A Wild Rapper Appears

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    Oh, crap! A random rap!
    dascottjr, "Friday", Literal Video Version

    You're listening to a Pop song, when suddenly, out of nowhere, a rapper jumps into the song. Then, almost as suddenly as he appeared, he disappears into the night, and the song returns to normal.

    It can be, but is not necessarily, a rapping bridge. This is generally due to deals made by record companies, since they want to make the most money possible. A similar practice existed in the early 1940s (which could be called A Wild Texan Appears), where a guy with a southern accent suddenly started talking over the music without warning.

    Compare with Stealth Hi Bye.

    Examples of A Wild Rapper Appears include:

    Anime & Manga

    Films

    Live Action TV

    "Why is there a rapper here?
    What exactly am I here?
    Did I just rhyme 'here' wit 'here'?
    I am getting out of here!"
    "That was a rapper,
    Which makes this a real song!"

    • The German Olympic skater Katarina Witt appeared in several Christmas TV specials in the early 1990s. In one of them, out of nowhere she suddenly breaks into a full-on rap.


    Music

    • Katy Perry's "California Gurlz" features a rap by Snoop Dogg.
    • Also by Perry, a version of "E.T." (featured in the music video) had Kanye West doing a rap in it.
    • "Friday", by Rebecca Black, is a well-known example of this trope, provided by producer Patrice Wilson.
    • Justin Bieber frequently has rappers do this in his songs. The weirdest is "Never Say Never" with Jaden Smith, who isn't very good at it.
    • Ludacris and Lil Wayne frequently enter this as they work in basically everything (the former is one of those who worked with Bieber).
    • Subverted in "Rapture" by Blondie, although considered the Ur Example. Instead of someone else rapping in her song, Debbie Harry does it herself.
    • Jenna Rose's song "My Jeans" has a rapper named Baby Triggy show up in the middle of the song.
    • REM’s "Radio Song" has KRS-One rapping at the end. Much later Q-Tip would contribute a rap verse to "The Outsiders".
    • "Underneath It All" and "Hey Baby" by No Doubt - but note that Lady Saw and Bounty Killer are Jamaican Dancehall Reggae artistes, rather than rappers.
    • Sonic Youth's "Kool Thing" uses this. Although instead of delivering an actual rap, Chuck D just responds to Kim Deal's spoken monologue with deliberately vague, meaningless hip-hop cliches ("Tell it like it is... Yeah, word up!")
    • Hard 'n' Phirm's "Pi" features fellow comedian/musician Howard Kremer aka Dragon Boy Suede.
    • Kevin Max's "Existence" has a bridge featuring Knowdaverbs from GRITS.
    • 'Alligator Sky' by Owl City.
    • A much earlier example: "Every Little Step" by Bobby Brown has a rap portion, though by Bobby himself.
    • Emilie Autumn, of all people, does this in "Opheliac". It's done by Emilie herself, though.
    • Parodied by inversion in Jack Sparrow by The Lonely Island, where a rap song has a wild Michael Bolton appear...
    • Very common in eurodance music, e.g.:
      • Snap — Rhythm is a Dancer.
      • La Bouche — Be My Lover.
      • Basic Element — Love 4 Real.
      • Playahitty — The Summer Is Magic. Also done by vocalist herself, not by a guest rapper.
      • And many more, listing them all would be pointless.
    • "Electronic Pleasure" by N Trance.
    • "Good Kill" by Too Much Joy ends with a rap by KRS-One. Oddly enough, this was released the same year he also appeared on REM's "Radio Song".
    • Bad Religion's "Let Them Eat War" features a rap verse by Sage Francis.
    • Parodied on the song "Pop Song" by Jon Lajoie

    And now the token rap verse that doesn't make any sense
    But helps me get a small percentage of the urban music market

    • "Lost+" by Coldplay, courtesy of Jay Z.
    • Pete Townshend's "Who Are You (Gateway Remix)", which is basically his solo version of The Who song, includes a rap verse by Hame.
    • Inverted in the Eminem song "Stan", which features refrains from pop singer Dido. The song helped get Dido's own single out.
    • The now little-remembered Charity Motivation Song "Voices That Care" included a brief rap by Will Smith. This was even more jarringly, awkwardly done in the Dutch answer to this, “Als je iets kan doen” by Artiesten voor Azië.
    • "We Are The World 2010" has a whole section of this.
    • Parodied by The Axis of Awesome in their How To Write A Love Song where Lee pops in with a rap in the middle of their R&B love song.
    • "Roll the Bones" by Rush, provided by usual vocalist Geddy Lee, but with his voice drastically altered via studio effects.
    • Madonna's "Give Me All Your Luvin'" kind of doubles up on this - the bridge has both M.I.A. and Nicki Minaj rapping for a few lines each.
    • Michael Jackson's "Black Or White" has a rap bridge credited to a mysterious "L.T.B.". The video had Macaulay Culkin lip sync this part.
    • "Rollin' (The Ballad of Big & Rich)" by Big & Rich has a guest appearance by Cowboy Troy in the middle.
    • Kirsty MacColl's "Walking Down Madison" has a rap bridge by Aniff Cousins. He doesn't entirely appear out of nowhere though - he also gets the spoken line "would you like to see some more?" in the chorus.
    • The Jessie J song "Price Tag" has a rap by B.o.B.
    • The last verse of Riskay's positively delightful Smell Yo Dick.
    • Maroon 5 has Wiz Khalifa appear in "Payphone".
    • Betty Wright And The Roots' Betty Wright: The Movie has three such appearances - Snoop Dogg on "Real Woman", Lil Wayne on "Grapes On A Vine" and Robert "The Messenger" Bozeman on "Hollywould". Though The Roots are a hip-hop group, they only provide instrumentation on the album, and most of the vocals are sung by Betty Wright herself.
    • Double-subverted by Keane's Stop For A Minute. It features K'NAAN, a rapper, who sings. But right after the second chorus, he abruptly switches to rapping.

    Video Games

    Web Animation

    • Homestar Runner: Inverted with "Rap Song" by Coach Z (accidentally) featuring Peacey P. The song itself is all rap but has an R&B break, performed by Tenerence Love. "Loading Screens" is a straight example.

    Web Original

    Katy Perry: Kanye,/Why are you here?/I don't like this version./You're not on the album.
    Kanye West: Katy, ungh,/Let me be clear, ungh./Every single pop hit/Needs a rapper on it.

    Western Animation

    • Inverted in the Phineas and Ferb episode "Spa Day", which has a song with relaxing, lounge music, except for a completely out-of-the-blue rap tune interrupting it in the middle - the catch being that the rap section made up the majority of the song.
    • Total Drama World Tour: Harold interrupts some songs to start rapping, much to the others' annoyance.
    • The Veggie Tales song "BellyButton".
    • The opening theme to Liberty's Kids:

    I take my heart into battle
    Give that freedom bell a rattle
    Gonna have independence signed
    I'll sign right here on the dotted line
    Red, white, and blue, never give up
    We represent America!

    • Schoolhouse Rock has one in the form of a rapping walrus during the solo parts of the otherwise rock & roll-themed "Save the Ocean" in "Earth Rock", provided by Eric "Badlands" Booker.
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