The Mexican (song)

"The Mexican"
Song by Babe Ruth
from the album First Base
Released November 1972
Recorded 1972, Abbey Road Studios
Length 5:45
Label Harvest (EMI)
Songwriter(s) Alan Shacklock
Ennio Morricone ("Per Qualche Dollaro in Piu")
Producer(s) Alan Shacklock, Nick Mobbs
"The Mexican"
Single by Jellybean
from the album Wotupski!?!
Released 1984
Songwriter(s) Alan Shacklock
Ennio Morricone ("Per Qualche Dollaro in Piu")
Producer(s) John "Jellybean" Benitez
Jellybean singles chronology
"The Mexican"
(1984)
"Sidewalk Talk"
(1984)

"The Mexican"
(1984)
"Sidewalk Talk"
(1984)

"The Mexican" is a piece of music on the album First Base by the 1970s British band Babe Ruth.[1]

The song has been compiled, covered and mixed many times and is considered one of the most influential songs in hip hop music culture as well as being popular in early disco clubs such as The Loft.

The song was written by Alan Shacklock and recorded along with the rest of the First Base album at Abbey Road Studios in the summer of 1972. Shacklock wrote the lyrics of the song as a retort to the 1960 John Wayne film The Alamo, which was full of historical inaccuracies and did not show the human side of the Mexican troops who defeated the Texian forces at the Battle of the Alamo. The song has a driving drum beat and funky bass and shows Shacklock’s fondness for African-American music and Wild West shoot outs.[2]

The song composition interpolates "Per qualche dollaro in più" by Ennio Morricone, from the music soundtrack for the film For a Few Dollars More (stated on album credits).

Personnel

Cover Versions

Sampled and Mixed

Preceded by
"Caribbean Queen" by Billy Ocean
U.S. Billboard Hot Dance Club Play number-one single
(Jellybean version)

September 15, 1984 (one week)
Succeeded by
"No Favors by Temper

References

  1. Allmusic entry
  2. "Classic Rock" magazine, May 2012, The Stories Behind The Songs: Babe Ruth - The Mexican.
  3. Whitburn, Joel (2004). Hot Dance/Disco: 1974-2003. Record Research. p. 135.
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