Difference between revisions of "I Have Decoded You"

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It seems that Delia's only contribution to this was to provide Newley with recordings of other people's electronic music to "sing" over.
 
It seems that Delia's only contribution to this was to provide Newley with recordings of other people's electronic music to "sing" over.
  
You can hear [http://www.myfree.cc/mp3/Henk+Badings.+-+Evolutionen Hank Badings' ''Evolutionen'' on  myfree.cc]
 
 
The backgrounds are from parts 3 and 5, ''Ragtime'' and ''Waltz'':<ref>[http://www.finderskeepersrecords.com/shop/henk-badings-evolutions/ Hank Badings' ''Evolutionen'' tracklist and soundclips] at finderskeepersrecords.com</ref>
 
The backgrounds are from parts 3 and 5, ''Ragtime'' and ''Waltz'':<ref>[http://www.finderskeepersrecords.com/shop/henk-badings-evolutions/ Hank Badings' ''Evolutionen'' tracklist and soundclips] at finderskeepersrecords.com</ref>
 
* 3. ''Ragtime''
 
* 3. ''Ragtime''
 
* 5. ''Waltz'' (11:01-11:58)
 
* 5. ''Waltz'' (11:01-11:58)
 +
 +
Trunk records, on the sleeve notes, wrongly credit Delia as one of the artists, and [[Henk Badings]] goes uncredited.
  
 
=Availability=
 
=Availability=

Latest revision as of 18:54, 19 March 2020

I Have Decoded You is a work by Anthony Newley, said to be "classic Newley vocals" with "background sounds made up of a number of samples from other sources, standard BBC Radiophonic tape loops for SFX or white noise generation, and a fascinating edit of electronic pioneer Henk Badings' Evolutionen 5.[1]

It seems that Delia's only contribution to this was to provide Newley with recordings of other people's electronic music to "sing" over.

The backgrounds are from parts 3 and 5, Ragtime and Waltz:[2]

  • 3. Ragtime
  • 5. Waltz (11:01-11:58)

Trunk records, on the sleeve notes, wrongly credit Delia as one of the artists, and Henk Badings goes uncredited.

Availability

References