Let New Days Dawn performed by A Cautionary Tale
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The Way You Look Tonight performed by Air (french band)
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Different From The Rest performed by Alice Peacock
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Let Down performed by Another Cynthia
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Bleak House performed by Anthony Phillips
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Juliana performed by Antonio Adolfo & A Brazuca
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Space Race performed by Apemen
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Spacebeach performed by Arling & Cameron
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| | : great track - best song on the LP
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Mundo Civilizado performed by Arto Lindsay
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| | : Arto sings in such a sensual and soothing way. His most recent albums are well worth checking out. : Hmmm. I know he's Brazilian and everything, but I think Arto Lindsay's best stuff was done before he went all Latin on us. Listen to his guitar on the first Lounge Lizards album, when he manages to go 40 minutes without playing anything actually recognisable as a note.
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Life on Mars performed by Barbara Streisand
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a space boy dream performed by belle & sebastian
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Twangy Brisba performed by Berry Lipman
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Winter Warm performed by Bob Crewe Generation
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So much trouble in the world performed by Bob Marley
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Discovery performed by Brian Bennett
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| | : Lovage sampled this track for their opener, "ladies love chest rockwell." Anybody know if there's a site that shows all the original samples for stuff like this, rap and what not?
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Unchanging Window performed by Broadcast
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Oblighetto performed by Brother Jack McDuff
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Just Lust performed by Buzzcocks
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This Afternoon performed by Chad Mitchell
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| | : The album "Chad" on Bell records is the one to get.
Great songs (by Jake Holmes, Joni Mitchell and others) and fantastic arrangements. Hal Blaine and a couple of other wrecking crew members and great musicians are on it, too. In places it also reminds me of the group H.P. Lovecraft. So it might even be interesting for lovers of psychedelic music (not for those who hate strings, of course). I wonder if I should call it a masterpiece. : I second that on the "Chad" album...it's terrific. There's a 7-minute plus cover of Tim Buckley's "Goodbye and Hello" on there that rather stunned me, since it seems like a very challenging song to sing. The H.P.Lovecraft connection comes through Chicago producer Bill Traut, who owned Dunwich Records (the album is a Dunwich production). Traut was involved with H.P. Lovecraft, and of course the Shadows of Knight.
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space latin age performed by chappie
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first sleep performed by cliff martinez
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| | : The piece is not "simple". For minimalist music lovers, this is a pure gem. The whole soundtrack is a mesmerizing variation around the same notes. And I was frankly NOT disappointed by the remake of Solaris. It is an "ambient"' movie, that made me think of Brian eno's solo music (music for airports for ex). Very elegant, very slow, very subtle. : well, in my opinion the soundtrack was the best thing about the film. though I like and deeply respect soderbergh as a director( I'm intrigued by "the limey" for the same reasons you appreciated solaris), i feel his vision for solaris was too rushed compared to the soviet original(wich admittedly is a bit TOO slow in places), and I felt it didn't give enough of a fresh angle on the subject to warrant a remake. (yeah, i know they thought of it more as an adaptation of the book rather than a remake of the film, but people just aren't going to get that) Still, the word dissappointment was used a bit relatively here, as it WAS one of the better studio films out that year..it's just that the original has a special value to me.
(hmm.just realized that this might not be the ideal forum for discussing films, what with the lack of the word "movie" in the domain name and all. So I'll leave it here.)
Still, I agree that i phrased my description of the piece a bit ackwardly, it really should have said simple. There, fixed it.
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The space track performed by Cosmic Baby
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Fly High performed by Cotton Casino
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Dodo performed by David Bowie
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Space Oddity performed by David Bowie
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Interlude (Time) performed by Diamanda Galas
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The Cutter performed by Echo & The Bunnymen
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Getting Away With It performed by Electronic
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Bicho do Mato performed by Elis Regina
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| | : I believe the original version (by anybody) is on Jorge Ben's "Ben e Samba Bom" on philips from the mid 60s.
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Sosta Vietata performed by Ennio Morricone
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| | : After listening to a fairly large amount of Morricone music over the years this still stands out as one of his very best tracks for me. Oddly enough, this one never got compiled for one of the countless compilations that cover his "lounge" sound of the late 60s to the mid 70s. This should have been on "Molte Mondo Morricone", one of only a few essential tracks that were overlooked on this otherwise excellent trilogy. : I agree with you, this is a incredible track! The slow lush strings are perfect. I can't say I have heard much of Morricone's music, but if the rest is anything like this - he is going right in my list of favorite composers. : Nighteye, you should definitely give the Mondo-Trilogy a spin. Can't really praise these comps enough, they actually got me into Morricone and are by far the best ones when it comes to sum up the maestros non-spaghetti late 60s to mid 70s work. : Yeah, thanks eftimihn I think I have to look at those compilations.
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Minha Gente performed by Erasmo Carlos
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the tradesman’s entrance performed by faith brothers
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The Moon Was Yellow performed by Ferrante and Teicher
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On and Off performed by Forks and Knives
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Footprints on the Moon performed by Francis Lai
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| | : Yow! That sound snippet alone is so cool. : I finally got the version by Francis Lai, and i think its better then Johnny Harris one. Splendid song!. I love the ending part of it.. cant get that part out of my head :) : I'd have to go for the Johnny Harris original over the Francis Lai version. It's colder and spookier with less obtrusive strings. "Movements" is available on CD (great sleeve - his expression suggests a combined photo shoot/visit to his proctologist) - but the mono single version (w/"Lulu's Theme") is all you need. : Well, thanks to all of you I had to track down BOTH versions! Amazing what a difference an arrangement makes. I agree with scrubbles: the clip of Lai's version is the most infectious thing around!
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two spaces performed by frank black
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Time Out From The World performed by Goldfrapp
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| | : I doubt you're "only one" who wishes Goldfrapp lingered a tad longer on the slopes of Felt Mountain, but I really feel they made the right choice. "Felt Mountain II - The Sequel" would have been really anticlimactic. The Thin White Duchess, @ his height in the 1970's, had the right impulse - once you've got a trope right; move onwards! A great song tip though, and I would give a shout towards "Let It Take You" likewise. It sounds like John Barry arranging a weird Prince song circa "Purple Rain". : You're definitely not the only one, Efti ,and there is one more just here. To me, each successive album has contained fewer magically beautiful tracks than the last, the jump "onwards" into material I find uninteresting being accelerated hugely with the new disc. Robert, the evidence suggests that the choice appears to have been the right one when assessed on the basis of commercial success, but artistically I personally think it a shame they chose to concentrate so much on the "T-Rex with synths material". However I'll return to the new record again in a while and see if it grates less on me... : Thanks for the song recommendation, Robert. Well, i wouldn't have asked for just another Felt Mountain, but maybe for a slower transition towards their new sound, for keeping that magical feel of such stellar song such as "Pilots" or "Utopia". And "Supernature" feels rather "Black Cherry II" to me, so to me they really haven't moved on from there now either. But i know it's always a topic of debate, the "sticking to their style" vs. "changing/progressing from album to album" thing basically. I mean, did anyone complain The Smiths didn't move on to, say, synth pop? Did anyone complain Kraftwerk using electronics for 30 years? I don't know, i like electronic music a lot, but with Goldfrapp i just feel it's a loss such a gifted arranger like Will Gregory with all the right influences, carrying a Morricone/Barry style into a new contemporary sound, is now so firmly into synths and electronics... : You have some very valid points - I just don't agree that they apply here. A band/artist need not radically change styles release to release, but I stand by my previous statement when you get it right, move on. "Felt Mountain" got it really, really right. In retrospect, I see the shift for that group as correct move artistically. Likewise, I see "Supernature" not so much as "Black Cherry II", but as the logical fulfillment of the shift that that record, now clearly a transitional LP, suggested. I would also say that "Supernature" is a stronger record than "Black Cherry" on pretty much every front (save perhaps the lack of anything as utterly exquisite "Black Cherry's" title track - which I believe is the group's best song to date.) Now I happen to like the obvious points of reference for "Supernature" - glam rock and electro - as much as I do Italian soundtracks. (All three genres do much the same for me - create their own sonic environments, that play with the contents of my skull.) And if Goldfrapp's next LP is "Supernature II", I will complain loudly - (but I hope/suspect Allison and Will are smarter than that.) And @ the risk of fueling further controversy, many a great band/artist has run a great sound/trope/idea/etc. into the floorboards. (See: The Pixies, The Ramones, The Cocteau Twins, (my beloved) T. Rex and, sadly, The Smiths (post "The Queen is Dead") and Kraftwerk (post "Computer World").) Many of the artists I love best - Bowie, Gainsbourg, Joni Mitchell, Kate Bush, Siouxsie, Wire, The Fall, Broadcast - all remake/remodel themselves every so often. Sometimes said exercise fails - but seem, to me, to create a sense of artistic vitality within the work of said bands/artists. (And "Supernature" feels, to me, thick with that very vitality.) Also let's not fall prey to the reverse snobbery that the commercial success of this LP means it is therefore an inferior piece of work artistically. Remember so much of what this forum champions - Bacharach, Nancy and Lee, Serge, Dusty, etc. - was squarely middle of the road pop music. It makes me very, very happy that people are actually hearing/buying sexy, smart, pop music w/more that a little sense of darkness to it, rather than bland, processed, obvious crap that dominates the charts.
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He’s Simple, He’s Dumb, He’s The Pilot. performed by Grandaddy
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Roskilde Song performed by Henry Sails
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space age lullaby performed by jackie lee
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Gorecki performed by Lamb
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Shooting Star performed by Les Baxter
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Take Me With You performed by Lyn Christopher
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Just Visiting performed by Lynsey de Paul
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ha ha performed by mates of state
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chase the devil performed by max romeo and the upsetters
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| | : Yes it rocks. but have you heard Wet Dream? quite purile and filthy lyrics but great x-rated Ska : Yeah, i love his early rude boy stuff. : theres a really good jungle dubbed version of max romeo's chase the devil done by Spacebar Collective from Malaysia.u guys should check it out. http://www.myspace.com/spacebarmalaysia : hey olli, hope you don't mind if copy here a more precise version. And LOL for this line in your version:
So when I check him my life's in hand
---
Lucifer son of the morning, I'm gonna chase you out of
earth!
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
Satan is an evilous man,
But him can't chocks it on I-man
So when I check him my lassing hand
And if him slip, I gaan with him hand
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase Satan out of
earth
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase the devil out of
earth
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
Him haffi drop him fork and run
Him can't stand up to Jah Jah son
Him haffi lef' ya with him gun
Dig off with him bomb
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase Satan out of
earth
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase the devil out of
earth
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
Satan is a evilous man,
But him can't chocks it on I-man
So when I check him my lassing hand
And if him slip, I gaan with him hand
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase Satan out of
earth
I'm gonna put on a iron shirt, and chase the devil out of
earth
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
I'm gonna send him to outa space, to find another race
Move ya with your gun
Mi sey fe lef' ya with your bomb...
---
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/davebulow/wow/lyrics_max_romeo_-_chase_the_devil.htm
http://www.vortexmind.net/index.php/2006-11-29-max-romeo-i-chase-the-devil/
http://faqs.ign.com/articles/717/717937p1.html : true, a great song - isn't there a mad hardcore version, too? : Yes there is. The Prodigy, before they (he) became a pop metal band. lol.
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Female of the Species performed by Meg Myles
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Bahia performed by Michel Magne
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So Much Beauty In Dirt performed by Modest Mouse
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Space Lord performed by Monster Magnet
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Areas performed by New Musik
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while the city sleeps performed by Nick DeCaro
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| | : Cordially corrected for hair splitters,and for the benefit of search engines everywhere!I'm sure Joni
has lifted a top or two in her heyday too!His work needs WAY MORE stateside attention indeed. : Even if you think you don't know who Nick DeCaro is, chances are you are familiar with his music, via his arrangements for many Golden Age of Warner-Reprise "Burbank Sound" recordings incl: Gordon Lightfoot's 'If You Could Read My Mind', James Taylor's 'Shower The People' and Randy Newman's 'Marie'. By conservative estimate, as producer, arranger, musician, songwriter, or singer, DeCaro, who died in 1992, partnered with over a hundred groups or artists - including not just Warners-Reprise artists like Arlo Guthrie, Maria Muldaur, Ry Cooder, the Everly Brothers, the Mojo Men & Harpers Bizarre, but also such diverse recorded citizenry as Barbra Streisand, the Ventures, Claudine Longet, Chris Montez, the Sandpipers, Del Shannon, Gary Lewis, et al - amassing a catalogue in excess of 300 albums and sundry 45rpm singles. In an interview I conducted with Randy Newman in 2001, he described DeCaro as being almost pathologically shy. Thus explaining, perhaps, the state of anonymity that still surrounds Nick, despite his prolific achievements. As a journalist I have devoted some of the last couple of years trying to redress this oversight. If you are interested, one result is an article I published in Japan in 2001. The English language version is available at communities.msn.com/NickDeCaro. A more recent article can be found on the web at www.spectropop.com/NickDeCaro
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Mile of Fence performed by Pete Droge
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The Great Gig in the Sky performed by Pink Floyd (featuring soloist Clare Torry)
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Das Licht performed by Ruth Hohmann & Erbe Chor
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Butterflies performed by Secrecy
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bonnie and clyde performed by serge gainsbourg
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| | : Relentless violin beat, depressing song, memorable, moves toward its inescapable conclusion...makes me think of a well loved coworker who died in '01. : the "stereolab version" wouldn't happen to be the Luna (feat. Laetitia Sadier of Stereolab)'s hidden track from the Penthouse LP would it?
Anyway, the Luna f. Laetitia version of Bonnie & Clyde is absolutely fantastic. : )
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Pink Girl performed by Shauna Burns
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So um amor performed by Shorty Rogers and his Giants
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We're Still Free performed by Skeleton Crew
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Headache performed by Space Twins
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Mungo City performed by Spacehog
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Broken Heart performed by Spiritualized
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| | : this was on my list to recommend too...but I've only heard the album version...what an astounding track! Will have to check out the EP...
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ladies and gentlemen we are floating in space performed by spiritualized
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I Think I’m In Love (live at The Royal Albert Hall) performed by Spiritualized
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Reading is Sexy performed by Stone Avenue Musical Endeavors
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Rocket Number Nine Take Off For The Planet Venus performed by Sun Ra and His Arkestra
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Hometown Unicorn performed by Super Furry Animals
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a love from outer space performed by tahiti 80
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| | : Is this the AR Kane song? 'She loves me, she loves me she loves me, hmm, a love from outer space, its true'. My girlfriends favourite track from the I LP. : Yes! Though I didn't know it was a cover...I'll have to find the original and hear it!
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White Car in Germany performed by The Associates
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Country Boy performed by The Associates
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little dots in space performed by the boston post
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Tear It All Away performed by The Church
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Creole Love Call performed by The Comedian Harmonists
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| | : This track is marvelous, thanks for the heads up.
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Groovin� With You performed by The Gentle People
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| | : Great track, it made me buy the LP, which was a little disappointing, but the first four or five tracks are great, and for me this song is the opeak of them, and the whole LP.
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We Could Be Flying performed by The Singers Unlimited w/ Art Van Damme
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| | : I only ever heard this once - been looking for it ever since. It's truly lovely.
I should say that Scott Walker does a really nice version of the song on his much-maligned (but actually pretty OK - albeit covers only) LP Any Day Now.
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Twilight Zone performed by The Spiders
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Uncertain Smile performed by The The
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You Can Tell Me performed by Tomi
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your hidden dreams performed by white noise
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| | : My dad's prog-rock friend brought this album over when my dad got his first proper stereo in 1972 and played us the scary side... These days, I love "Firebird" and "Here Come The Fleas". Quirky UK electronica by (BBC Radiophonic Workshop) Delia Derbyshire and David Vorhaus.
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space travel performed by yellowcard
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