Drifting: Difference between revisions
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|Alan Wilder/Siobhan Lynch|℗ 1997 Reprise Records}} | |Alan Wilder/Siobhan Lynch|℗ 1997 Reprise Records}} | ||
== Composition == | |||
=== Sample sources === | |||
{{#lst:List of Recoil sample sources by album/Unsound Methods|AW-SS-Drifting}} | |||
== Music video == | == Music video == | ||
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{{Singles}} | {{Singles}} |
Revision as of 19:10, 27 February 2023
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02. Drifting List of Unsound Methods songs |
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Drifting
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Song | Drifting |
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By | Recoil |
Songwriter | Alan Wilder Siobhan Lynch |
Produced by | Alan Wilder |
Recorded at | The Thin Line (Sussex) |
Mixed by | Alan Wilder |
Mixing assistance | Paul Stevens Simon Shazell |
Mastered by | Ian Cooper |
Studio assistance | Hepzibah Sessa |
Published by | Mute Song Not Normal Music Zoetrope Music Company Carlin Music Corp. Chappell, Inc. Warner/Chappell Music Ltd. |
Recorded | September 1996 - June 1997 |
Originally released | 27 October 1997 |
Live performances as Recoil | 0 times * |
Total live performances | 0 times * |
"Drifting" is a song from the 1997 album Unsound Methods by Recoil. It was released as a lead single on 13 October 1997.
Lyrics
Drifting
With your wild, call the pace
Taste the tracks of the waste
With your wild, with your sweet
With your cold black-eyed teeth
I close my eyes and I pray, yes I pray
Let it slide, let it slide
Ignore me and everything I've done
For I am stupid, I am poison
I take this one
And I taste the tracks
I taste the tracks
of the waste in my head
And you face me instead
I must be drifting somewhere
I held in my hand, but it's hard, so hard to see reason
The burning is here, is only here to follow through
But here it is harder than a screaming fist, and I hate it
It's dark behind your smile, and I can follow through
Let it slide, let it slide
Ignore me and everything I've done
For words, like bullets, they know when to come
And taste the tracks, and taste the tracks
Of the waste in my head, and you face me instead
Well, ignore me and everything I said
For I am stupid, I am poison
I held in my hand, but it's hard, so hard to see reason
It's dark behind your smile, and I can follow through
I close my eyes and I pray, yes I pray
With your wild, call the pace
Taste the track of the waste
With your wild, with your sweet
With your cold black-eyed teeth
Songwriter: Alan Wilder/Siobhan Lynch
Publishing Information: ℗ 1997 Reprise Records
Composition
Sample sources
"Drifting" - Recoil 1997 |
Sample overview | ||||
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Click to display/hide audio | |||||
Sample sources | |||||
Sample | Source | Status | Notes | Audio | |
Vocal elements | Howlin' Wolf - Oh Red!! - "My Last Affair" - 1953 |
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A manipulated vocal sample derived from blues musician Howlin' Wolf's 1953 "My Last Affair" is utilised sporadically throughout "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Marimba elements | Peter Gabriel - Birdy - "Slow Marimbas" - 18 March 1985 |
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A looping section of melodic marimba performance derived from the opening moments of Peter Gabriel's "Slow Marimbas" is utilised throughout "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Orchestral elements | Vivian Kubrick (as "Abigail Mead") - Full Metal Jacket (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) - "Sniper" - 1987 |
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A manipulated section of audio derived from Vivian Kubrick's "Sniper" as composed for the soundtrack of the 1987 Stanley Kubrick film Full Metal Jacket is utilised throughout "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Ambient elements | Super Cat - Ghetto Red Hot - "Ghetto Red Hot (Hip Hop Mix)" - 1992 |
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A manipulated section of audio derived from "Ghetto Red Hot (Hip Hop Mix)" by Super Cat is utilised sporadically throughout "Drifting". The sampled section of audio is itself comprised of a series of samples derived from "Fire" by the Ohio Players and Lou Donaldson's 1969 cover of "It's Your Thing" by The Isley Brothers. | ||
Brass elements | The Walker Brothers - "Another Tear Falls" - 1966 |
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A brass section swell derived from the opening moments of The Walker Brothers' 1966 UK single "Another Tear Falls" is utilised throughout "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Saxophone, choral elements | Hilliard Ensemble, Jan Garbarek - "Sanctus" - 1994 |
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A section of audio featuring a saxophone and choir phrase derived from the opening moments of a September 1993 performance of "Sanctus" by the Hilliard Ensemble is utilised for a brief pad during "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Guitar elements | The Comsat Angels - Waiting for a Miracle - "Missing in Action" - 1980 |
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A manipulated sample of guitar atmospherics derived from the opening moments of The Comsat Angels' "Missing in Action" is utilised throughout "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum, violin elements | Beastie Boys - Ill Communication - "Eugene's Lament" - 31 May 1994 |
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A manipulated, reversed section of audio derived from "Eugene's Lament" by the Beastie Boys is utilised mid-way through "Drifting". | ||
Ambient elements | Node - Node - "Clock" - 1995 |
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A sampled section of audio featuring electronic drums and ambient piano derived from "Clock" by Node is utilised throughout "Drifting". Node is notable as an analogue synth music collaboration between Dave Bessell, Gary Stout, Ed Buller, and Mark "Flood" Ellis. | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Orchestral, vocal elements | Loulie Jean Norman - "Summertime" - 1959 |
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A sampled orchestral/vocal phrase derived from Loulie Jean Norman's performance of "Summertime" as recorded for the 1959 Porgy and Bess film soundtrack is utilised in the outro of "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Vocal elements | Marlene Dietrich - Noel Coward Introduces Marlene Dietrich – At The Cafe De Paris - "Introduction Noel Coward" - 1954 |
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An introduction for German-American actress Marlene Dietrich by Noël Coward for Dietrich's 1954 Café de Paris cabaret performance is utilised in the outro of "Drifting". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum, ambient elements | De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising - "Transmitting Live from Mars" - 3 March 1989 |
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A section of audio derived from "Transmitting Live from Mars" by De La Soul is utilised sporadically mid-way through "Drifting". The separate organ and drum elements audible in the sample are themselves samples derived respectively from The Turtles' 1968 single "You Showed Me" and Wilson Pickett's 1969 cover of Lennon-McCartney's "Hey Jude". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum elements | A Tribe Called Quest - People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm - "Bonita Applebum (12" Why? Version)" - 1990 |
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A manipulated drum loop derived from "Bonita Applebum (12" Why? Version)", a twelve-inch remix of A Tribe Called Quest's 1990 single "Bonita Applebum" is utilised throughout "Drifting". The sample is itself partly comprised of a sample from Supreme DJ Nyborn's 1988 remix "Versatile Extension (Versatility Remix)". | Click to display/hide audio example | |
Drum, guitar elements | Deee-Lite - World Clique - "Try Me On... I'm Very You" - 7 August 1990 |
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A manipulated drum fill derived from "Try Me On... I'm Very You" by Deee-Lite is utilised sporadically throughout "Drifting". The drum aspect of the sample is itself a sample derived from "Soul Pride, Pts. 1 & 2" by James Brown. | ||
Timpani elements | Korg Inc. - Korg 01/W > PROG BANK B > B39: Timpani |
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The sequenced timpani performed throughout "Drifting" utilises samples derived from the Korg 01/W Bank B39 "Timpani". |
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Music video
Dates where Drifting was played
Drifting has never been played live.