September (funk cover)
Scary Pockets
Scary Pockets' funk cover of "September" takes Earth, Wind & Fire's already joyous original and injects it with a raw, live-band energy that strips away the polished studio sheen in favor of gritty, immediate groove. The arrangement centers on a thick, syncopated bass line and chicken-scratch guitar work that sits firmly in the pocket, while the drums push and pull with the elastic feel of musicians listening to each other in real time. The horn section — if present — is tighter and more aggressive than the original's lush orchestration, prioritizing punch over grandeur. The vocal interpretation brings a different character to those familiar melodies, emphasizing soul grit over smooth precision. What Scary Pockets captures is the essential DNA of "September" — its irrepressible optimism, its demand that bodies move — while translating it into a language that feels more garage than arena. The cultural context of their YouTube-era funk covers represents a democratization of arrangement, proving that a great song's skeleton can support radically different flesh. This version is built for small venues with sticky floors, for house parties where the speakers distort slightly on the low end, for any moment where joy needs to feel earned rather than produced.
fast
2020s
gritty, immediate, groovy
United States
Funk, Soul. Funk Cover. Joyful, Energetic. Explodes with irrepressible optimism and sustains raw, gritty, earned joy throughout.. energy 8. fast. danceability 9. valence 9. vocals: soulful grit, raw energy, celebratory, loose precision. production: syncopated bass, chicken-scratch guitar, tight horns, live-band feel, elastic drums. texture: gritty, immediate, groovy. acousticness 6. era: 2020s. United States. House parties with sticky floors where the speakers distort slightly and joy feels earned.