737. ‘Return of the Mack’, by Mark Morrison

I did say, a post or two ago, that we were hitting a golden vein of chart-toppers. In fact, Take That’s feeble swansong aside, 1996 has already been a vast improvement on the year before, and we’re only in April…

Return of the Mack, by Mark Morrison (his 1st and only #1)

2 weeks, from 14th – 28th April 1996

‘Return of the Mack’ is completely different from our last number one – the Prodigy’s searing ‘Firestarter’ – but it’s every bit as catchy. It’s slick, very mid-nineties R&B; but I don’t mean slick in a boring way. More in a supremely confident, honeyed, knows exactly what it’s doing sort of way.

You could easily believe that this was being sung by a US soul superstar, a Boyz II Men-Bobby Brown hybrid of some sort, apart from one detail: it’s actually quite fun, and doesn’t take itself too seriously. A lot of US R&B at this time was spotlessly honed to the point of being completely transparent and unmemorable. We had a taster of it when Michael Jackson’s ‘You Are Not Alone’ was at #1, but thankfully this sound never dominated the British charts like it did the Billboard.

I assume that the ‘Mack’ in the chorus is supposed to be Mark Morrison himself, and this self-referencing adds another layer of braggadocio to what is already a swaggering tune. He’s back, feeling better than ever, and ready to lord it over his ex… So I’m back up in the game, Running things to keep my swing, Letting all the people know, That I’m back to run the show… It’s not harsh to suggest that Morrison has a unique singing voice – high-pitched and nasal – and the way he enunciates certain words, like ‘swing’, adds another hook to the record.

We’re getting deep into the pop stars of my childhood now, and two things I remember about Mark Morrison were his very cool slanted mohawk hairdo, and the fact that ‘Return of the Mack’ was about his release from jail. Except, my mind is playing tricks on me… Morrison did do jailtime, for the always inadvisable crime of trying to take a gun onto an aeroplane, but not until a year after ‘Return of the Mack’ made number one.

Although he was released from his three month stretch just as the song started to climb the US charts, eventually settling at an impressive #2, so I wasn’t completely wrong. The fact that this up-tempo R&B did so well in the land of down-tempo R&B suggests that even Americans might have been growing weary of all the syrupy ballads. It was the first of an impressive five Top 10 UK hits from the one album (though, in the States, Morrison remains a one-hit wonder).

Gun-toting on aircraft wasn’t Morrison’s only brush with the law, and he’s also been in trouble for affray, assault, driving without a licence, suspected kidnapping, and for paying a lookalike to do his community service. An eventful life, then, though he has remained active in the music industry throughout. More recently, he seems to have been rediscovered by modern rap and R&B stars, being sampled by Chris Brown and working with Post Malone.

7 thoughts on “737. ‘Return of the Mack’, by Mark Morrison

  1. A few years after this, one of the touring bands who would stay with us, was touring with The Blue tones. They told me Bluetones Mark Morrison used to get really pissed off by folk shouting at him to sing ‘Return if the Mack.’

    So we did. 😂😂😂

    • Haha I didn’t know there was a Bluetones Mark Morrison! They should have done a jangle-pop cover version. I am distantly related to a Mark Morrison (not THE Mark Morrison, sadly…)

  2. This is another song like “Bombastic” that I wasn’t born when it came out, but it was still enduring in pop culture during the 2000s that I was very aware of it growing up. Love it. Very catchy.

  3. It’s a great throwback soul track, but also sounded very fresh at the time, still a great record and great vocal. Mark disappointed me that he was so easily diverted into bad boy stereotypes and throw away his career with some really unthinking actions, I went off him after a few hits, but this one remains gold. He could have been a stayer if he’d been a bit more sensible. Pity!

  4. The Mack was a 1973 blaxploitation film…when I saw the title that is what I thought about when he mentioned “the return”…here is the tagline to the movie “Goldie returns from five years at the state pen and winds up King of the pimping game. Trouble comes in the form of two corrupt white cops and a crime lord who wants him to return to the small time.”

    Now if the Mr Morrison would have sounded like that soundtrack did…I would like it….this no.

    • That film possibly gave the inspiration…? Mark Morrison does sound like someone with a lot of self-confidence… enough to compare himself with the ‘king of the pimping game’ anyway. Interesting possibility.

      • Maybe I’m wrong but the “Mack” is famous over here…the term is anyway and that is what I thought of.

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