(no subject)
May. 7th, 2005 01:47 amLadies and gentlemen, may I present to you
THE GREATEST ALBUM EVER.

01. Sesame Street Fever (The Count, Grover, Ernie, Cookie Monster and Robin Gibb)
02. Doin' The Pigeon (Bert & the Girls)
03. Rubber Duckie (Ernie & His Rubber Duckie)
04. Trash (Robin Gibb)
05. C is for Cookie (Cookie Monster & the Girls)
06. Has Anybody Seen My Dog? (Marty and Grover)
The entire album is worth it if only for one line: "Look over there, your dog is getting funky with Cookie Monster!"
Now to find the Electric Company double album on MP3... I know it exists somewhere. If only I'd been larcenous back in my college days and ganked it from WMUA when I had the chance!
THE GREATEST ALBUM EVER.

01. Sesame Street Fever (The Count, Grover, Ernie, Cookie Monster and Robin Gibb)
02. Doin' The Pigeon (Bert & the Girls)
03. Rubber Duckie (Ernie & His Rubber Duckie)
04. Trash (Robin Gibb)
05. C is for Cookie (Cookie Monster & the Girls)
06. Has Anybody Seen My Dog? (Marty and Grover)
The entire album is worth it if only for one line: "Look over there, your dog is getting funky with Cookie Monster!"
Now to find the Electric Company double album on MP3... I know it exists somewhere. If only I'd been larcenous back in my college days and ganked it from WMUA when I had the chance!
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 06:57 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 11:30 am (UTC)My mother has pictures somewhere of me and my cousin, gettin' our groove on to this record. Unfortunately, those pictures were not destroyed when the house burned down . . .
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 04:06 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 06:04 pm (UTC)The Disney album was, appropriately enough, Mickey Mouse Disco.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 12:11 pm (UTC)at one point someone put together a website called sesameseventies.com that was devoted to the history of this album, and included a lot of mp3s. the webmaster even said "this has never been released on cd. when it is, we will take down the mp3s," yadda yadda. sadly, the riaa seems to have gotten wind of this. you can view an internet cache here.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 08:30 pm (UTC)DIN'T U
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 08:52 pm (UTC)Too bad about the Sesame Seventies website. Does archive.org get multimedia files as well as the HTML? Not sure. I love any 2003-era site that tells me to "maximize your browser window", however.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 10:11 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-09 01:30 am (UTC)my lone experience with the "mom's apple pie" cover was in a record store. i couldn't understand why anyone would sell or purchase that record for $50...until the nice guy behind the counter pulled it off the wall and let me take a closer look. ew. if i wanted to look at that, i'd pull out a mirror. i have no desire to look any more closely at it, thanks.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 12:52 pm (UTC)Here's what happened to me, though. I sampled a kick drum and portions of the bassline from C Is For Cookie and made a beat (also using an isolated snare from Trash). The way I chopped it, it went really well with this spanish guitar I'd sampled, but it's still recognizable to anyone who's got a nose for samples.
I did that years after originally picking up the record, because I was going through disco records I'd overlooked for sampling. I hadn't messed with it before because it actually took some surgery to extract portions of the bass from in between other instruments because it's never isolated as a phrase on the record. But within a few months, Ninja Tune did something that made me look silly.
They teamed up with CTW and reissued the (apparently classic) tape edit 12" of C Is For Cookie. It looks like this:
The idea is, the record represents a bit of hip hop pre-history because it features a club remix created before the advent of digital editing. The multitrack tapes were physically sliced, copied and spliced, in addition to having different elements mixed higher or lower and/or having effects applied to them.
So what do you suppose makes up a huge chunk of this remix? My bassline, isolated. This bugs me for two reasons - one is that if they'd done that on the LP version (or I'd ever found the insanely rare and valuable 12" release), I would have been saved a lot of sample chopping time. The other is that I would NEVER sample a reissue, especially one that came out on a sample-based music label. It'd be like using a paint-by-numbers book if you wanted to be an artist, you know? So I'm frightened of the idea of someone recognizing my bassline, knowing about this reissue (maybe without even knowing about the LP version) and assuming I did something I would never do.
Okay, I'm sure you didn't need to hear all that. But what you DO need to know is what the b-side of the record is.
Pinball Number Count by The Pointer Sisters (DJ Food edit)
Yeah, that's "one two three FOUR FIVE! six, seven eight NINE TEN! Eleven twelve!" from the pinball animations. It was secretly performed by the Pointer Sisters. And for the 12", all of the separate, tiny vignette versions from the show, with their different solos and numbers called, have been edited into one big funky track.
If you love old sesame street music like I do, you need this.
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 02:45 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 03:25 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 07:32 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-07 07:34 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-08 07:48 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-08 01:42 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-08 04:07 pm (UTC)Ah ... Marty ... one of the lost muppets ... where have you gone Don Music and Sherlock Hemlock.
"Rubber Duckie" is interesting to hear Henson ad-libbing to cover the extensive intrumental parts. He seems to run out of ideas by the end.
Interesting story: Before I was born, my parents were unfamiliar with "Sesame Street," as there wasn't much reason to be. But they had heard "Rubber Duckie," which was a moderate radio hit in the early 70s. They thought it was just some weird novelty song. Only years later did they discover it was sung by a puppet.
Then there's the story of when my father was pretty sure he heard Tom Lehrer singing on "Electric Company" ...
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-09 02:06 am (UTC)Noah
PS Remember how Whack Flapjack had starred, in the 70s, in a movie called Disco Avenger and there was a fight scored with the "Rubber Duckie" track?
PPS Remember Al and Tipper getting down to "Disco Frog" on "Wannabe Radio"?
(no subject)
Date: 2005-05-10 09:31 pm (UTC)