翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Foots Creek, Oregon
・ Foots Walker
・ Footsbarn Theatre
・ Footscray
・ Footscray Baseball Club
・ Footscray City College
・ Footscray City Films
・ Footscray JUST
・ Footscray Park
・ Footscray railway station
・ Footscray RUFC
・ Footscray Town Hall
・ Footscray, Victoria
・ Footscray-Edgewater Cricket Club
・ Footscrew Nunatak
Footsee
・ Footsie
・ Footsie (flirting)
・ Footsie Blair
・ Footskating 101
・ Footsoldier in the Moonlight
・ Footspeed
・ Footstar
・ Footstep
・ Footsteps (album)
・ Footsteps (Buckethead album)
・ Footsteps (Dardanelles song)
・ Footsteps (organization)
・ Footsteps (Pop Evil song)
・ Footsteps (Ri Jong-o song)


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Footsee : ウィキペディア英語版
Footsee

"Footsee", credited to Wigan's Chosen Few, was a British hit single in 1975, reaching # 9 on the UK Singles Chart. It is notable as being one of the first commercially successful remixes of a previously released recording.
By late 1974, the Northern soul music and dance scene centered on the Wigan Casino club in Lancashire, England, was attracting increasing attention from mainstream media in the UK, at the same time as original American R&B recordings which met the musical criteria of its fans, and which were new to listeners, were becoming more difficult to find. According to most sources, Dave McAleer, then working for Pye Records' Disco Demand subsidiary label, heard a 1968 single by the obscure Canadian band, The Chosen Few. The record's B-side was a brief instrumental version of the A-side. It had originally been released on the Transworld record label in Canada, and was reissued in the US by Roulette Records (Roulette 7015) as a tie-in with the popular "Footsee" toy.〔( "Roulette acquires 'Footsee'..", ''Billboard'', 6 July 1968, p.3 )〕〔(Roulette Records discography )〕 Pye held the rights to the Roulette catalogue in the UK, and McAleer arranged for the original instrumental track to be speeded up in the recording studio to the right dance tempo. It was also overdubbed with car horns and crowd noises, which are variously reported to be taken from the 1966 FA Cup final between Everton and Sheffield Wednesday, or alternatively a group of revellers invited into the Pye studio.〔("European Discos Blooming As Diskery Promos", ''Billboard'', 8 February 1975, p.63 )〕〔("Northern Soul Music and the KFC revival" )〕
Released on the Disco Demand label in late 1974, the remixed and overdubbed record reached the UK chart in January 1975. The B-side was a true Northern soul favourite, "Seven Days Too Long" by Chuck Wood. When "Footsee" was featured on BBC Television's ''Top of the Pops'', dancers from the Wigan Casino gave a demonstration of the Northern Soul style of dancing, in the absence of a real group to promote the record.〔
Music journalist, Stuart Maconie, described the record as an "embarrassing novelty" and "execrable" in his autobiography, ''Cider With Roadies''.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Footsee」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.