Critical reception
Upon the release, pan-European magazine Music & Media wrote, "Some boys revisit the Musical Youth concept, doing a juvenile reggae track in a contemporary production. Qua "hummability" they come close to the instant catchiness of 'Pass the Dutchie'." [3] Alan Jones from Music Week gave the song a score of four out of five, adding, "Young, gifted and black—and British, too. Too slow to be a dance record, yet rhythmically pronounced and straining to break into a reggae beat. The juvenile lead's vocals are alternatively confident and pure and a little shaky. Overall, a classy pop record that will race into the upper reaches of the chart." [1]
Brad Beatnik from the Record Mirror Dance Update noted, "Destined to be huge, this very young five-piece have already been dubbed a Nineties Jackson Five. [4] Another Record Mirror editor, James Hamilton, named it a "somehat raggedly squeaking harmonizing and ragga rapping juvenile guys' Steve Miller Band 'The Joker' like swaying groin grinder" in his weekly dance column. [2] Emma Cochrane from Smash Hits also gave "Some Girls" four out of five, commenting, "The little fellas who are supporting Take That on tour plant their size fours in the footsteps of The Jackson Five, Musical Youth, New Edition etc, and bring it off with style. Although the backing track sounds suspiciously like that tune in the Levi's ad, the vocals are spot on and if you like this funky kind of sound, you can't fault 'em." [5]
This page is based on this
Wikipedia article Text is available under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply.
Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.