth mixed up...

  • @dyzlexiccm
    @dyzlexiccm Год назад +1

    Another informative and entertaining video! Thanks again!!

  • @elizabethyoung3061
    @elizabethyoung3061 Год назад +1

    Just discovered your amazing channel. Will be bingeing while I work tomorrow onwards.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      Cool! glad you found me 😀
      But er shouldn't you be working...at work...don't let me get you in trouble😆

    • @elizabethyoung3061
      @elizabethyoung3061 Год назад +1

      @@Traxploitation I work in the living room 🤣

  • @acb6621
    @acb6621 Год назад +4

    Great material as always. Well researched, well presented. Keep it up! (and let me know if you ever run dry on ideas, so many tracks and bands have fascinating back stories!)

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +3

      I don't think I'll ever run dry, but I'm open to suggestions and if it's a good one it'll jump the list!
      Any in particular u had in mind?

  • @Oooo-bi7bi
    @Oooo-bi7bi Год назад +1

    Found your channel today its good

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      Thank you 😊 and welcome 🙏

    • @Oooo-bi7bi
      @Oooo-bi7bi Год назад +1

      @@Traxploitation it’s channels like yours that makes my RUclips premium subscription worthwhile. Been a fan of Reggae since hearing pirate radio from Moss Side in Manchester England.

  • @batmandestroys1978
    @batmandestroys1978 Год назад +1

    Great Channel!

  • @gloriacato7761
    @gloriacato7761 Год назад +1

    Not knowing much, i've learned more.

  • @HyinaMufasa13
    @HyinaMufasa13 Год назад +1

    These videos are solid

  • @matthewmoore5698
    @matthewmoore5698 Год назад +1

    I was living it , when I was a kid they were on local news, tiwas, top of the pops everything and it was explained to us “white” kids a dutchie was a stew pot ! but we use to say pass the dutchie when someone held on to a joint too long , awesome x

  • @DiabolikalFollikles
    @DiabolikalFollikles Год назад +2

    Culture Club, Men At Work, The Police were among many white UK groups who incorporated elements of reggae in their music: while pocketing more money. Non-Blacks hijacking elements of Black culture to create something “new” has unfortunately been the norm forever. Still, awesome upload. New sub.🎼🖤🎼

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +2

      I get what youre saying but Culture Club aren't a "white group". Mikey Craig, bassist and founding member is a black englishman of Jamaican descent. 🤷‍♂️ they didn't "hijack" anything. They combined their individual cultures...hence the name.
      "Down Under" has a vaguely reggae vibe to it, but Men At Work was mostly rock/pop.
      But the Police? Don't get me started on the Police!. I can't think of another all white band that relied so heavily on reggae and yet never did anything in return. Most other bands, even members of The Beatles and The Rolling Stones actually went to Jamaica and recorded in Jamaican studios with Jamaican musicians. The closest the police got was George Martins AIR studios in Montserrat that locals were not permitted to use.
      Ugh then there's "Regatta De Blanc" allegedly a faux French rendering of the phrase "White reggae" with Stings borderline offensive fake carribean accent 🙄.
      (I do still think message in a bottle and walking on the moon are great songs) but other than that I have very little good to say about them.
      (I should probably add, for context, I'm a mixed race englishman myself, my mum is Jamaican and i lived there as a young child)

    • @DiabolikalFollikles
      @DiabolikalFollikles Год назад +2

      @@Traxploitation i appreciate the breakdown and insight concerning CC and MAW. However, the general hijacking of Black culture particularly in music cannot be denied. As you are aware, most forms of *American* music were created/invented by *Black* artists: gospel, blues, r&r, jazz, hip-hop, etc. Early blues and rock&roll artists died penniless because they were swingled. Thankfully, modern Black artists now have more economic autonomy and creative control. During the onset, we paid a heavy price for our ignorance. Thankfully, “thangs in the game done changed.” ✌🏽🎼🖤

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      @Leslie Warnell yes "in general" there are some nuances to it but even them it doesnt really change the overall truth that marginalised communities got savagely exploited, and in terms of the USA the largest marginalised community is black people.
      Some black artists and creatives are now gaining some autonomy but there's still some ways to go until its truly and even playing field.

  • @hhvictor2462
    @hhvictor2462 Год назад +1

    I recall Jamaicans, at the time the song was released, was hesitant to tell me what the tune really meant, except to say that it was about a Dutch oven.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      This song IS about a Dutch oven but it's hard to deny the original meaning.
      It's like when All Saints covered Under the Bridge and tried to say it was just a love song and not about drugs...when it was clearly a song about heroin addiction 🤷‍♂️🤦‍♂️

  • @juliaconnell
    @juliaconnell Год назад +1

    oh no - this has started me on a rabbit hole of 80s music - Safety Dance... (I was either 12 or 13 when this came out - loved the song immediately, then saw the music video - had the biggest crush on the lead singer 😍) I can see Micky (oh micky you're so fine, you're so fine you blow my mind, hey micky, hey micky!) (this & Eye of the Tiger, oh & We are the Kids from America (woahh) - opps 'in' not 'from' defining songs of our class (so ironic, the 'kids in america' esp, given we were kiwi kids - aka New Zealanders) - . was just wondering yesterday how MANY songs, including lyrics, are stuck in my head.... (& growing - belong to a community choir, so much lovely new music...)

  • @MizTheDonGargon
    @MizTheDonGargon Год назад +3

    we all thought it was about blunts lmao Dutch masters😊

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      😆 lol
      That's the beauty of music though, it can mean what you want it to mean 😏 now pass that dutchie!

  • @shonsaunders420
    @shonsaunders420 Год назад +1

    Lone Ranger “Three Mile Skank” used the “Full Up” rhythm too.

  • @jannarkiewicz633
    @jannarkiewicz633 Год назад +1

    Cute tribute by the actual writer of the song. He made no money :-)

  • @lourdesgyan
    @lourdesgyan Год назад +1

    Interesting! This song was so popular in my country Ghana when I was a kid in the 90s. Did they credit URoy?

  • @RBB8S
    @RBB8S Год назад

    The pronunciation of hand change from the release of the song till the live reunion

  • @strandedinparadise8202
    @strandedinparadise8202 Год назад +1

    That's a subscribe for the channel name alone! Great content too and I'm looking forward to seeing you develop.

  • @anthonycarlisle6184
    @anthonycarlisle6184 Год назад

    Wedding Singer was my generation's introduction to this song

  • @juliaconnell
    @juliaconnell Год назад +1

    wow - this is really interesting. I was born in 1971, so grew up with this song, and always understood 'the dutchie' to be a reference to weed/ganja/dope - (even though this was not present in my life at all) - funny that it was *actually* about food (while also being about weed/ganja/dope in it's original form). I'll have to listen to this again with FOOD in mind. also, while I knew about dutch ovens always assumed they were, well, dutch - not that this was the casting method. enjoy little tidbits of knowledge like this. thanks. always interested in the background to songs, reeally appreciate this content - thank you!

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      Thanks! So glad you enjoyed it...I'm all about the tidbits!!! Without them I feel like I'm just drawing outlines...those details add colour and texture 😃

  • @brinkybrinkz
    @brinkybrinkz Год назад +1

    I didn't know what I was doing when I made this one? I didn't know one riddim could a last so long. I never made much money on this one, but I still feel good. Each time a soundboy string up Leroy Sibbles in your neighborhood. I'm the original full up full up full up!

  • @KattMurr
    @KattMurr Год назад +1

    Funny how now a Dutchie does refer to a joint made with cigar paper...lol...

  • @humorpotamus
    @humorpotamus 2 месяца назад +1

    These guys are probably grown up by now.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  2 месяца назад

      Lol. Yes. The people in this video who were children in the 80s...are now, 40 odd years later..." probably grown up" 🙄🤷‍♂️
      Although 2 of the members sadly died...Freddie Waite died in 2022 and Patrick Waite in 1993.

  • @divinedelaware7541
    @divinedelaware7541 Год назад +1

    I think they talkin about having the munchies after a fire session

  • @insmett1elf4
    @insmett1elf4 Год назад +1

    I like the video, may this comment kick the algorhythm. Thank you!

  • @javenwilliams9875
    @javenwilliams9875 Год назад +1

    All that work to change the drug references for everyone to immediately think is a song about drugs decades later. I always loved the song and thought Dutchie meant weed from the get go. Im glad to know the history behind thesong now😂😂

  • @deafviolinist
    @deafviolinist Год назад +1

    's good yeah

  • @thomaskinsey3424
    @thomaskinsey3424 Год назад +1

    Ironic that they were trying to make it less of a drug reference, but inadvertently made it a more modern drug reference, for those who’ve smoked dutch masters blunts at least

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Yeah, and for us in UK who didn't find out about Dutch Masters and other blunts until we heard it in hip hop tunes in the 90s, we thought it was a reference to cafes in Amseterdam where u can smoke spliffs🤷‍♂️

  • @flybobbie1449
    @flybobbie1449 Год назад +1

    When the video aired back then, having Parliament as a back drop seemed off. See why now, the message even then.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Yeah I always thought it was strange too...mostly cos I knew they were from Birmingham 🤔

  • @Captain_Rhodes
    @Captain_Rhodes Год назад +1

    Girls just wanna have fun would be quite a good one to do

  • @mattkaustickomments
    @mattkaustickomments Год назад +1

    Even as a kid who knew nothing about drugs, I was pretty sure it was about passing a spliff around when it came out.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +1

      Lol its funny how they changed it but it stayed the same 🤷‍♂️😂

    • @mattkaustickomments
      @mattkaustickomments Год назад

      @@Traxploitation Haha! I know, I just thought Dutchie was Brixton slang for doobie. Dey fooled noo one, mon.

  • @grahambingham1649
    @grahambingham1649 Год назад +3

    RIP PATRICK WAITE

  • @moedemama
    @moedemama Год назад +3

    Pay leroy sibbles, vulchures

  • @MayaLarsen-y3r
    @MayaLarsen-y3r 5 месяцев назад +1

    ❤❤

  • @muhigwalawrencelawrence-js2bb
    @muhigwalawrencelawrence-js2bb Год назад +1

    Oh their was andnice

  • @justinaowobu5662
    @justinaowobu5662 2 месяца назад

    I feel good to day old shool

  • @richardfinlayson1524
    @richardfinlayson1524 Год назад +1

    Dutchie sounds like it's about pot too, as pot is legal in Holland

  • @cyaniderecords
    @cyaniderecords Год назад +2

    🇯🇲🔥

  • @newwavepop
    @newwavepop Год назад +1

    i remember several years back i saw some comedian or somebody on TV talking about when he was young he found them scary, because in the music video they looked just like those pictures you see of little kid soldiers in Africa holding machine guns and stuff and i actually always thought the same thing so i literally never even knew they were an English band. i actually thought they were some group of kids from some African country or something. im American and was the same age as them so i had no idea what the buildings behind them were.

  • @hdervish2497
    @hdervish2497 Год назад

    That's hilarious that they changed it from kutchie, because of then I can joints dutchies and I always pass to the left

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Right!? Lol.
      Also I've never passed a cooking pot around. 🤷‍♂️

  • @brutalbasspro
    @brutalbasspro Год назад +1

    8th grade I had to do summer school or be held back. One day after school a friend who also was in summer school took me to his South African dads apartment. He was blasting this song smoking spliffs of dirt reb bud and cigarette tobacco. He explained to me what the song means shared his dirty splifs with us and cooked some spicy sausage and rice that was delicious. This song always brings back those memories of the mid 90s hot apartment in a block of immigrants so many different smells and types of music going at once.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Amazing what memories a song can bring back...a sound can remind you of a smell
      Thanks for watching and taking the time to share your story 😊

  • @roger_rivas
    @roger_rivas Год назад

    If ya want the REAL OG OG, it's "Full Up" by Jackie Mittoo & Sound Dimension.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      Did u not watch the whole video before commenting? 🤷‍♂️🤦‍♂️🤣
      I mentioned all that and more. 😁
      Just the bassine in from Full Up.
      Most of the words are from Pass The Kutchie, some words are from U-Browns "Gimme the music" and the intro is adapted from "Rule the Nation" by U-Roy.
      All. Mentioned. In. The. Video. 🙄😎

  • @codzy3532
    @codzy3532 Год назад

    to cool awesome good onto them is the guy that directed them singing in front of parliament house is he the guy from aswad

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад

      That's Don Letts. He was videographer for The Clash, co-founded Big Audio Dynamite, managed The Slits. Directed a bunch of music videos for The Clash, Bob Marley and Fun Boy 3. Introduced Bob Marley to punk music, inspiring the song "Punky Reggae Party". Directed the Jamaican movie "Dancehall Queen" and has been a BBC radio host since 2009.

  • @abraxasjinx5207
    @abraxasjinx5207 Год назад

    A dutchie is a weed blunt named after the Dutch Master cigar that was used for such.

    • @Traxploitation
      @Traxploitation  Год назад +2

      Nope! It's not. Not in the context of this song. It absolutely isn't.
      They were school children from Birmingham UK in the 1980s. Dutch Masters are an American brand that were not on sale in the UK at that time. Even now they're not very widely available, Phillies Blunts are far more common for that purpose and even they're only available in Hip Hop related shops.
      They would have had no idea about some obscure brand of American cigar. 🤦‍♂️ the notion of rolling weed in a cigar didn't come to UK until the 1990s and even then wasn't widespread.
      However, every Jamaican kid knows what a Dutch Pot is 🤷‍♂️
      Why on earth would they replace the word Kutchie...that most Jamaicans know about to a brand of cigars that none of them know about, in order to make the song not about smoking? 🤦‍♂️ makes zero sense. 😆

    • @rickwalters5066
      @rickwalters5066 Год назад

      A dutchie is a pot you cook in

  • @billychapman7274
    @billychapman7274 Год назад +1

    brum

  • @KimTebrok
    @KimTebrok Год назад +1

    Child exploitation. Very sad. Human vultures are always around to exploit naïveté & vulnerability. Most creative people have been exploited by financial shite bags.

  • @MadSUPANOVA
    @MadSUPANOVA 9 месяцев назад

    Watching this. I already figured who got all their money. Same old pimp game. Really messed up the original song was stolen and original artist for 'pass the duchee'... got no money. Ridiculous.

  • @andyboz4752
    @andyboz4752 8 месяцев назад

    Yuck

  • @FirebrandVOCALS
    @FirebrandVOCALS 6 месяцев назад +1

    I bought this single at that time I was 9 years old 🥸