Pretty Little Ditty Explained

Pretty Little Ditty
Type:instrumental
Artist:Red Hot Chili Peppers
Album:Mother's Milk
Recorded:November 1988March 1989
Genre:Funk rock, alternative rock
Length: (original)
(2003 remaster)
Label:EMI America
Producer:Michael Beinhorn

"Pretty Little Ditty" is an instrumental track by the American rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers, from their 1989 album Mother's Milk. Recognized as one of the best examples of the eclecticism the band experimented with in this album, the track was written by guitarist John Frusciante and bassist Flea.

It is one of the few tracks on the album not to feature any guitar layering; music journalist Jeff Apter defined the song "a dreamy, sweetly stoned instrumental featured deft picking and strumming from Frusciante, intertwined with blasts of trumpet from Flea".[1]

Impact and legacy

In 1999, part of the second segment of the intrumental track was sampled by rap rock band Crazy Town for their single "Butterfly", featuring additional lyrics by the members of the band. The single sold 6 million copies worldwide.[2] [3] "Butterfly" itself, and the associated musical segment, was sampled by Gayle and featured on Barbie the Album, on the track "Butterflies".

"Pretty Little Ditty" was also sampled on the August 2020 track "Ain't It Different" by British rappers Headie One, AJ Tracey and Stormzy.

Notes and References

  1. Apter, 2004, p. 194.
  2. https://books.google.com/books?id=DE9qW3YfHG4C&lpg=PT256&pg=PT256 The Great Rock Discography
  3. Web site: How the Red Hot Chili Peppers Felt About Crazy Town's 'Butterfly'. 94.3 THE X.