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Dub be good to me: the strange and challenging art of the remix album

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THE LEAGUE UNLIMITED ORCHESTRA
LOVE AND DANCING
(VIRGIN, 1981)

The daddy of pop remix albums, Love And Dancing was the idea of Human League producer Martin Rushent, who, inspired by the hip-hop cut-ups of Grandmaster Flash, painstakingly re-edited tracks from the ‘League’s platinum-selling Dare album into elegant disco dubs. The name League Unlimited Orchestra is a nod to Barry White’s band, but the “unlimited” seems also to refer to the possibilities of modern studio technology.


PET SHOP BOYS
DISCO
(PARLOPHONE, 1986)

The art of the extended dance mix was further developed on Disco, an album compiling remixes of singles and B-sides from Pet Shop Boys’ 1986 debut album, Please. Featuring versions by Shep Pettibone, Latin Rascals and Arthur Baker among others, this took Tennant and Lowe out of the pages of Smash Hits and into the clubs.


THE AUTEURS VS μZIQ
THE AUTEURS VS μZIQ
(HUT, 1994)

When Hut (a subsidiary of Virgin) commissioned Mike Paradinas to remix sophomore album, Now I’m A Cowboy, they probably weren’t expecting him to ignore – or at least obscure – the source material almost entirely. Though neither label nor band, nor indeed Paradinas himself, were happy with his work, the record came out nonetheless and has attained something approaching cult status in the last 18 years.


MASSIVE ATTACK VS MAD PROFESSOR
NO PROTECTION
(WILD BUNCH / VIRGIN, 1994)

Probably the most notorious “full” remix album of the 1990s, No Protection came about when avowed dub-heads Massive Attack handed the parts for their second album over to second generation digi don Neil Fraser, aka Mad Professor. The Scientist-style cover art remains the best thing about it, but there are some moments of undeniable excellence: ‘Bumper Ball Dub’ arguably trumps the original ‘Karmacoma’, and the Tracey Thorn-vocalled ‘Better Things’ lends itself beautifully to Fraser’s reverb-heavy treatments on ‘Moving Dub’.

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