This R&B Song Shows Just How Disposable Music Has Become

Jelani Greenidge
8 min readJan 21, 2022

Anitta’s not-quite-cover is good, not great. And that’s a problem.

Anitta, posing in a throwback striped, sleeved bathing suit from her 2021 music video, “Girl From Rio.”
Anitta, posing in a throwback striped, sleeved bathing suit from her 2021 music video, “Girl From Rio.”

Story time!

My wife Holly and I were out visiting a Sephora store recently, and like I tend to do when I visit stores in malls or shopping centers, I was trying to listen closely to the music playing overhead. It wasn’t blaring loud, but this song was playing. Because Holly and I were also chatting with the young sales associate, I didn’t quite recognize it at first. But 30 seconds in, it hit me.

“Oh my goodness, this is ‘The Girl from Ipanema!!’” I blurted out.

“I’m sorry…?” said the young lady.

“He’s talking about the music,” said Holly, in an apologetic tone.

“This is amazing,” I continued. “It’s an R&B trap cover of a classic bossa nova jazz tune from 1963!!!”

Antonio Carlos Jobim, a thoughtful looking mid-30s adult man, holding a guitar and singing into a microphone in what looks like a performance hall or a large recording studio.
Antonio Carlos Jobim, circa 1963

And before I could mention the influence of Antonio Carlos Jobim on mid-20th century standards, the young woman complimented me on my musical knowledge, but she did it in a way that one might marvel at an old former fighter pilot in an assisted living facility. She was very polite, and probably a little…

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Jelani Greenidge

Pastor, Writer, Musician, DJ, Stand-up Comic. Author of Undercover Prophets. Linktr.ee/jelani.greenidge Support via Cash App $JelaniGreenidge He/Him