Saturday, June 9, 1990

MC Hammer’s Please Hammer album hit #1 for 1st of 20 weeks

Please Hammer Don’t Hurt ‘Em

M.C. Hammer


Released: February 12, 1990


Peak: 121 US, 129 RB, 8 UK, 19 CN, 5 AU


Sales (in millions): 10.1 US, 0.6 UK, 20.0 world (includes US and UK)


Genre: rap


Tracks:

Song Title (date of single release, chart peaks) Click for codes to singles charts.

  1. Here Comes the Hammer (1/5/91, 54 US, 15 RB, 15 UK, 37 AU)
  2. U Can’t Touch This (4/28/90, 2a US, 1 RB, 3 UK, 8 CN, 1 AU, sales: 1.09 million)
  3. Have You Seen Her? (6/30/90, 4 US, 4 RB, 8 UK, 42 AU, gold single)
  4. Yo!! Sweetness (6/1/91, 16 UK)
  5. Help the Children (1/27/90, 12 RB)
  6. On Your Face
  7. Dancin’ Machine
  8. Pray (9/22/90, 2 US, 4 RB, 8 UK, 14 CN, 7 AU, gold single)
  9. Crime Story
  10. She’s Soft and Wet
  11. Black Is Black
  12. Let’s Go Deeper
  13. Work This


Total Running Time: 59:04

Rating:

3.146 out of 5.00 (average of 14 ratings)


Awards: (Click on award to learn more).

About the Album:

Please Hammer Don't Hurt ‘Em proved that rap music was no longer just a specialty niche genre, but had the crossover potential to be a commercial juggernaut.” AMG “But in an art form so conscious of preserving its integrity, this wasn’t the way to go about it – at least not from a creative standpoint. Hammer builds the majority of the songs here on obvious samples from easily recognizable soul and funk hits of the past, relying on the original hooks without twisting them into anything new (or, by implication, his own). That approach confirmed the worst fears of hip-hop purists about how the music might hit the mainstream.” AMG

“Taken on its own terms, Please Hammer Don’t Hurt ‘Em is a pretty slick – if unsubtle – pop confection. Hammer certainly has good taste in source material, if nothing else; the hits U Can’t Touch This and Pray crib from Rick James’ ‘Super Freak’ and Prince’s ‘When Doves Cry,’ respectively, and the ballad Have You Seen Her is a flat-out cover of the Chi-Lites' hit (with some updated lyrics).” AMG

“Other tracks sample Marvin Gaye; Earth, Wind & Fire; and the Jackson 5. Throughout the record, choruses are repeated ad infinitum for maximum memorability, which either makes it irresistible or irritating, depending on your taste. Hammer has improved as a rapper – his delivery is often more subtle, and he even attempts a little bit of verbal flash here and there. He still isn’t technically on a par with the average MC of the time – he’s a little too stiff, flowing awkwardly around the beat.” AMG

“Of course, his simple style also makes him easy to understand, and coupled with the highly danceable production and a great set of borrowed hooks, it’s easy to see why Please Hammer Don’t Hurt ‘Em was so popular – and why it now functions chiefly as a nostalgia piece.” AMG

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First posted 3/27/2008; last updated 4/19/2022.

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