they're great... i'm the white rabbit. these are samples from something in the song 'Daisy Chain for Satan."
the question is
where are these sampled from? a movie? a tv show? what?
the question is
where are these sampled from? a movie? a tv show? what?
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Sun, August 7, 2005 - 12:51 AMit was an interview with someone, I believe... I can't remember who it was tho. the samples appear other places as well, meat beat manifesto, etc. -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Sun, August 7, 2005 - 6:29 AMsomebody told me it was from some documentary on bad trips, and it was called "Bad Trip" or FreakOut or something like that. I looked on Netflix and on Internet Movie Database and found nothing. I must see the whole interview. Damn it!!! -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Sun, August 7, 2005 - 9:27 PMCrap, Sloth.org used to host a database for all registered samples that were used on published CDs... Page is gone now... -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Sun, August 7, 2005 - 11:20 PMhere's a neat list of sources of tkk samples ... i couldn't find the particular one you were looking for .. but i swear! i vaguely remember watching some t.v. documentary on drugs/acid houses/raves and hearing that phrase and going 'hey, wow .. this was sampled on daisy chain for satan' ....... i think i saw this show sometime in the early/mid 90's ..? if you do find out, please fill the rest of us in!
web.archive.org/web/200306...mples/group -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Sun, August 7, 2005 - 11:46 PMmore on the tkk source of samples for daisy chain:
Some of those beats are best shown in the high point of the album, "Acid Again". This first single off the album opens with a superb speech sample of a woman nonchalantly rambling (we speculate that her proclamation that "I live for drugs, it's great" will reappear as a sample in some other song) before launching into a repeated sample of her reaction to a bad LSD experience ("I'll never acid again") placed over huge shifting beats. An ironic jibe at the acid house elements of their own music? Perhaps, or perhaps not; in any case, this is an amazing trip of a song. ( www.dsng.net/Writing/MBM.htm )
from: www.gloriousnoise.com/bb/viewtopic.php :
www.nineinchnails.net/news/ar...PER.html
UR : The opening sample to "Acid Again," off the new one, features a self effacing girl expressing her "love" for drugs. The sample's also prominent on some other bands' records. Where is it from and what's the obsession with it ?
Dangers : I actually know the records you're tlaking about. And I completely forgot it was in there. When i heard it, it was like, "Huh. That would be good in a song." It's from this promotional record from 1967, an anti-drugs record. I took passages from it and edited words out to give it a more surreal, wierd feeling doesn't make any sense, or makes some sense. The whole record is just this sad, whimpering women.
www.xmission.com/pub/lists...orb.199909
Acid Again was the single, with the sample of Ricki Lee Jones talking about drugs, which was first used by My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult on
"Confessions Of A Knife" lp. -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Mon, August 8, 2005 - 8:45 PMif i could locate this anti-drugs record from 1967 that would be great...
-
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Mon, August 8, 2005 - 9:38 PMyeah, Ricki Lee Jones, that's it.
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Fri, January 11, 2008 - 8:34 PMwww.lysergia.com/AcidArchi...22L.S.D%22
"L.S.D" ( ) see presentation
LSDCapitol_frGf.jpg (160724 bytes)
"LSD" 1966 (Capitol TAO-2574) [mono; gatefold]
"LSD" 1966 (Capitol TAO-2574) [stereo; gatefold]
Extraordinary documentary on the new drug craze sweeping the nation, one of the best and most entertaining spoken word LPs of the era. Narration (by an uncredited Dick Clark) is superbly eloquent and manages to portray the whole acid wave as a game for con-men and loonies, without ever saying so openly. Allen Ginsberg, Laura Huxley and Ken Kesey get to see only their most bizarre sides exposed, while Tim Leary fares better doing his usual ritual spiel. There's interviews with dozens of teenage heads, and an unforgettable peak is reached with an actual trip recording of "Brian", a hipster acid head who unfortunately happens to have his first bad LSD experience while being recorded (with concealed microphones). The "Brian" recording is authentic-sounding and either very funny or pretty scary, depending on how hard-core you are. A highly sophisticated anti-drug LP, and the artwork and photos are equally outstanding. All material (including the Leary and Kesey/Prankster snips) is unique to this LP. Judging from promo ads, the LP was released as early as August 1966. [PL]
"LSD - Exclusive Open End Interview" 1966 (Capitol PRO 4153) [promo only; single sleeve; b & w cover]
This rare promo variant on the "LSD" documentary LP is of special interest as it has almost a whole side's worth of unique material. The "open-end interview" features the unnervingly warbling voice of wellknown anti-LSD spokesman Dr Sidney Cohen, with gaps of silence in between his responses so that any local radio DJ could pretend that Cohen was right there to answer his questions. Needless to say, listening to this in a lysergic state will produce an amazing, ghostly effect certain to drive inexperienced travellers up the wall. Side 2 features excerpts from the above-mentioned "LSD" LP and seems to contain only material found on the official release. There also exists a 3-side acetate set from the production of these LPs, but the exact contents of these are unknown; possibly they cover all the unique material from the two releases above. [PL] -
-
Re: i live for drugs...
Mon, January 14, 2008 - 8:58 AMthe above info is absolutely correct.....Iv'e found alot of the early samples from movies myself....but does ANYONE know where the "Devil Bunnies" samples are from???? "that's ridiculous!"..."oilcan.." etc...
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
