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KOOL-AID / THE GLOBE
KICKIN’ IN Kool-Aid (1990) / Free single (1990)
"It should be kickin' in by now..."
"Wow! Shoo!" Dennis
Hopper in Flashback (1990).
"Ah, I actually got
him!" Dennis Hopper in Flashback (1990).
"Freedom, that's what it's
all about...I mean, it's real hard to be free when you're bought and sold in
the marketplace..." Dennis Hopper and Jack Nicholson in Easy Rider
(1969).
Slide guitar sample is Keith
Richards from "No Expectations" by The Rolling Stones.
"Wah!"
and drum sample from "Sympathy For The Devil" by The Rolling
Stones.
"Once we get out of the '80s,
the '90s are gonna make the '60s look like
the '50s..." Dennis Hopper in Flashback (1990).
ON ONE Kool-Aid (1990)
Spoken word sample by William S.
Burroughs
CHANGE OF ATMOSPHERE Kool-Aid
(1990) / RUSH The Globe (1991)
("Change Of Atmosphere")
Organ intro from "Child In Time" by Deep Purple.
Synthesizer sampled from"Baba O'Reilly" by The Who.
"Ah yes, delightful,
delightful...I wish I could sing like that...the only thing that's
important these days is rhythm and melody..." "You've Got Me Swingin'" by Peter Sellers.
The rhythm part in the
"rhythm & melody" interlude is sampled from "Here
Comes The Judge" by Pigmeat Markham
(1968, MCA Records).
"Hi, it's Russ here again
with another find: After the 'rhythm and melody' part of RUSH, the
phrase 'there's a time to laugh, a time to cry' is repeated seven
times. This is heard at the 11:11 mark of the Sugar Hill 12"
single, 'Rapper's Delight (Long Version)', by the Sugarhill
Gang."
CAN’T WAIT Kool-Aid (1990) / The
Globe (1991)
"O God! methinks
it were a happy life...how many years a mortal man may live." John
Gielgud reading from Shakespeare's
"Henry VI Part III".
I DON’T KNOW The Globe (1991)
There's
a Doug Lazy loop in there.
The dubby "beep" at the start of
one of the verses is from Scientist Wins the World Cup
Percussive loop is sampled (or
copied?) from house classic "Let The Music Use You" by the Nightwriters.
The voice about the rhythm and
Jones is Ian McShane, the actor best known
now for the antiques investigator programme "Lovejoy" on BBC
1, but a long time Shakespearian actor. The sample is from the Grace
Jones album Slave To The Rhythm at the start of the album. - Euan Forrest
THE GLOBE The Globe (1991)
Guitar elements and whoops sampled
from "Should I Stay Or Should I Go" by The Clash (1982).
At 2:17, listen for the into to Lionel Ritchie's "All Night
Long".
INNOCENT CHILD Kool-Aid (1990) /
The Globe (1991)
Opening drum beat is a slowed down
sample from "In The Air Tonight" by Phil Collins.
Opening guitar riffs are a slowed
down sample from "The Bottom Line" by B.A.D..
One
of the breaks is Marvin Gaye's "Sexual Healing".
The kid singing "Teddybear's
picnic" on the intro to the Kool Aid
version (also doing the "ah"'s a
couple of times in the main song) is a sample of André, aged 18 months.
Features a drum loop from "Vienna" by Ultravox.
GREEN GRASS The Globe (1991)
Piano sample is from "Wuthering Heights" by Kate Bush.
Bob
Dylan "Lay Lady Lay"
KOOL-AID The Globe (1991)
Contains a brief sample from
"Could You Be Loved" by Bob Marley and the Wailers.
Sample
from Kraftwerks "Numbers".
"Energy Equ-a-a-a-ls - MC2" from Gergio
Moroder's E=MC2 (under the name "Munich Machine").
IN MY DREAMS The Globe (1991)
Based heavily on
"Floatation" by the Grid - a big record in Ibiza
during the summer of 1990.
WHEN THE TIME COMES Kool-Aid
(1990)
Samples the beat from "We
Will Rock You" by Queen.
THE TEA PARTY The Globe (1991)
"Overture originally intended
as opening track was from an idea in the Marc Bolan/T-REX
film Born to Boogie (1971/72?) where Mark has
a tea party like in Alice
in Wonderland while a string quartet plays a medley of T-Rex hits. The
more recently released soundtrack to the film calls the track The Tea
Party. Andre (Shapps) was unaware of this and
he says it was as a "Tea" reference like other albums had at
the end of side 1. (tea
break etc)" - El Buccanero
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