Step Up: Difference between revisions

From Linkinpedia
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 15: Line 15:
| Samples      =  
| Samples      =  
| References      =  
| References      =  
| Live debut      =  
| Live debut      = [http://lplive.net/shows/db/2001/20010912 September 12, 2001]
| Last played      =  
| Last played      = [http://lplive.net/shows/db/2002/20020302 March 2, 2002]
| Writer        = Mike Shinoda, Joe Hahn, Brad Delson
| Writer        = Mike Shinoda, Joe Hahn, Brad Delson
| Producer      = Mike Shinoda
| Producer      = Mike Shinoda

Revision as of 21:57, 26 August 2018

Template:Infobox song

Background

"Step Up" was a song written by Mike Shinoda, Joe Hahn, and Brad Delson. It was originally released on the Hybrid Theory EP in 1999 and was later used as a b-side of the "In The End" single in 2001. On the EP, Kyle Christener is credited for bass.

Samples of the song were used on "It's Goin' Down" and "Kyur4 Th Ich".

Versions

Note: Only the date of the very first release of each version is listed.

Studio

Title Album Length Recorded Released Notes
Step Up Hybrid Theory EP 3:55 1999 1999
Step Up In The End (CD 2)

Hybrid Theory EP (Re-Issue)

In The End (JP EP)

Compilation

3:55 1999 October 9, 2001
  • Remastered. Sounds louder than the original release.
  • Listed as "Step Up (1999 Demo)" on the "In The End" single.

Live

Title Album Length Recorded Released Notes
Step Up (Live) Somewhere I Belong

Meteora (Mastered For iTunes)

Compilation

3:15 February 23, 2002 March 17, 2003
  • Recorded during the Projekt Revolution 2002 Tour.
  • Labeled "Step Up (Live From Proj. Revolutions)" on Compilation.
Step Up/Nobody's Listening/It's Goin' Down (Live) LP Underground 4.0 4:57 July 18, 2004 November 22, 2004
  • Recorded in the summer of 2004.

Live

"Step Up" became a signature track towards the end of the Hybrid Theory touring cycle. It is possible the song was performed while the band was still under the moniker Hybrid Theory, but its first known appearances were on the Hybrid Theory European Tour in the Fall of 2001. During a press conference prior to the tour, Brad claimed the band would be using their soundcheck time on the tour to rehearse older songs for the upcoming tour (the Family Values Tour), mentioning "My December" and "Carousel" as songs being rehearsed (the latter of which never ended up being performed). He also added, "I'm using two extra Boss effects pedals, the Auto-Wah and the Phaser, to re-create the guitar sounds on another old song we'll be playing called “Step Up". When performed, it was played as the second song in the encore, preceding "One Step Closer", moving down to the mid-set by the end of the tour. It maintained this position on the following Family Values Tour. It returned to its encore spot on the Countdown To Revolution tour briefly before being moved back down to the mid-set on the string of holiday festivals at the end of 2001. In 2002, it was performed mid-set with the addition of an extended bridge and ending.

The song did not return in full during the Meteora touring cycle, but it did appear in another form. During the International Tour in the summer of 2004, the Hip-Hop Medley debuted, which mashup up parts of "Step Up", "Nobody's Listening", and "It's Goin' Down". It was dropped once the cycle ended, but verses of "Step Up" occasionally appeared during the extended intro of "Points Of Authority" during the Minutes To Midnight touring cycle.

Variations

Last Updated: August 12, 2016

Type Description First Played Last Played
Bridge Instrumental repeated January 29, 2002 February 24, 2002
Ending Jam outro featuring Mr. Hahn January 29, 2002 February 24, 2002
Alternative Hip-Hop Medley (Step Up/Nobody's Listening/It's Goin' Down) June 3, 2004 September 11, 2004

Personnel

  • Rob Bourdon
  • Joseph Hahn
  • Kyle Christner
  • Brad Delson
  • Chester Bennington
  • Mike Shinoda

Production

  • Produced and mixed by Mike Shinoda
  • Mastered by Pat Kraus

Lyrics

Template:Collapse top

Yo

Watch as the room rocks
Mentally moonwalk
Mixed media slang
Banging in your boom box verbal violence
Lyrical stylist
In a time when rock hip hop rhymes are childish
You can't tempt me with rhymes that are empty
Rapping to a beat doesn't make you an MC
With your lack of skill and facility
You're killing me
And a DJ in the group just for credibility
I heard that some of you are getting help with your rhymes
You're not an emcee if someone else writes your lines
And rapping over rock doesn't make you a pioneer
'Cause rock and hip hop have collaborated for years
But now they're getting randomly mixed and matched up
All after a fast buck and all the tracks suck
So how does it stack up? None of it's real
You want to be an emcee you've got to study the skill

Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Bring it to you every time like this?
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Step, step up, step, step up

So you pick up a pen and write yourself a new identity
But mentally you don't have the hip hop energy
With a tendency to make up stories
Sounding like the only hip hop you've heard is top 40 (Top 40)
And your record company is completely missing it
All the kids are dissing it for not being legitimate
So in a battle you can't hack it
React with whack shit
And get smacked with verbal back flips
Get your ass kicked by fabulous battle catalysts
It's taken decades for emcees to establish this
You're new to hip hop and welcome if you're serious
But not on the mic
Leave that to the experienced

(Using the waves of sound, the true master paralyzes his opponents, leaving him vulnerable to attack)

Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Bring it to you every time like this?
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Step, step up, step, step up
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Bring it to you every time like this?
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Step, step up, step, step up
Step up

(After years of pain staking research by the world's leading sound scientists, we here at the sound institute have invented a reliable audio weapons system. Actual movement of musical sound in space used to carefully attack and neutralize the cellular structure of the human body, and the question must be asked.)

Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Bring it to you every time like this?
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Step, step up, step, step up
 
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Bring it to you every time like this?
Who can rock a rhyme like this?
Step, step up, step, step up
Step up
 
(Step up to the microphone)
(And you do it like this)
(And you do it like this)
(Step up to the microphone)
(And you do it like this)
(Step up to the microphone)
(And you do it like this)
(Step up to the microphone)
(And you do it like this)

Template:Collapse bottom

External Links

References