Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Music / MCHammer

Go To

1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/mc-hammer-looking-awesome_3115.jpg]]
2[[caption-width-right:300:Hammer, looking awesome.]]
3
4-> ''"Can't touch this."''
5
6MC Hammer, hip-hop's first LargeHam, real name Stanley Kirk Burrell (born March 30, 1962). He is mostly famous for his dance hit "U Can't Touch This"[[note]]A song owing a lawsuit-inducingly large amount to Music/RickJames' "Super Freak"[[/note]] and for bringing [[HipHop Rap]] into the mainstream. In fact, along with Music/VanillaIce, he practically ''was'' mainstream rap from about 1988 to 1992. Nowadays, he's a Pentecostal minister, and he has a TV show, ''Hammertime'', on A&E.
7
8!!Discography:
9* ''Feel My Power'' (1986)
10* ''Let's Get It Started'' (1988, an UpdatedRerelease of ''Feel My Power'')
11* ''Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em'' (1990)
12* ''Too Legit Too Quit'' (1991)
13* ''The Funky Headhunter'' (1994)
14* ''Inside Out'' (1995)
15* ''Too Tight'' (1996, unreleased, written entirely by Music/TupacShakur)
16* ''Family Affair'' (1998, notable for featuring Music/TupacShakur's "Unconditional Love", albeit re-recorded by Hammer)
17* ''Active Duty'' (2001)
18* ''Full Blast'' (2004)
19* ''Look Look Look'' (2006)
20* ''[=DanceJam=] the Music'' (2009)
21
22
23!!"U Can't Trope This":
24
25* AdamWesting: On the rare occasion Burrell is seen on TV nowadays, it's usually as an exaggeration of his Hammer persona, or referencing his Fall from Grace. His ministry is rarely brought up.
26* AnyoneRememberPogs: People really did wear MC Hammer-inspired Hammer Pants while the fad lasted.
27* ArsonMurderAndJaywalking: ''Musician'' Magazine's review of ''Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em'' lists the album's messages as "DrugsAreBad. Save The Children. I Can Dance."
28* AwesomeButImpractical: His concerts. A big reason he lost his fortune so quickly was that his stage shows were beyond extravagant, with dozens of dancers, musicians, giant screens, and [[StuffBlowingUp a lot of pyrotechnics]]. A hell of a show, but also a hell of a money drain.
29* BadassPreacher: He was raised in the Pentecostal faith and although he wasn't officially ordained until 1997, dedicated at least one song per album to God.
30* BerserkButton: Do not diss him, and, most importantly, ''never, '''EVER''''' speak ill about his mother on a track. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0fyqEYQQW2U Redman]] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W3B7KBrnqCI MC Serch]] are just two emcees who nearly got ''killed'' by Hammer and his entourage over the latter.
31* BewareTheSillyOnes: Even at his peak, he was often clowned by his contemporaries for his goofy "Hammer Pants", seemingly unabashed willingness to sell-out and generally lackluster rhyme skills. But Hammer, while not a thug, was not only raised on the notoriously dangerous streets of Oakland, California, he was also a Navy veteran. That, combined with the numerous gang members he had on his payroll, meant he wasn't afraid to step to ''anyone'' who dissed him, even hardcore gangster rappers like Ice Cube. As the man himself said on the title track of ''The Funky Headhunter'':
32--> ''"Cause we can get it on, Don't let the dance steps fool ya,\
33Cause if I catch ya slippin', I'mma have to do ya."''
34* BoastfulRap: How he starts "U Can't Touch This".
35-->My, my, my, my\
36Music hits me so hard\
37Makes me say "Oh, my Lord\
38Thank you for blessing me\
39With a mind to rhyme and two hyped feet"\
40It feels good when you know you're down\
41A super dope homeboy from the Oaktown\
42And I'm known as such\
43And this is a beat, uh, you can't touch
44* TheCameo: MC Hammer managed to get in a video game... as a hammer, in the Japanese version of ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast''.
45-->''"You got the M.C. Hammer!\
46BANG BANG, pound the likes of stakes!\
47BANG BANG pound, pound other things too!"''
48* CelebrityToons: ''WesternAnimation/{{Hammerman}}'' -- named after another alias for Mr. Burrell -- where Hammer is a superhero with magical shoes. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w8WYh8uz3pQ The opening theme will fill you in on the finer details]].
49* CrouchingMoronHiddenBadass: While Hammer is widely seen as a walking punchline and pop-rap has-been, he actually had a reputation for checking anyone who dared cross him and could be ''very'' intimidating to anyone who got on his bad side, cowtowing Ice Cube into an apology within seconds. Many of his contemporaries claimed [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p9Jh258EUVM he had strong ties with Bay Area gangsters]], and as mentioned above, tried to seriously hurt two rappers who dissed his mother.
50--> '''Redman [[https://youtu.be/0fyqEYQQW2U?t=393 (talking about Hammer confronting him)]]:''' We was already in Oakland with Music/{{EPMD}}, and we damn near had to bounce up outta there for that! Cuz they had niggas back here [...] We had to get the fuck outta here; they wasn't playing! We was almost boxed in! And I'm at a young age, too; I'm like, "Yo... this nigga is ''not'' playin'!"
51* DarkerAndEdgier: Hammer tried this with ''The Funky Headhunter'' by trying to look and sound like the more popular gangsta rap artists of the time, but it didn't take.
52** He later attempted this again by signing a deal with Creator/DeathRowRecords in 1995, and recording an album called ''Too Tight'', with the majority of its lyrics penned by close friend and labelmate, Music/TupacShakur. Pac's death caused Hammer to jump ship from Death Row, leaving ''Too Tight'' to get shelved.
53* DistractedByTheSexy: "U Can't Touch This" features a scene where Hammer suddenly stops dancing to admire the backside of the girl dancing in front of him.
54* FanDisservice: The notorious zebra-striped thong from the "Pumps In A Bump" music video not only leaves extremely little to the imagination, but it was especially uncomfortable for a musician who had a dedicated child-aged fanbase.
55* GoodShepherd: In his case, "M.C." means "Man of Christ". Even before that, a line in ''U Can't Touch This'' praises {{God}} for blessing him with "a mind to rhyme and two hype feet". And of course, there's "Pray."
56* GreatBallsOfFire: The music video for "2 Legit 2 Quit", and indeed, many of his high-energy stage performances, were filled with these.
57* GreatestHitsAlbum: ''Greatest Hits,'' ''The Hits'' and ''Platinum.'' There's also ''Back To Back Hits'' where his hits are mixed in with Music/VanillaIce's (admittedly, a pretty good idea).
58* HiddenDepths: His religious leanings notwithstanding (and not very hidden), he's also a veteran - he served in the United States Navy for three years.
59* LargeHam: His stage persona and his concerts were larger than life.
60* LyricalColdOpen: "U Can't Touch This" and "This Is What We Do".
61* MeaningfulName: When Burrell worked as a batboy for the Oakland A's, Reggie Jackson nicknamed him "Hammer" due to Burrell's resemblance to a young "Hammerin' Hank" Aaron.
62* TheMoralSubstitute: He was marketed as this to the violent crime-oriented GangstaRap genre, then in it's early stages of popularity, keeping his lyrics family-friendly and making a point of including a Christian song on every album. When gangsta rap would up becoming the dominant subgenre of hip hop, he tried to shed this and go in a DarkerAndEdgier direction with ''The Funky Headhunter'', alienating his fanbase in the process.
63* NewSoundAlbum: ''The Funky Headhunter,'' which contained a more harder and aggressive sound than his earlier albums.
64%%* PunctuatedForEmphasis: Many of his hooks are prone to this.
65* RichesToRags: One of the more infamous celebrity examples. Hammer's lavish lifestyle and dwindling album sales eventually resulted in him being $13 million in debt. He filed for bankruptcy in 1996.
66* SongOfSongTitles: He spends the final seconds of his song "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZgcCgdS_dY Burn It Up]]" acknowledging seven of his past hits.
67* StuffyOldSongsAboutTheButtocks: "Pumps and a Bump" from ''The Funky Headhunter''
68* StopAndGo: "Stop! Hammertime!"
69* TotallyRadical: Many of the songs on ''The Funky Headhunter'' make liberal use of the phrase "[=OG=]" in their lyrics. It's safe to assume that no other rappers at the time considered Hammer an "original gangster," let alone believed he knew that was what that meant. Ironically, Hammer, despite his clean image, actually had gang connections, and many of those same rappers later admitted Hammer was a ''lot'' more gangster than they gave him credit for.
70* TropeCodifier: MC Hammer was the first rapper to achieve mainstream popularity, although his poppy, upbeat style would fall out of style in the mid-1990s when gangsta rap became popular. He is also largely responsible for the mainstream public notion that most rapper names start with "M.C." (By extension, he was largely the reason why most rapper names ''don't''.)
71----

Top