10 Times Popular Musicians Tried Out Completely Unexpected Genres
No one saw these tracks coming.
Moving beyond the confines of genre can be a foolish move for musicians. You risk alienating your core followers, irritating your adopted style's diehard fans, and generally looking a fool.
We may live in a time when the boundaries between genres seem more and more permeable (what do terms like Pop, Rock, and Rap even mean anymore?); it may be an era when subcultures have given way to more omnivorous tastes, but how often do you really hear an artist write something radically different?
Swans might write experimental rock, but it's still rock. Kanye West might write avant-garde rap music, but it's still rap.
So, true musical curveballs - when an artist casts off the familiar and attempts something mindbogglingly different - are rare, exotic breeds. But there have been times when musicians stepped well and truly outside of their comfort zone.
10. Brian Wilson - Smart Girls
Brian Wilson’s “Smart Girls” was never properly released - it can only be found on bootlegged album Sweet Insanity, suggesting it was never really intended to see the light of day.
Well, that’s fair enough, as the 1991 song sees a side to the eccentric auteur we hope to never see again: a pastiche rapper spitting Marky Mark rhymes over an unlistenable cacophony of saxophones, squawking singers and savaged samples from The Beach Boys heyday.
With lyrics containing such revelations as “Intelligent chicks are dynamite”, and “I’m no different from the rest / I love hip and legs and breasts”, it probably won't make any future Greatest Hits collections. Nontheless, it is at least reassuring to know that, even in his fifties, a famously innovative musician found hip-hop exciting enough to give it a try.