That reminds me of Red Hot Chili Peppers remake of that Love Rollercoaster song. It's so incredibly noisy/dense, but it totally works. I love these kinds of music where every time you listen in a new device, say, car vs. home stereo vs. headphones - you hear some new noise every time. What I have always liked about a lot of Yello noises is that they are so obviously samples of human noises, like the "shooka shookaaaaa" on Oh Yeah, or the "doom ba doomp bop doom ba doomp bop" on Gold (I might have the titles mixed up here) of course the belch, I think a lot of these mouth noise samples may have predated some of the "a capello" rap mouth noise song beats? -----Original Message----- From: yello-bounces+tourguide=austexecotours.com@mailman.xmission.com [mailto:yello-bounces+tourguide=austexecotours.com@mailman.xmission.com] On Behalf Of Christopher dowlen Sent: Monday, February 16, 2004 10:37 PM To: yello@mailman.xmission.com Subject: [Yello] RE: Yello Digest, Vol 12, Issue 7 As you all know Yello's music is extremely dense and full of layers that may take extended time to hear. Think of all the layers in Pink Floyd's Wall and Dark Side . . . In Classical forms like Stravinsky's Sythian Suite, or Varase's Arcania: HEAVY SHIT!!! It takes time for the mind to create new pathways for understanding new music . . .each new piece may have a frame of reference but in itself a new dialect. Look into XM radio, lots of just released stations: punk and ska, ultra lounge, and I have heard a song that was on the trance station with Dieter doing vocals!! Really a cool song. CASPER _________________________________________________________________ Check out the great features of the new MSN 9 Dial-up, with the MSN Dial-up Accelerator. http://click.atdmt.com/AVE/go/onm00200361ave/direct/01/ _______________________________________________ Yello mailing list Yello@mailman.xmission.com http://mailman.xmission.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/yello