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Tuesday, 30 August 2011

B'B'BOYS !

This one proved difficult to find on the internet, so I'm making it available here. Leah Landis had good success with this single from 1986. Her previous release titled "She doesn't like it from behind" wasn't as noticed commercially probably because the title didn't help. Anyway for those who loved this song as much as I did back then here it is, and as some have pointed out to me, she 'does' kind of look like Jon Bon Jovi on the back cover!

BOP SHOO WAH!



One of the greatest medleys of all time.

Back in 1985 when records like this were not only very expensive, but incredibly hard to get your hands on, mixes like this one became a "holy grail" of sorts. When only a lucky handful of Dj's were blessed enough to be able to have a copy for themselves, many of us had to make do with crackly recordings off late night radio and thus became a mad following of regular shows such as "Dance til dawn" and "Pulsation Club Show" throughout the mid to late 80's.This particular record took me a staggering fifteen years to find and cost me a small fortune.It was released in two parts. The first and second parts being on separate volumes of Hot Tracks. Here is the mix in its entirety, with part one and part two together for the complete journey.


 I still have the original price tag of $65.95 that the original price was for it back in 1985.
80's fans and lovers of medleys will not be disappointed .... OCTOMNIPENT ZEITGEIST MEDLEY 1985

Making Of… "Octomnipent Zeitgeist" Medley

by Glenn Cattanach
To create the medley, Glenn Cattanach worked with two other DJ's - Greg Lee and Jeff McKeehan. Glenn owned all the equipment, and Greg and Jeff were local club DJ's in Lexington, Kentucky. The three of them had previously made two other medleys together - the "1984 Top 40 Medley" and the "Best of Hot Tracks 1984." Both medleys appeared on Hot Tracks during 1985, which was the 4th year for Hot Tracks.
Glenn, Greg & Jeff came up for the idea of a BIG two-part medley for 1985 and started work on it in October of 1985. Greg was really the mastermind behind the medley, being the one with most of the ideas, but the medley was a group effort. Greg reviewed dance charts and came up with the list of songs to include. They named the two-part medley "Octomnipent Zeitgeist" which loosely meant "THE Spirit of '85." These guys wisely kept logs on the entire project, noting the settings for the turntable speed, mix board levels, equalizer settings, tape speed, etc. This enabled them to later re-edit any part that needed perfecting.
All the work was done with two turntables, a ¼" track 15 IPS reel to reel recorder, a cassette deck with dbx noise reduction and a variable speed 7½ IPS reel to reel recorder. Digital recording was uncommon in 1985 and no samplers or effects (delay, reverb, echo, and no CD players!) and no multi-track tape recorders were used.
The key to the entire medley was what was called the Kentucky Multi-Track method (named that because they were living in Lexington, Kentucky at that time). They would record 8 to 16 beats of a percussion piece to use "under" the song being edited. They looped those beats by splicing a length of edited tape together, sometimes several meters long, and playing it repeatedly while recording that rhythm track to a cassette deck (with dbx noise reduction) for 3 minutes. They would then play that cassette back, mixing in the record/song they were adding to the medley with the rhythm track. To transition to another song, they would use the same rhythm track under the next song to make it sound similar to the previous song. Frequently, several rhythm tracks were sampled, layered and cross-faded. This method was often subtle and always effective. This way the songs did NOT sound like a bunch of turntable mixes that were simply chopped up and edited back together. They used more than 70 or 80 different "loops" or rhythm tracks for the entire medley.
Final preparations for "Octomnipent Zeitgeist" included breaking the 35 minute medley into two parts, adding mix breaks between the two parts, and adding a Wizard of Oz theme (since they were calling the separate parts OZ-I and OZ-II). The medley ends with a trickling ultra-high-speed voice-over describing the origin of OZ. Hot Tracks published the medley in January and February 1986 as Series 5, Issues 1 and 2.
The mix took 600 man-hours and over three months to complete. It was a labor of love for these guys. They figured out what they had spent on tape (remember, back then everything was on ¼" tape, no hard drive recording) and the vinyl records, they each made only about $40 US. They didn't care. They had created one of the best year-end medleys ever and were known by DJ's around the world.

First post on the blog, and a fitting one....

Ok, so the blog is in its infancy and I'm trying for a third time to post a full profile and provide information without success. But let's get the ball rolling. This is one of the greatest remixes Hot Tracks ever did. It oozes with 80's pop magic and is choc full of 'good feeling'. It remains to be a very special record in my collection.
 It can be downloaded here...
 I LOVE MY RADIO - HOT TRACKS REMIX