744. ‘Flava’, by Peter Andre

Straight after the ‘90s most famous five-piece, the decade’s most famous six-pack arrives on the scene…

Flava, by Peter Andre (his 1st of three #1s)

1 week, from 8th – 15th September 1996

To be fair to this record, we have to try forget what Peter Andre is now – the butt of a million jokes, basically – and cast our minds back over a quarter of a century (gulp!) to when he was hot property. And if we are being fair, this record is a perfectly serviceable slice of mid-nineties dance/pop/R&B. Listening to it, you’d assume that Andre was American, especially when singing lines like Can’t bring myself to sleep, So I get the keys to my Jeep…

Except Mark Morrison recently proved that Brits (or British-Australians in Andre’s case) could do these sort of new-jack swing, R&B jams as well as, if not better than, the Americans. Not that ‘Flava’ is in the same street as ‘Return of the Mack’, but they do share the same postcode. And interestingly, Andre also sings in the chorus that the Mack’s back with the flava of the year… (Since writing my post on Mark Morrison, I’ve learned that ‘Mack’ is US slang for ‘a confident, successful man who has many sexual partners’, according to the OED, possibly stemming from the blaxploitation movie of the same name.)

The weakest link here is Peter Andre himself, and his reedy voice which never quite convinces that he is someone who parties all night, or who gets drunk as hell blazin’ up with the smoke, as the uncredited Cee raps in his verse. But this leads us on to what the legacy of ‘Flava’, an otherwise average, throwaway tune, is… The fact that it is a completely and utterly modern pop song.

There’s that beat that Max Martin would be rinsing the life out of by 1999, there’s a synth riff that I’m pretty sure was used by both the Backstreet Boys and 5ive (if not several others), and there’s a rent-a-rapper brought in for the middle eight. This is how pop music will sound for the next twenty-odd years, and here it first appears on top of the charts. With Peter Andre, musical trailblazer…

Or maybe it’s because I can remember 1996, and so my subconscious is forcing me to hear it as modern. It’s either that, or accept that I’m old… Anyway. I made a big play of Peter Andre’s six-pack in the intro, but in the ‘Flava’ video he keeps it fairly well hidden behind an array of baggy shirts. This was probably a reaction to the ‘Mysterious Girl’ video, which had made #2 earlier in the year and in the video for which he spent most of his time topless, under a waterfall. He clearly wanted to be known for his art, dammit, not his body! I won’t link to ‘Mysterious Girl’ – his one true classic – as that makes #1 eventually, under circumstances that will lead to Peter becoming the boob he is nowadays

8 thoughts on “744. ‘Flava’, by Peter Andre

  1. I agree about the voice…usually I like different kind of voices…but maybe it’s the music that brings it down…for me anyway.
    I looked him up…people don’t say nice things about him lol…I found this from someone who met him… “He may be nice in person, but he’s also a talentless drip with no personality whatsoever. “

  2. He recently recommended hosted a ‘news’ show on GB news, which is a conspiracy theory laden right wing news channel over here. Even more ridicule followed, people asking him if Chaka Demus and Pliers were doing the weather report and so on, but it seems he’ll do anything to keep himself in the media spotlight. As for his musical output, makes Westlife sound like ABBA

    • I didn’t realise he was on GB News…. Sady thats the route for so many former pop stars, footballers, actors whose glory days are long behind them, but who need just one more hit from the fame pipe…

      • According to google he co presented a Saturday morning show from mid November to January, and is still a ‘ regular guest presenter ‘

  3. This didn’t get a positive response from folk online a few years back, which surprised me – in terms of 90’s number ones, it’s not even close to being the worst, I rather liked the beats myself and yes it was taking coals to Newcastle in terms of US swing-jack and all that. Since being an airhead has never stopped popstars of any age making decent records, I’m happy to judge music on its own merits as always, and I like Flava. Probably more than that other one….

    • The worst you could accuse it of is being a bit lame – a pop star trying to sound a bit more ‘street’ than they are. Otherwise, it’s an OK mid-nineties pop song. I’d imagine that if you were younger, and had grown up with Peter Andre the TV personality rather than the pop star then you might, rightly or wrongly, struggle to keep a level-head in your assessments of him…

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