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Urban Dance Squad

Urban Dance Squad was a Dutch rap rock band formed after what was originally intended as a one-time jam-session at a festival in Utrecht on December 20, 1986.[1] The band consisted of a guitarist, bassist, drummer, rapper, and DJ. Urban Dance Squad was one of the most successful Dutch bands of the nineties, releasing five studio albums.

Urban Dance Squad

Utrecht, Netherlands

  • 1986–2000
  • 2006

Rudeboy Remington (Patrick Tilon)
Tres Manos (René van Barneveld)
Silly Sil (Silvano Matadin)
Magic Stick (Michel Schoots)
DJ DNA (DoNotAsk) (Arjen de Vreede)

Career[edit]

Urban Dance Squad first got together in 1986, at a jam session in De Vrije Vloer, a club in Utrecht, a jam which resulted in the first Dutch rock band with a rapper (they borrowed the name from Parliament-Funkadelic's Urban Dancefloor Guerillas); a song, "Struggle for Jive"; and the blending of white and black music in the Netherlands, at the same time that Fishbone, Living Colour, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Faith No More, and the Beastie Boys were doing the same in the United States.[2] The band recorded its first album, Mental Floss for the Globe, in Brussels in 1989 (produced by Jean-Marie Aerts, of TC Matic), and came to instant success. It won an Edison Award, and the single "Deeper Shade of Soul" was a hit in Europe, and in the United States, where it charted at number 21 on the Billboard Hot 100. Two more singles were released from the album, and Urban Dance Squad toured the US in 1991, opening for Living Colour. The UDS had always been a volatile unit with the band members frequently arguing, and this came to a head while touring as the opening act for U2, after the release of Life 'n Perspectives of a Genuine Crossover, when DJ DNA quit abruptly.[3]


In the middle of the band's career, to capitalize on the success of grunge and alternative rock, Urban Dance Squad released Persona Non Grata in January 1994. All of the tracks feature heavy use of distortion and guitar. The singles "No Honestly" and "Candy Strip Exp." were released, the latter single being released as a radio edit that cuts most of the pre-song noise.


Artantica saw release in 1999, and was a return to the band's hip-hop roots, and received critical acclaim. Urban Dance Squad disbanded the following year, though they did perform together again as late as 2006.[2]

Rudeboy Remington () - vocals

Patrick Tilon

Tres Manos (René van Barneveld) - guitar

Silly Sil (Silvano Matadin) - bass guitar

Magic Stick (Michel Schoots) - drums

(Arjen de Vreede) - turntables (1987-1993, 1997-2000, 2006)

DJ DNA

U-Gene - keyboards (1996-1997)

(1989)

Mental Floss for the Globe

(1991)

Life 'n Perspectives of a Genuine Crossover

(1994)

Persona Non Grata

(1996)

Planet Ultra

Beograd Live (1997)

(1999)

Artantica

The Singles Collection (2006)

"Fast Lane" appears in the 1990 film but does not appear on the soundtrack album.[13]

Pump Up the Volume

The song "Good Grief" appears on the soundtrack of the 1995 film , and the band has a cameo appearance in the film with the same song.[14]

Hackers

The song "Demagogue" appears on the soundtrack of the 2001 film [15] and in 2003 on Gigli.[16]

Crazy/Beautiful

Frans Steensma (ed), "OOR's Eerste Nederlandse Pop-encyclopedie" (12th edition, Amsterdam, 2000)