Saturday, May 31, 2008

Pat & Mick - "I haven't stopped Dancing yet"

Pat and Mick were a British vocal duo consisting of popular radio personalities Pat Sharp and Mick Brown. The royalties from their record sales were donated to Capital FM's Help A London Child charity. The pair were often portrayed as unintelligent in media coverage, but this served to boost record sales, providing money for the charity in the process. With their last single released in 1993, and Pat Sharp no longer at Capital Radio, they have no immediate plans to collaborate on future charity singles.

Top 40 Singles

* 1988: Let's All Chant / On The Night (UK #11, credited to Mick And Pat)
* 1989: I Haven't Stopped Dancing Yet (UK #9)
* 1990: Use It Up & Wear It Out (UK #22)

The duo also had 2 lesser hits after 1990. These were 1991's "Gimme Some" (UK #53) and 1993's "Hot Hot Hot" (UK #47).

PAT & MICK - I HAVEN'T STOPPED DANCING YET


Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Something different

Ever since I started this blogging thing, my purpose was to promote & share 80's & 90's music just like from other music blogs. However, it came to a point that while I love sharing and listening to through these mixes, I just thought it would also be nice to post my own mix sets and hear how others would interpret it. Next week, am going to try somethin' different. For the first time, I will be uploading my own MIX SET. If you're into 80's/90's mixes, you should give this set a try and you won't regret it.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

Robert Palmer - "Addicted to Love"

"Addicted to Love" is a song by Robert Palmer. It is the third song on the Riptide album. The most commonly heard version runs around four minutes, but the full album version runs a little over six minutes. The song topped the Billboard Hot 100 and peaked at #5 on the UK Singles Chart, and has now become known as his trademark song, thanks, in part, to a highly popular video. The song is unusual in that the intro drum solo is in the 7/4 time signature, while the remainder is in a more conventional (at least for pop music) 4/4 time signature. It was originally intended to be a duet with Chaka Khan. However, her record company at the time wouldn't grant her a release to work on Palmer's label, Island Records. Chaka Khan is still credited for the vocal arrangements in the album liner notes. The guitar part on the song is played by Andy Taylor, then a member of Duran Duran. Palmer met Taylor when they were both members of supergroup The Power Station.

ROBERT PALMER - ADDICTED TO LOVE (12")


Saturday, May 24, 2008

U2 - "New Year's Day"

"New Year's Day" is the third song and lead single from U2's 1983 album, War. The song is driven by Adam Clayton's distinctive bassline and The Edge's keyboard. It was the band's first hit single, breaking the top ten in the UK, peaking at #10 on the singles chart, and charting on the Billboard Hot 100 for the first time in their career. In 2004, Rolling Stone magazine placed the single at number 427 on their list of the 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.

U2 - NEW YEAR'S DAY (US Remix)


Friday, May 23, 2008

Marky Mark & Funky Bunch - "Good Vibrations"

Marky Mark and the Funky Bunch was a hip-hop group led by Mark Wahlberg. Members included Scott Ross (alias Scottie Gee), Hector Barros (alias Hector the Bootie Inspector), Duffy Culligan (alias Duffle), Terry Yancey (alias DJ-T) and Anthony Thomas (alias Ashey Ace). The group's best known song is "Good Vibrations". "Good Vibrations" made it to number one on the American music charts in 1991. Although their music career was only minimally successful in the United Kingdom, they won "Best Dance Act" at the Smash Hits Poll Winners Party in December 1992. Marky Mark was also featured on the single "You Know How We Do It" by Pandemonium on the Surf Ninjas soundtrack.

MARKY MARK & FUNKY BUNCH - GOOD VIBRATIONS


Thursday, May 22, 2008

Freda Payne - "Band of Gold"

Powered by a rumbling, pounding rhythm section and an unforgettable chorus, Freda Payne’s “Band Of Gold” was released in 1969 and went on to dominate 1970’s pop charts on both sides of the Atlantic. In the UK, it spent an amazing six weeks at #1. In the USA, it sold a million copies, earning Freda Payne her first gold record.

FREDA PAYNE - BAND OF GOLD (Almighty 12" Pop'd Up Mix)


Phil Fearon & Galaxy - "Dancing Tight"

Rather like the RAH Band, GALAXY was not a true group of musicians but a front for an individual producing all the music in a studio environment, with two female backing singers to supplement the recording sound (Julie Gore & Dorothy Galdes). Galaxy's best known hits were "Dancing Tight", "What Do I Do" and "Everybody's Laughing", which were all up-beat commercial pop songs, hitting the Top Ten of the UK Singles Chart. Before forming Galaxy, Fearon was a member of the band Kandidate. Galaxy's records were distinctly early 1980s in style, with prominent use of keyboards and synthesizers. Galaxy's popularity waned in the mid '80s, with the trend moving towards acid house, though the later single, a cover version of "Ain't Nothing but a Houseparty" was an early example of this genre. In 1987 Fearon founded and managed a record label called 'Production House Records' with Laurie Jago & Raj Malkani, moving away from performing to producing other acts.

PHIL FEARON & GALAXY - DANCING TIGHT (12" Remix)


Paula Abdul - "Promise of a New Day"

"The Promise of a New Day" is the second single (and lead-off track) from American artist Paula Abdul's album Spellbound. The single was released to radio while the surprise-hit "Rush Rush" was still at the top of radio airplay and the pop charts in order to keep the momentum going. The song hit #1 on the Billboard Hot 100 on September 14, 1991, becoming Abdul's sixth chart-topping single, and her last #1 hit to date.

PAULA ABDUL - PROMISE OF A NEW DAY


Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Pet Shop Boys - "Where the Streets have no Name"

Pet Shop Boys are a popular English dance music duo, consisting of Neil Tennant, who provides main vocals, keyboards and occasionally guitar, and Chris Lowe on keyboards and occasionally on vocals. The duo achieved most of their success near the end of the popularity of the new wave dance music era, receiving their initial sound and presentation from other acts of the period (especially the new romantics) such as Depeche Mode, Roxy Music, Midge Ure, Visage, Thompson Twins, New Order, and Ultravox, mixing in a bit of R & B as well.

PET SHOP BOYS - WHERE THE STREETS HAVE NO NAME (Ext. Dance Mix)


Right said Fred - "I'm too Sexy"

Right Said Fred is the name of a British pop band, which was founded in 1989 by brothers Richard Fairbrass and Fred Fairbrass from East Grinstead, as well as their close friend Mark Hollins. The group is named after a novelty song of the same name which was a hit for Bernard Cribbins in 1962. In 1991 released their single, "I'm Too Sexy", which was released by the Gut Reaction firm on an especially-created record label called Tug. The song, a tongue-in-cheek dance song sung from the point of view of a vain male fashion model, became a huge hit in the United Kingdom, spending six weeks at number two behind Bryan Adams' blockbuster "(Everything I Do) I Do It For You". The song also went to number one on the charts in the United States and went on to become a hit around the world. The song's instrumental break is based on the chorus of the 1974 instrumental hit "Dance with the Devil" by Cozy Powell which itself is based on "Third Stone from the Sun" by Jimi Hendrix.

RIGHT SAID FRED - I'M TOO SEXY (Betty's Mix)


The B-52's - "Roam"

The B-52's are a New Wave rock band formed in Athens, Georgia, in 1976. The band's name comes from a particular beehive hairdo resembling the nose cone of the airplane of the same name. During their early years, wigs of that style were often worn by the band's female singers Cindy Wilson and Kate Pierson.[1] The correct name for the band has long been "The B-52's", but in 2008 they dropped the apostrophe, with their official website and Funplex album and single covers reading "The B-52s". However, the file tags on the digital releases of both of these retain the apostrophe. Both spellings could now be considered correct. Love Shack came next. With its party vibe and colorful music video (featuring a cameo by a then-unknown RuPaul), "Love Shack" not only became their first song to hit the U.S. top 40, but it went on to peak at number three.[13] That peak was matched in early 1990 when "Roam" also hit number three.[14] In Australia, the country that had most embraced the band a decade earlier, "Love Shack" stayed at number one for eight weeks.

THE B-52's - ROAM (Extended Version)



Simple Minds - "Sanctify yourself"


Once Upon a Time is the eighth album by Simple Minds, released in 1985. Due to the popularity of the Keith Forsey-penned "Don't You (Forget About Me)" on The Breakfast Club soundtrack, interest in Simple Minds was at an all-time high by the time this album came out. Some say it was to spite the song's success, but the band decided to leave the career-defining cut off the album, and instead let singles like "Alive and Kicking" (UK #7, US #3), "All the Things She Said" (UK #9), "Sanctify Yourself" (UK #10), and "Ghost Dancing" (UK #13) speak for themselves. It was a ploy that seemed to pay off as the album topped the UK charts, and peaked on the US charts at number 10. Virgin reissued the album on a remastered CD in 2002 (cardboard vinyl replica edition) and early 2003 (jewel-case). The remastered edition is noticeably louder in the low-end. Virgin reissued the album on SACD in 2003.

SIMPLE MINDS - SANCTIFY YOURSELF (12")


Brother beyond - "Be my Twin"

Brother Beyond was a British boy band / pop group, that saw some mainstream success in the late 1980s. Mike Stock, Matt Aitken and Pete Waterman known as Stock Aitken Waterman (SAW) auctioned off their services to charity, and Brother Beyond and label EMI won the auction. The first song to be released from this session was "The Harder I Try", a Number 2 hit, that was only kept off the top by the million-seller "A Groovy Kind of Love", by Phil Collins, in July 1988. The 12" version of the latter topped the Hi-NRG charts, in October 1988, where it stayed until it was knocked off by the Samantha Fox cover of "I Only Wanna Be with You", again produced by SAW. Their final significant hits were two remixed versions of album-tracks: "Be My Twin", which got to Number 14, and "Can You Keep a Secret?", hitting Number 22. All these singles were taken from the two different editions of their first album Get Even.

BY THE WAY THIS ONE GOES OUT TO MY BESTFRIEND & KUMPARE DJ JASON of DECADES METROWALK

BROTHER BEYOND - BE MY TWIN


Tuesday, May 20, 2008

Culture Club - "Miss me blind / It's a Miracle"

Miss Me Blind" is a song by the 1980s pop band CULTURE CLUB. The song was released on the band's second album Colour by Numbers and charted in 1984 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart at #5. The single was released in U.S.A, Canada (where it also reached number 5), Brazil, Australia and Japan. The song also includes a reference to the title of one of Culture Club's previous album. Lead singer Boy George states in the song "But you know, I'm never really sure, If you're just kissing to be clever", the name of Culture Club's debut album. The song was never released in UK as a single, even if it was a fans' favourite. In most countries (like Japan, Canada and USA), its B-Side was the ballad "Colour by Numbers". In Mexico, the B-Side was "Victims". In Brazil, the B-Side was "Boy Boy (I'm The Boy)". A very popular 12" was issued, gaining big success in American clubs especially. The popular extended 12" version contained extracts of the other Culture Club hit of the spring, "It's a Miracle"

CULTURE CLUB - MISS ME BLIND / IT'S A MIRACLE (US Dance Remix)



Pretty Poison, C.C.C.P., & Red Flag Package

PRETTY POISON is an electronic dance music group based out of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Group members are Jade Starling - Lead vocalist; Whey Cooler - keyboardist/guitarist; Kaya Pryor - Percussionist/keyboardist; Mike Capozzoli - Bassist; Bobby Corea - Drummer; Lou Franco - Guitar (performance). They charted for the first time in 1984 with the song "Nighttime", which hit number fourteen on the U.S. Hot Dance Club Play chart. In 1987 their song "Catch Me (I'm Falling)" was featured in the Jon Cryer movie Hiding Out, and with heavy MTV exposure, became a top ten U.S. Billboard Hot 100 hit, peaking at number eight. The song also went to number one on the dance chart. The B-side contained a shorter "Spanish Mix" vocal. A re-recorded version of "Nighttime" became their second Hot 100 hit, climbing to number thirty-six. Pretty Poison had several more dance chart entries, the most recent being a new version of "Catch Me (I'm Falling)" which hit number forty-three in 1998.


C.C.C.P. was a German high-energy techno and rock band, led by Rasputin Stoy. They were best known for their 1986 instrumental American-Soviets, released by Clockwork Germany. This six-minute song themed on the Cold War became a major hit at dance clubs and in the US-Billboard Charts, German Top 75 and many more european charts. The following single releases (Made in Russia, Orient Express) was released by BMG Europe and BMG Pacific. Boths titles was no. 1 and no.2 in the official charts in the same week (Hong Kong, BeNeLux,France and Spain).
RED FLAG is a synthpop band founded in 1984 in San Diego by brothers Chris Reynolds and Mark Reynolds (vocals). Considered to be one of the most successful and widely known synthpop bands hailing from the United States, RED FLAG has proven to be one of the most enduring, most prolific, stylistically varied and most influential electronic bands from America.

Monday, May 19, 2008

Just woke up!

For starters, way back 1990 from the group "Breathe", Say a Prayer

ENJOY!