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Difference between revisions of "Julie And Candy"

(Samples/Lyrics)
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*From 4:00 to about 4:40, a female voice can be heard quickly saying, "Hey!"  It starts at 4:00, it's very easy to hear at 4:26 and 4:33.  It comes from the left side.
 
*From 4:00 to about 4:40, a female voice can be heard quickly saying, "Hey!"  It starts at 4:00, it's very easy to hear at 4:26 and 4:33.  It comes from the left side.
** Starting at 3:09 a carousel slide projector's advancement is added to the percussion for its clicking sounds, in the style of [[Kid For Today]]. If the vocal is "Bass!" it could be a reference to the gelatin /base/ found in slide film. Following [[In The Annexe]], titularly about a "base." Gelatin is also used in Jello and Gummy Candies, hence the name Julie (Jello) and Candy (Gummy Worms).
 
  
 
[[Category:Released tracks]]
 
[[Category:Released tracks]]

Revision as of 07:27, 5 November 2014

Julie And Candy
Running time 5:30
Appears on Geogaddi


Production

  • In interviews, Boards of Canada have used "Julie And Candy" as a point of reference for their approach to music production:

Remix Magazine, July 2002

In the past, we've taken a much more minimal approach to the texture, like single melody lines where you could clearly hear the instrument. I guess we're heading back toward that empty sound now after Geogaddi, but sometimes it's nice to make a track that just sounds like a weird cacophony of undefined instruments. Most of "Julie And Candy" was actually made up of recorders and flutes.

HMV Magazine, February 2002

We don't like using digital things or computer effects so we get sounds by doing things like running whole parts through a really bad tape recorder or something like that. Like the intro on "Julie And Candy" for example, we just played the melody on a couple of whistles and then we bounced it back and forward between the internal mics of two tape-decks until the sound started disappearing into hell. Like when you look at an image reflected within two mirrors forever, in the distance it gets darker and greener and murkier.

Samples/Lyrics

  • In the opening bars of "Julie And Candy" (and again at 2:46), a sample of dialogue taken from George A. Romero's 1972 film "Season of the Witch" (alternately titled "Hungry Wives") can be heard:
Shirley: "You're putting me on!"
Gregg: "We're going to try it, you ever try it?"
Shirley: "You're putting me on!"
Gregg: "I'm TURNING you on."
Shirley: "You're putting me on! Where did you get that stuff?"
Gregg: "Oh, Nikki's growing a patch out in the backyard".
Shirley: "Come on, you're putting me on."
Nikki: "Yeah, he's putting you on, he's a brat!"
Shirley: "Uh-huh. Sure, sure!"

The original audio sampled from "Season of the Witch". MP3 sample [1]

The cover of George Romero's 1972
film, "Season of the Witch"


  • From 4:00 to about 4:40, a female voice can be heard quickly saying, "Hey!" It starts at 4:00, it's very easy to hear at 4:26 and 4:33. It comes from the left side.

Videos

External links

References

  1. <flashmp3>Julie-and-candy--sample-(putting-me-on).mp3</flashmp3>