Pop Champagne

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Jim Jones at the 5th Annual Hip-Hop Summit Action Network's Action Awards.jpg
Spring break O6 4 (37) (cropped 2).jpg
Jim Jones (left) and Juelz Santana (right) are featured on the remixed version of "Pop Champagne".

The popular remixed version of "Pop Champagne" began taking shape when rapper Jim Jones heard the original version of the song for the first time, being played by DJ Jazzy Joyce, "at 4:30 in the morning", according to Jones. After thinking about "how much Ron wanted to become an artist and break into the game", he remarked on the "good sound" of the song. Jones later recounted: "I was just being courteous, as he did so many hot beats for me." After that, he met with Ron Browz and pulled up the track, aiming to "see what it do.'" [1] After arriving at the recording studio, Jones unexpectedly fell asleep, confusing Browz, who recalled "sitting there for two hours", unsure whether he should leave. Suddenly, Jones woke up, and requested the microphone be turned on, and immediately recorded his verse for "Pop Champagne", deeply impressing Ron Browz, who later described it as the most impressive thing he had seen someone do in the studio. [2] In his verse, Jones recounts his order of drinks, referencing various alcoholic beverages throughout. [6]

Jones later recounted that after the recording of his verse, "It started to sound a little bit crazy, and I said, 'Well, let's see if we put Juelz [Santana] on it how crazy could it get. And I called Young Hub, and Hub was like, 'Aiight, on the strength of you, I'll jump on it for you." [1]

Release and promotion

The remixed version of "Pop Champagne" was released on September 4, 2008 [10] through Columbia, Universal Motown, and Koch Records and achieved commercial success. [8] Its artist credits were noted by some critics as unusual, as they list Jim Jones as the lead artist despite the fact that it was originally released as a Ron Browz solo single. [11] [12] Nevertheless, the song served as a major boost to Ron Browz's publicity and fame, as previously he had been "largely unknown outside of music industry circles". [5]

The music video for "Pop Champagne" was directed by Dale Resteghini and Jim Jones. It features cameo appearances by Dame Dash, Busta Rhymes, Mike Epps and Jessica Rich from Real Chance of Love . [13] Jonah Weiner, writing for Slate magazine, described the video as containing homoerotic undertones in a scene where "Jim Jones and Juelz Santana giddily douse each other with frothy white geysers of bubbly." [14]

Critical reception

"Pop Champagne" received mixed reviews from critics. VIBE magazine described "Pop Champagne", alongside "Arab Money" and "Jumping (Out the Window)", as representing Browz having "mastered the craft of creating mindless melodies that catch on". [15] MTV News ranked the song #27 on their list of the top 28 commercially released hip-hop songs of the year. [16] Ben Westhoff, writing for the Houston Press , said the song was one of the tracks on Pray IV Reign that showed off Jones's "hypnotic, breathy delivery". [17]

"Pop Champagne" was compared by multiple critics to Jones's 2006 hit single "We Fly High". [18] [11] [19] Chris Ryan of Spin magazine said it was the only song on the album Pray IV Reign "that recall[ed] the balls-out hedonism" that "We Fly High" possessed, [18] and David Jeffries of AllMusic called it a "club anthem". [20] Chris Gaerig of PopMatters was far more negative, describing the song as "a shell of its predecessor, 'We Fly High'". He called the song's "listenability [...] near zero", referring to Browz's hook as "processed garble" and saying the song was worse off as a result of the lack of "[Jim Jones's] staple ad libbing". [19] Jesse Cataldo of Slant Magazine called the song "remarkably anemic, nearly drowning in Auto-Tune, with a low-key shuffle beat that underlines the verses clashing with a more bombastic chorus". [21] Kit Mackintosh, in a retrospective about technology in music, remarked that the song was "hard artifice as car crusher to the soul tradition, taking the voice [...] and flattening it into inhumanly rigid timbral geometrics", tying it to a larger trend of "human authenticity [being] automatised, and, ultimately, bastardised." [22]

Singer T-Pain, known for his use of the same Auto-Tune effect that is featured prominently in "Pop Champagne", criticized the song, saying Browz did not understand how to use Auto-Tune correctly. [23] [24] Browz responded to the criticism in an interview, saying "I [...] did the record two days after I got the [Auto-Tune] plugin, you know what I mean? [The track] was hot. [...] That's my philosophy: If something is hot, it's hot, something is not, it's not. [3] The two would later reconcile and release a collaborative single, "All The Way", in 2013, with Ron Browz dismissing their brief conflict as part of the competitive nature of hip hop and "good for the game". [24]

Retrospectively, in a 2024 interview, Browz described the beat on "Pop Champagne" as the best he had ever created. [4]

Other remixes

Barack Obama (pictured) is celebrated in a remix of "Pop Champagne". Obama portrait crop.jpg
Barack Obama (pictured) is celebrated in a remix of "Pop Champagne".

In October 2008, another remix was released featuring Ludacris, Lil' Kim, and Swizz Beatz. [25] [26]

In November 2008, after the conclusion of that year's U.S. presidential election that led to Barack Obama's election as President of the United States, Ron Browz made a remix of "Pop Champagne" with rewritten lyrics referencing Obama, including the recurring line "We pop Champagne for Barack campaign." [27] [28] He also references Obama's campaign slogan of change, while clarifying that he intends "no disrespect to [John] McCain or [Sarah] Palin", Obama's then-political opponents. The remix also features rapper Busta Rhymes, who raps about his experience voting for Obama. [29]

Charts

Weekly charts

"Pop Champagne"
Pop Champagne.jpg
Single by Jim Jones and Ron Browz featuring Juelz Santana
from the album Pray IV Reign
Released
  • June 2008 (2008-06)(original)
  • September 4, 2008 (2008-09-04)(remix)
Genre Hip hop
Length
  • 3:35(album version)
  • 3:32 (pop radio edit)
Label
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s) Ron Browz
Jim Jones singles chronology
"The Good Stuff"
(2008)
"Pop Champagne"
(2008)
"My Swagg"
(2009)
Ron Browz singles chronology
"Pop Champagne"
(2008)
"Arab Money"
(2008)
Chart (2008–2009)Peak
Position
US Billboard Hot 100 [30] 22
US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs ( Billboard ) [31] 3
US Rhythmic ( Billboard ) [32] 8

End of year charts

Charts (2009)Position
US Billboard Hot 100 [33] 98
US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs ( Billboard ) [34] 36
US Rhythmic ( Billboard ) [35] 39

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References

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