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OK, so I found an old mix tape. It's a TDK MA90. Unlike many of the
ferric tapes I've got, this one still sounds half decent. For a tape.
Considering that it's 20+ years old. The right channel seems a bit
faint, the treble is a tad muffled, and there's a teeny bit of tape
hiss, but other than that it's in remarkably good condition.
So how has my taste in music changed in 20 years? Well, let's see what
the track listing reveals...
First, I need to rewind the tape. (Remember that?) Five minutes later, I
hit play on side-A. This is what I hear:
"All that she wants", Ace of Bass. (1992)
"Tribal Dance", 2 Unlimited. (1993)
"The land of make-believe", Bucks Fizz. [I never knew that!] (1981)
"Sweat", Inner Circle. (1992)
"Water on glass", Kim Wilde. [Really??] (1981)
"In the hall of the mountain king", source unknown. (It appears to be
entirely synthesizers. I might perhaps be able to figure out who did it
if I raid my dad's CD collection.)
"Boom Shack-A-Lak", Apache Indian. (1993)
"Go West", The Pet Shop Boys. (1993)
"Boom!, Shake the room", DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince. (1993)
"Maximum Overdrive", 2 Unlimited. (1993)
"Mr Vain", Culture Beat. (1993)
"Loving of the Common People", ?Paul Young. (1983)?
It should be noted, almost all of these tracks I never know who the
artist was. When I was a teenager, I never cared about such things. I
listened to songs. The ones I liked ended up on tape, regardless of
author, year, style or popularity. If I liked it and my dad had a CD, he
put it onto tape for me.
In compiling this list, I've looked up all the songs to find out their
release dates and author. I've been quite surprised by who some of the
songs were performed by, and quite how old some of them are.
(Also, is it wrong that I can actually /remember/ some of the running
order before I get that far on the tape? I guess when your whole musical
experience consists of just one tape, it gets a bit ingrained...)
Oh yeah, side B:
"Denis", Blondie. (Original is 1978, but I think this particular
remix might be 1988.)
"No Limit", 2 Unlimited. [Like you didn't know that!] (1993)
"It's a sin", The Pet Shop Boys. (1987)
"Tainted Love", Soft Cell. (1981)
"Let the beat control your body", 2 Unlimited. (1994)
"Doop", Doop. [No, really.] (1994)
"No More", unknown. [Maybe once Google invents audio searches. :-P]
"Meet the Flintstones", The B-52s. (1994)
"Think about the way", Ice MC. (1994)
"Here we go again", unknown.
"Two princes", Spin Doctors. (1993)
"Give it up", The Goodmen. (1993)
"Young and proud", Ace of Base. (1993) [The tape cuts out after half
a verse. Clearly I was trying to cram more onto the tape than it would
hold...]
Man, generic one-hit-wonder dance tracks are remarkably hard to track down!
As some of you may have guessed, much of the source material for this
tape came from here:
http://tinyurl.com/bwadvyf
and here:
http://tinyurl.com/c5dzw5s
I know this, because I recognise the CD labels. (No, seriously...) It's
frankly miraculous that Wikipedia has the entire track listing for every
single compilation in this series. (Consider how many generic
compilations are released every single day...) Unfortunately, there is
apparently no way to search for a particular track in the compilation to
attempt to find out what other tracks came from that CD. (At least, if
there /is/ a way, I can't figure it out.)
I'm fairly sure a couple of the tracks came from another dance
compilation who's name I don't remember. (But if anybody finds it, I'll
recognise it. It's purple.)
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On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:13:58 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> "In the hall of the mountain king", source unknown. (It appears to be
> entirely synthesizers. I might perhaps be able to figure out who did it
> if I raid my dad's CD collection.)
The Electric Light Orchestra did a version in 1973 that is a very early
synth version.
Jim
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On 06/08/2012 08:19 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
> On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:13:58 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
>
>> "In the hall of the mountain king", source unknown. (It appears to be
>> entirely synthesizers. I might perhaps be able to figure out who did it
>> if I raid my dad's CD collection.)
>
> The Electric Light Orchestra did a version in 1973 that is a very early
> synth version.
YouTube confirms that it was actually Erasure.
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On 06/08/2012 08:13 PM, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> "In the hall of the mountain king", source unknown.
Actually Erasure.
> "Loving of the Common People", ?Paul Young. (1983)?
Definitely Paul Young.
> "Doop", Doop. [No, really.] (1994)
In case time has healed your wounds:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvLDm8821jQ
(My recording is a slightly different mix of this. It wouldn't surprise
me if there's several...)
Still, at roughly the same time, we had THIS:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wSr7h_pjxs
MY BRAIN! IT BURNS!!
Still, it was far, far worse when The Smurfs covered it. (No, I'm not
joking. The Smurfs.)
> "No More", unknown. [Maybe once Google invents audio searches. :-P]
> "Here we go again", unknown.
Yeah, still working on that one...
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>> "No More", unknown. [Maybe once Google invents audio searches. :-P]
>> "Here we go again", unknown.
>
> Yeah, still working on that one...
GOTCHA: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9I5iugfTiIk
One down, one to go...
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On 06/08/2012 8:19 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
> The Electric Light Orchestra did a version in 1973 that is a very early
> synth version.
I remember that (old f*rt, me) ;-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:24:34 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
> On 06/08/2012 08:19 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
>> On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:13:58 +0100, Orchid Win7 v1 wrote:
>>
>>> "In the hall of the mountain king", source unknown. (It appears to
>>> be
>>> entirely synthesizers. I might perhaps be able to figure out who did
>>> it if I raid my dad's CD collection.)
>>
>> The Electric Light Orchestra did a version in 1973 that is a very early
>> synth version.
>
> YouTube confirms that it was actually Erasure.
That's an interesting recording. Found it on Slacker and am listening to
it now.
Jim
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On Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:37:42 +0100, Stephen wrote:
> On 06/08/2012 8:19 PM, Jim Henderson wrote:
>> The Electric Light Orchestra did a version in 1973 that is a very early
>> synth version.
>
> I remember that (old f*rt, me) ;-)
LOL
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Orchid Win7 v1 <voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
>
> "All that she wants", Ace of Bass. (1992)
>
> "Tainted Love", Soft Cell. (1981)
These are the only 2 of those songs I recognize.
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On 09/08/2012 06:40 PM, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> Orchid Win7 v1<voi### [at] devnull> wrote:
>>
>> "All that she wants", Ace of Bass. (1992)
>>
>> "Tainted Love", Soft Cell. (1981)
>
> These are the only 2 of those songs I recognize.
Somewhere we have an old VHS of my little sister, aged 14, dressed up
like a goth, dancing to this, under red stage lighting.
I should go find that video...
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