Loading...
「ツール」は右上に移動しました。
18いいね 217回再生

You Don’t Think That Fat Meat Is Greasy! | Obscure 2000s Neo-Soul Blues Song

[Obscure 2000s Song] Tameka Rayne - You Don’t Think That Fat Meat Is Greasy! (2003)

"One lesson, one skillet, and a whole lotta attitude."

Welcome back to Retroactive Rhythms, where forgotten grooves get the love they deserve! 🎶

Today we’re diving into one of the most obscure 2000s songs you've never heard — “You Don’t Think That Fat Meat Is Greasy” by the legendary Tameka Rayne. Blending neo-soul music with Southern-style blues and bold humor, this neo soul blues gem from 2003 is both a funny song for adults and a sassy anthem every mama needed.

This AI recreation celebrates obscure 2000s music, perfect if you're craving a funny song to dance to, love obscure blues songs, or just need a funny song to sing with attitude. Part of our best AI music series and pressed virtually on our AI obscure vinyl, this track brings forgotten flavor to your ears!

💿 Don’t forget to like, comment, and subscribe for more obscure neo-soul songs and rare finds reborn!

Tameka Rayne

In 2003, Tameka Rayne shocked the Neo-Soul Blues scene with her fiery breakout single, “You Don’t Think That Fat Meat Is Greasy!” The song dropped like a hot skillet at a Sunday fish fry and had aunties, cousins, and everybody in between hollering “YAAAS” across the South. Inspired by a real-life spat with her then 22-year-old daughter who had the nerve to roll her eyes at the dinner table, Tameka marched straight into her cousin Boo-Boo’s home studio, still in her church heels and apron, and laid down the vocals in one take — fried chicken grease and all.

The song became a cult hit almost overnight. DJs from Jackson to Memphis started spinning it between Mary J. and Musiq Soulchild, and folks swore they could hear Tameka wagging a finger between verses. Bootleg CDs sold out in barbershops, and one woman allegedly left her man after playing the track five times in a row, claiming, “Tameka told me what I needed to do!” Tameka even got banned from one Atlanta radio station for calling a caller’s daughter “hard-headed and two seconds from eviction,” live on-air.

Though she never hit mainstream radio, Tameka Rayne became a beloved underground legend — the “Auntie of Accountability.” Her signature phrase, “Fat meat been greasy, baby,” became church-lady scripture and was later printed on aprons, mugs, and one line of limited-edition bonnets. To this day, when daughters get slick with their mouths, mamas just turn the volume up and let Tameka do the talking.

🔴 DISCLAIMER: This is an AI Music Comedy Channel! The artist & band stories are fictitious, and lyrics won’t be historically accurate—think “what if they sang about this in that era” for laughs. If you're here for serious music history, this ain't it. But if you’re here to kick back and enjoy some wild tunes, welcome to the party! 😆🎶

#obscure2000smusic #neosoul #aimusic

コメント