Rob Base and DJ E-Z Rock
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Rob Base (b. Robert Ginyard) and DJ E-Z Rock (b. Rodney "Skip" Bryce) are a hip-hop duo from Harlem, New York who are best known for their hit "It Takes Two", a 1988 platinum-selling release that has since become one of the classic hits of the genre.
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[edit] Career
Their first U.S. single and release was "DJ Interview," appeared on World to World, which later got them a recording contract with Profile Records in 1987.
Based upon a vocal sample from Lyn Collins' 1972 song "Think (About It)," the track first became a regional hit and then slowly climbed the Hot 100, eventually peaking at #36 and picking up a platinum single certification. The song also peaked at #3 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart.
An album, also called It Takes Two, was quickly put together and it produced a significant follow-up hit, "Joy and Pain," which sampled a song of the same name by Maze featuring Frankie Beverly. It also hit the Top 10 on the dance chart and climbed to #58 on the Hot 100. However, vicious rumors started to circulate that Rob Base had legal problems for using samples from Maze's Frankie Beverly for the hit "Joy and Pain". Moreover Rob began to have some personal problems at the same time. He responded in 1989 with The Incredible Base.
"Get On the Dance Floor," a track released to clubs in between the two singles, hit #1 on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart in 1989. One additional song hit the dance chart in late 1989: "Turn It Out (Go Base)," credited only to Rob Base.
By the end of 1989 Rob Base went on his own; DJ E-Z Rock was nowhere on the scene because of his personal issues.
[edit] Appearances in Pop Culture
[edit] Film
- "It Takes Two" was heard in the 2000 film Coyote Ugly. While not released on the initial soundtrack, it was included on a follow-up soundtrack album, More Music from Coyote Ugly, in 2003.
[edit] Television
- "It Takes Two" was featured prominently in the pilot episode of the NBC sitcom My Name Is Earl, which aired on September 20, 2005. It has also been featured in several subsequent episodes as one of Randy's favorite songs (whenever someone plays it on the jukebox he exclaims "Oh no you didn't!" and begins a "hooking the big one" dance).
- "Joy and Pain" was also briefly referenced in the NBC sitcom Scrubs, as Dr. Christopher Turk sang the chorus during surgery in Season One.
[edit] Games
- In 2004 It Takes Two appeared on popular videogame Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, playing on Classic hip hop radio station Playback FM.