Throw It on Me

"Throw It on Me"
Single by Timbaland featuring The Hives
from the album Shock Value
Released July 23, 2007
(See release history)
Recorded 2006
Virginia Beach, Virginia
(Thomas Crown Studios)
Miami, Florida
(The Hit Factory Criteria)
Sweden
(Studio Gröndahl)
Genre Rap rock
Length 2:11
Label Blackground, Interscope
Writer(s) Timothy Mosley, Timothy Clayton, Randy Fitzsimmons
Producer(s) Timbaland
Timbaland singles chronology
"The Way I Are"
(2007)
"Throw It on Me"
(2007)
"Ayo Technology"
(2007)
The Hives singles chronology
"A Little More for Little You"
(2005)
"Throw It on Me"
(2007)
"Tick Tick Boom"
(2007)
Music video
"Throw It on Me" on YouTube

"Throw It on Me" is a song performed by American producer, songwriter and rapper Timbaland, taken from his second studio album Shock Value (2007). The song is performed as a collaboration between Timbaland and Swedish garage rock band The Hives. It was written by Timbaland, Attitude and Randy Fitzsimmons, while production and instrumentation were helmed by Timbaland.

The song was made available for download in Australia on August 4, 2007. "Throw It on Me" utilizes disco and rock genres while incorporating dance and hip hop flavored beats. Contemporary music critics viewed it as one of the better rock tracks on Shock Value, although they were collectively criticized as falling short of expectations. The single ultimately flopped in Australia, spending only one week on the singles chart at number fifty.

Background and composition

"Throw It on Me" was written and produced by Timbaland, while additional writing was done by Attitude and Randy Fitzsimmons, the latter is a long-time collaborator for The Hives.[1] Sound engineer Demacio "Demo" Castellon handled the programming and mixing for the song; the latter took place at The Studio at The Palms Las Vegas in Paradise, Nevada.[1] Mark Gray, James Roach and Doug Sadler assisted Castellon in mixing the song.[1] Castellon also recorded Timbaland's vocals for the song at Thomas Crown Studios in Virginia Beach, Virginia and The Hit Factory Criteria in Miami, Florida.[1] The Hives received their own recording engineer, Johan Gustafsson, and had their vocals recorded at Studio Gröndahl in the band's home country Sweden.[1] Howlin' Pelle Almqvist, lead vocalist of The Hives, contributed vocals alongside Timbaland.[1] In addition to co-writing and producing the song, Timbaland also provided every instrument.[1] The guitars, however, were also provided by The Hives's guitarists Vigilante Carlstroem and Nicholaus Arson alongside musician Dan Warner.[1] "Throw It on Me" merges disco and rock music with dance and hip hop beats.[2] The song uses a jagged guitar, techno keyboards, drums and pulsating dance beats.[2]

Release and reception

"Throw It on Me" was released as the third single from Shock Value (2007), after the worldwide chart topper "The Way I Are" (2007). It was serviced to digital retailers in Australia on August 4, 2007 and was released as a CD single two days later on August 6, 2007.[3][4] A month later, the song appeared on the Australian Singles Chart at number fifty before falling off the following week.[5] "Throw It on Me" received fairly positive reviews; most found the track to be the better of the rock-oriented tracks on Shock Value, but those tracks received criticism for falling short of expectations. Andrea Park of The Online Gargoyle named "Throw It on Me" one of the album's best highlights, calling it an effortless blend of rock and hip hop.[6] David Hyland of WESH Orlando praised the vocal collaboration between Timbaland and The Hives's Pelle Almqvist and said, "He puffs up his voice like Rob Zombie and his aggressiveness on the mic keeps the cut moving. As Tim raps, Hives singer Pelle Almqvist is his Flavor Flav. He howls, yells and screeches and generally keeps the song's energy level high."[2] Andy Kellman of AllMusic called it a "frisky, careening number that must have taken all of ten minutes to put together".[7] Zharmer Hardimon of The Houston Chronicle claims the Swedish band renders awe on the track and wrote, "The tunes give way to what Shock Value could have been or perhaps tries to be — a genre-bending modern-day version of Quincy Jones's 1980 classic The Dude."[8] Alexis Petridis of The Guardian expressed his disappointment in the rock-oriented tracks on Shock Value. At one point, he wrote, "The Hives must have wondered if it was really worth the journey from Fagersta just to play the guitar riff from the Elastik Band's 60s garage rocker Spazz on Throw It On Me."[9] Evan McGarvey of Stylus Magazine called "Throw It on Me" and "Time" " battlegrounds between two divergent tempos, effects drowning out the instruments we want to hear (post-punk needs a elegant, discernable bassline) and truism after truism (The Hives want to psyche up, She Wants Revenge needs a hug)."[10]

Plagiarism

In lieu of a copyright lawsuit over "Throw It On Me", Timbaland and David Cortopassi, the composer of "Spazz", which was originally recorded by The Elastik Band and released by ATCO/Atlantic and EMI, reached a settlement agreement in July 2009. [11] [12] [13]

"Spazz", noted as being "one of the most tasteless records ever made", was initially banned by radio stations and even pulled mid-stream while on air when first released in 1967. At the time, the DJ even apologized to his listeners for playing the record.[14] Since then it has become a popular cult favorite of garage band enthusiasts worldwide which led to its CD re-release in 1998 by Rhino Records on their "Nuggets Original Artyfacts from the First Psychedelic Era 1965–1968" [Box Set].

Terms of the settlement are undisclosed.

Music video

The music video directed by Justin Francis was shot on April 19, 2007 at Universal Studios and it features current and former WWE Divas including Torrie Wilson, Kelly Kelly, Layla El, Maryse Ouellet, Ashley Massaro and Brooke Adams. The video premiered during Raw on May 21, 2007.[15] The video looks almost like a version of Sin City, where "The Baby Faces" (a reference to the term face in pro wrestling) consisting of Torrie, Maryse and Ashley take on "Extreme Exposé" (Brooke, Kelly and Layla) in a wrestling match. Timbaland and The Hives declare a winner at the end of the video. The winner announced, however, varies. In most markets, it is said to be "The Baby Faces". However, there is a video where "Extreme Exposé" is the winner. The video clip ends with "To be continued...". The video has reached #11 on Top 20 ReVamped. It was also #76 on MTV Asia[16]

Credits and personnel

Credits taken from the liner notes of Shock Value, Mosley Music Group, Blackground Records, Interscope Records.[1]

Recording and mixing
Personnel

Track listing

Australian CD Single[4]
  1. "Throw It On Me" (Album Version) – 2:11
  2. "Throw It On Me" (Video) – 2:30

Chart performance

Chart (2007) Peak
position
scope="row"Australia (ARIA)[5] 50

Release history

Country Date Format Label
Australia[3][4] August 4, 2007 Digital download Blackground Records, Interscope Records
August 6, 2007 CD single Interscope Records

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Shock Value (liner notes). Timbaland. United States: Mosley, Blakcground, Interscope. 2008.
  2. 1 2 3 Hyland, David (April 11, 2007). "Timbaland's 'Shock Value' Has Shockingly Limited Value". WESH Orlando. Orlando Hearst Television Inc. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  3. 1 2 "Throw It on Me (feat. The Hives) – Single by Timbaland". iTunes Store (US). Apple Inc. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  4. 1 2 3 "Timbaland FT Hives – Throw It On Me CD Single". CD Universe. CD Universe. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  5. 1 2 "australian-charts.com – Timbaland feat. The Hives – Throw It On Me". australian-charts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved 4 May 2012.
  6. Parks, Andrea (April 8, 2007). "CD review: Timbaland, "Shock Value"". The Online Gargoyle. University of Illinois Board of Trustees. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  7. Kellman, Andy. "Timbaland Present Shock Value – Timbaland". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  8. Hardimon, Zharmer (April 8, 2007). "You're a great producer, but please stop rapping". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  9. Petridis, Alexis (March 29, 2007). "Timbaland, Shock Value". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  10. McGarvey, Evan (April 11, 2007). "Timbaland". Stylus Magazine. stylusmagazine.com. Retrieved 2 May 2012.
  11. Winslow, Mike (May 24, 2010). "Timbaland Settles 'Spazz' Lawsuit For Undisclosed Amount". AllHipHop News.
  12. Fontaine, Smokey (May 24, 2010). "Timbaland Settles 'Spazz' Lawsuit For Undisclosed Amount". The Urban Dailey.
  13. Copsey, Robert (May 25, 2010). "Timbaland settles copywright lawsuit". Digital Spy.
  14. "From The Archives". CMJ New Music Monthly. April 2007.
  15. Medalis, Kara A. (April 22, 2007). "The Sexiest Women in L.A.". WWE. World Wrestling Entertainment, Inc. Archived from the original on April 22, 2007. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
  16. "MTV Top 100 Hits of 2007". MTV Asia. Viacom International, Inc. Archived from the original on December 12, 2007. Retrieved 28 August 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.