Neneh Cherry sits at the crossroads of punk, rap, pop, and Black music history, and this episode traces how she built a lane that still feels outside the box. DJ Sir Daniel and Jay Ray talk about her global roots, the Wild Bunch, “Buffalo Stance,” the Raw Like Sushi era, and the way her music moved through MTV, the clubs, and Black radio culture. They also get into the records, remixes, and collaborations that made her feel like more than a crossover act, but a real part of the conversation about legacy and cool. If you remember Video Mus...
Neneh Cherry sits at the crossroads of punk, rap, pop, and Black music history, and this episode traces how she built a lane that still feels outside the box. DJ Sir Daniel and Jay Ray talk about her global roots, the Wild Bunch, “Buffalo Stance,” the Raw Like Sushi era, and the way her music moved through MTV, the clubs, and Black radio culture. They also get into the records, remixes, and collaborations that made her feel like more than a crossover act, but a real part of the conversation about legacy and cool. If you remember Video Music Box, long-box CDs, and the days when remixes changed everything, this one will take you right back.
The Breakdown
- How did Neneh Cherry’s background shape her sound? From Sweden to Sierra Leone to New York and London, her nomadic upbringing and artistic family gave her a sound that pulled from reggae, world music, punk, and U.S. hip-hop.
- Why did “Buffalo Stance” hit so hard? The song grew out of “Looking Good Diving with the Wild Bunch,” then broke wider through the video era, Video Music Box, MTV, and the pop-crossover moment of the late 1980s.
- What made Neneh Cherry more than a rapper or singer? The conversation gets into her activist edge, her genre-bending approach on records like Raw Like Sushi, Homebrew, and later projects, and why her work still feels connected to Black music history.
Want to hear this episode with music? Listen here: https://qpnt.net/show-218-mixcloud
Links to Content Related To This Episode For Research and Context
- Keep Those Dreams Burning Forever: Neneh Cherry Interviewed | The Quietus - A long-form feature from The Quietus covering The Cherry Thing, the Bristol scene's spirit, and her stepfather Don Cherry's influence; strong critical analysis of her jazz-punk lineage.
- Twisted Mess - Neneh Cherry (from the Best Laid Plans soundtrack) - Song referenced by Jay Ray as one of his favorites during Neneh's hiatus years. From the "Best Laid Plans" soundtrack.
- Neneh Cherry - Buddy X (Falcon and Fabian Jeep Mix) - Remix featuring Biggie — directly relevant to the episode's deep-cut revelations.
- Neneh Cherry - Buddy X - The 1993 Homebrew single featuring the gender-politics video with its notably diverse cast; key visual document of Neneh's 90s era discussed in depth in the episode.
- Neneh Cherry - Buffalo Stance (Official Music Video) - The original Virgin Records video that introduced most US audiences to Neneh Cherry via Video Music Box and MTV; essential visual context for understanding her crossover moment and UK hip-hop aesthetic.
- Morgan-McVey - 'Looking Good Diving With The Wild Bunch' Featuring Neneh Cherry - "Looking Good Diving with the Wild Bunch" is the B-side of Morgan-McVey's "Looking Good Diving." This version features Neneh Cherry, and was ultimately reworked to become "Buffalo Stance."
Read the full show notes for this episode here: https://qpnt.net/show-218-notes
Chapter Markers
00:00 Intro Theme
00:16 Welcome to the Show
00:45 Why Neneh Cherry Matters
01:40 Nomadic Roots and Punk London
05:05 From Wild Bunch to Buffalo Stance
07:04 Buffalo Stance Video Memories
13:44 90s Evolution and Buddy X Remix
20:23 Legacy Wrap and Listener Shoutouts
24:33 Outro Theme
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