That's it! I just found it in an online version a few seconds before your post hit my mail server.
"There is no greater joy than soaring high on the wings of your dreams, except maybe the joy of watching a dreamer who has nowhere to land but in the ocean of reality."
DONALD D GAGEN
MAILTO:DGAGEN@ENSEMBLESTUDIOS.COM
ENSEMBLE STUDIOS
http://www.ensemblestudios.com
-----Original Message-----
From: Jerry Quartley [mailto:jrq@interport.net]
Sent: Tuesday, April 29, 2003 2:15 PM
To: All bound for Mu-Mu Land.
Subject: Re: [KLF] Sample Spot
Just to be boring, here's the quote:
"Michael Jackson, who we cited earlier on for not being that adept at
coming up with the killer Number One hit choruses, CAN come up with
the bass lines. "Billy Jean" was the turning point in Jackson's
career. That song, on his own admission, took him into the mega
strataspheres where his myth now reigns. The fact is, "Billy Jean"
would be nothing without that lynx-on-the-prowl bass line; but he
wasn't the first to use it. It had been featured in numerous dance
tracks by various artists before him. Jackson and Quincy must have
been hanging out around the pool table in their air conditioned dimmed
light atmosphere, L.A. studio one evening wondering: "What next?" when
one of them came up with the idea of using the old lynx- on-the-prowl
standby. Without making that decision back in 1981 there would have
been no Pepsi Cola sponsored jamboree in 1988."
Don Gagen wrote:
> I seem to remember Bill or Jimmy pointing out in one of their books
> that Billy Jean itself samples or copies another song. I think it
> might have been in the Manual when they discuss the importance of an
> infectious bass-line.
>
> "There is no greater joy than soaring high on the wings of your
> dreams, except maybe the joy of watching a dreamer who has nowhere to
> land but in the ocean of reality."
>
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