![oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song](https://imgix.bustle.com/rehost/2016/9/13/8248b47c-80c3-46e4-abbb-6e7074f99137.png)
“Oh, I think that I found myself a cheerleader/She is always right there when I need her” But like, why? The support in this relationship seems to trend pretty hard in one direction. “And they say/’Do you need me? Do you think I’m pretty?/Do you feel like cheating?’/I’m like ‘No, not really'” I just love that avowed monogamist OMI turns down infidelity with the same casual denial you use when someone suggests going to that bar you don’t like. “All those other girls are tempting/But I’m empty when you’re gone” Cuz they got nothin’ on youuuuuu, baby. “When I need motivation/My one solution is my queen/Cuz she stays strong…She is always in my corner” It’s cool to refer to her as your queen and all, but seems like you’re leaning on her kind of hard here, no? So, let’s look at some of those lyrics, shall we? Sure, there wasn’t much to “Cheerleader” in the first place, but trying to appreciate the remix is like trying to divine the nuanced flavor in a Lim-A-Rita. It feels disjointed, like something’s missing. Maybe it’s because I don’t know a lot about EDM, but the ThisSickBeat version doesn’t do anything for me. It trades the easygoing swing of the original for the peppy, empty calorie bounce of festivals and clubs. Honestly, “Too chirpy” could apply to the whole remix: it’s a little too perky for its own good. The treatment on the vocals works okay enough on the chorus, but OMI’s verses trip on their own melody sped up like this, and it’s kind of chirpy. The remix speeds up the vocal and guts the instrumentation of the original for a world house beat complete with piano, conga loops, soft pad drums, and entirely too much trumpet. Just remember: it takes a German producer to unlock the dance rhythms and feel good vibes in a Caribbean track. The original had done well regionally (Dubai, Hawaii, Miami) and been a hit in Jamaica, but the remix took it somewhere else entirely. “Cheerleader” went to a pair of DJs, and Jaehn’s remix was released in May 2014 (which is decades ago in pop music time), when it started gaining traction in Europe before being pushed in the states. About a year after the original’s release, a record executive for Sony dance music subsidiary Ultra Music heard the song, and signed OMI while looking for someone to remix it. Beeeeeeat! like the Felix Jaehn remix does. OMI might have found himself a cheerleader, but he doesn’t have anyone getting down to this. It’s a breezy and enjoyable if not brainy song that has Song of the Summer written all over it.īut that’s not the version that actually blew up this summer. OMI’s vocals throughout are bright and endearing, especially on the warbling chorus when he sings “I think that I found myself a cheerleader” and “She is always right there when I need her”.
![oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song](https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/01AAAOSwZJBYB3lL/s-l300.jpg)
This version of “Cheerleader” is maybe a little brassier and midtempo than his normal fare (not to mention a bit tighter, possibly due to famous producer Clifton Dillon), and maybe hews a little closer to reggae that world pop in the dubby guitar, limber bassline, and saxophone flourishes throughout. I say “the rest of” and not “previous” because the original 2012 version was a one-off release with singles before it and singles after it. Which is to say that, immediately, “Cheerleader” doesn’t stand too far out from the rest of his work. Take “Baby Mama Drama”, for example: he’s done with baby mama drama…because they’re going to make it official! “Baby Mama Drama” might be his most on the nose song, but all of his music I’ve found has that same boys-like-girls romanticism and single-minded devotion. OMI’s been knocking around the Jamaican music scene for the last few years, making woo-y world-pop songs with idiosyncratic and stupendously cheery lyrics. This year’s winner of the “Who The Fuck Knows?” Late Summer Hit-Maker Contest is Jamaican singer Omi OMI (oh God, ALL CAPS flashbacks). It’s usually a slow promo season, so any new number ones tend to be whatever bubbled in the top five and still has a little gas in the tank once the Summit Hit exhausts all momentum in its ninth week or so. The whole Song of the Summer campaign is pretty much decided, kids gotta get back to school in a few weeks, and the “fun in the sun” thing is a lot less sexy in 95% humidity. I think August has become the pop chart’s “fuck it” month.
![oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song oh i think i found myself a cheerleader song](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/e7/38/3f/e7383fd75853c04442e97a66fb592e78.jpg)
And we’re starting with two, four, six, eight!