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Switched on Pop

Too Fast? We’re Curious: The sped-up remix phenomenon - ICYMI

Switched on Pop

Vox Media Podcast Network

Music Interviews, Music History, Music, Music Commentary

4.62.7K Ratings

🗓️ 2 January 2024

⏱️ 26 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In case you missed it, last January, we published this story on the rising trend of sped-up music. It seems like the tempo-shifting isn't going anywhere, so we're rerunning our history and exploration into the phenomenon. Original description below: Over the past few months, you may have heard your favorite song pop up on the Internet – just slightly faster. You’re not alone: the phenomenon of the “sped-up” remix has taken over social media, with everyone from Lady Gaga to Thundercat getting the tempo treatment. The popularity of the craze has led to millions of TikTok videos, Billboard number ones, and songs becoming relevant again, decades after release. Ever since the proliferation of these “remixes,” the big questions remain: where did these songs come from and why are they here? On this episode of Switched on Pop, we explore this exact phenomenon, tracing its roots from Thomas Edison to Cam’ron to vaporwave to nightcore. Songs Discussed: “Dream On” – Aerosmith (sped up) “Escapism” – RAYE, 070 Shake (sped up) “Bad Habit” – Steve Lacy (sped up) “Miss You” – Oliver Tree (sped up) “Say It Right” – Nelly Furtado (sped up) “Bloody Mary” – Lady Gaga (sped up) “Heat Waves” – Glass Animals (slowed down) “Juicy” – Notorious B.I.G. “Juicy” – DJ Screw “Jolene” – Dolly Parton (slowed down) “リサフランク420 / 現代のコンピュー |” – Macintosh Plus “In Da Club Before Eleven O’ Clock” – DJ Rashad “Monster [Nightcore]” – Meg & Dia, remixed by Barren Gates “Concrete Angel” – Hannah Diamond “Witch Doctor” – David Seville “Oh Boy” – Cam’ron, Juelz Santana “Cool for the Summer” – Demi Lovato (sped up) “Them Changes” – Thundercat (sped up & Chopnotslop remix) “That’s All” – Genesis Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Switch

0:05.0

on Pop.

0:10.0

Switched on Pop.

0:12.0

Welcome to Switched on Pop, I'm producer Rianna Cruz.

0:15.0

I'm songwriter Charlie Harding.

0:16.4

And I'm musicologist Nate Sloane.

0:18.6

So the other day when I was browsing Tik-Toc, I heard this.

0:22.6

This. I didn't know that I didn't know that I didn't know that I could enjoy

0:37.3

Aerosmith any less than I already do. Right so that is a sped up version of

0:42.4

Aerosmith's dream on.

0:45.0

Ear piercing. Sing for the year, sing for the left and sing for the year.

0:55.0

It feels so slow now.

1:00.0

It feels like glacial. Like it's the slowest talk on earth right and the

1:06.1

audacity of it being an Aerosmith dub got me thinking about how

1:10.4

Tik-Tok and other video platforms have been founded on user-generated audios,

1:15.0

but specifically over the past few months, something called Sped Up Audios.

1:20.0

Audios?

1:21.0

What are we talking about?

1:22.0

I'm so confused about everything that's happening right now.

1:24.8

Okay, old man.

1:26.1

Buckle up, Charlie. You can't scroll on Tik-talk for more than a minute without

1:31.5

hearing one of these.

...

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