Psy goes from 'Gangnam' to hip-hop style in new song | Inquirer Entertainment

Psy goes from ‘Gangnam’ to hip-hop style in new song

/ 10:19 AM June 09, 2014

LOS ANGELES – Psy, who set off a global sensation with “Gangnam Style,” tried out a fresh sound Sunday as he released a hip-hop tale of drunken debauchery co-starring rap legend Snoop Dogg.

Entitled “Hangover,” the South Korean star’s new song returns to the “Gangnam Style” theme of material excess but eschews the giddy K-Pop arrangements of his 2012 megahit for more minimalist hip-hop beats.

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The video features Psy and the notoriously hard-partying Snoop Dogg on a night of intense boozing. The subject matter is apparent from the video’s first moments in which Psy vomits in a toilet bowl, only to start tapping his hands to the rhythm as Snoop Dogg jumps out of a bathtub revved up to party.

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In a line that could quickly become a favorite in late-night bars the world over, the song goes: “The party’s over! It ain’t over!” and, “Drink it up and get sick. Bottoms up, get wasted.”

The video takes the duo on a beer-sodden adventure through Seoul’s rambunctious nightlife. At one point, young women twerk to the music and later Psy and Snoop Dogg skip through the streets with two flirtatious middle-aged women they met at a karaoke bar.

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“I can’t stop. Making bottles pop until the wheels go out,” Snoop Dogg raps. “I can’t quit. I wake up in the morning do the same sh*t.”

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Psy released “Hangover” on YouTube, an appropriate forum for him after “Gangnam Style” became the most viewed music clip ever on the video-sharing site with more than two billion views.

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In an elaborate roll-out for the video, Psy and Snoop Dogg also appeared on a special edition of the “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” comedy show in Los Angeles broadcast before game two of the National Basketball Association finals.

Psy, whose real name is Park Jae-Sang, said that he and Snoop Dogg wrote the song through online collaboration and filmed the video together in Seoul in just 18 hours of production without breaks.

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Psy said that he initially telephoned Snoop Dogg to pitch working together.

“He said, ‘What is the title of the song?’ And I said, ‘Hangover,’ and he said, ‘”I’m doing it,'” Psy said.

Snoop Dogg said that he “felt like I was in an action movie” by shooting a video in Asia.

“For me, it was awesome, because I’ve always wanted to be in a martial arts movie,” he said.

For the show, host Kimmel, Psy and Snoop Dogg appeared together at a Los Angeles karaoke club where Psy performed Snoop Dogg’s signature 1994 hit “What’s My Name?” and the South Korean star delighted the crowd by putting on his horse-riding-like dance moves from “Gangnam Style.”

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The “Gangnam Style” dance has spawned myriad imitations in videos around the world, in a global success all the more surprising as — unlike “Hangover” — the song is in Korean.

“Gangnam Style,” however, is at its root satirical, poking fun at the quest for material wealth and status epitomized by Seoul’s tony Gangnam district.

TAGS: Entertainment, Music, psy

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