Daglish's "Return of the Mutant Camel" (MUSICIANS/D/Daglish_Ben/Return_of_the_Mutant_Camel.sid) (1987) is a cover of the song "Atahuallpa" by Incantation (on the album "Dance of the flames" released in 1983).
I wonder if Chris knows this, because i found no credits to Incantation on the Karma64 album which contains a (great!) remix of this song (track 10 - Revenge of the Mutant Camels 2).
Also, there's no STIL entry about this.
Possibly the Incantation song has it's roots in a traditional Andean/Incan folksong, so even Incantation won't be the original composers, but i don't think so.
Slow Poison - "Revenge of the Mutant Camels 2": c64audio.com (named "Return of the Mutant Camels" here and falsly credited to Rob Hubbard )
Greetz, Monty
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 28/04/2010 - 9:18
by Chris Abbott
Monty wrote:Daglish's "Return of the Mutant Camel" (MUSICIANS/D/Daglish_Ben/Return_of_the_Mutant_Camel.sid) (1987) is a cover of the song "Atahuallpa" by Incantation (on the album "Dance of the flames" released in 1983).
I wonder if Chris knows this, because i found no credits to Incantation on the Karma64 album which contains a (great!) remix of this song (track 10 - Revenge of the Mutant Camels 2).
Also, there's no STIL entry about this.
Possibly the Incantation song has it's roots in a traditional Andean/Incan folksong, so even Incantation won't be the original composers, but i don't think so.
Slow Poison - "Revenge of the Mutant Camels 2": c64audio.com (named "Return of the Mutant Camels" here and falsly credited to Rob Hubbard )
Greetz, Monty
Ben insisted that he based it on a traditional Peruvian tune which is out of copyright (written by unknown authors), so this is the first I've heard of it. I'm not sure we'll ever get to the truth, maaaan.....
As for being credited to Rob Hubbard, what can I say but... Must be a database typo.
This is definitely worth a STIL entry though!
Chris
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 28/04/2010 - 11:12
by Monty
Well, i dug a little deeper on it and i think Ben is right here, although it seems to be not a peruvian but an equadorian folk song
There are other musicians out there who interpreted it too.
I browsed through a number of andean music style albums lately and you hear the same compositions in different interpretations over and over again, but this one was unique and so i thought it was possibly not based on a traditional song.
Plus i was surprised to hear that known melody because i always thought it was Ben's own composition.
Cheers, Monty
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 28/04/2010 - 11:19
by merman
There's also a cover of Cachapaya by Incantation in one of Ben's music demos...
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 28/04/2010 - 13:49
by Chris Abbott
It's just nice to put a name to the tune So thanks!
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 28/04/2010 - 22:23
by Monty
merman wrote:There's also a cover of Cachapaya by Incantation in one of Ben's music demos...
haha, thanks for this info! funny, because i asked my brother about this specific track. it instantly reminded me of some amiga-mod but i couldn't put my finger on it.
well, after listening to ben's version (ben's music selector, subtune 11) i still think i heard it on amiga somewhere. ben's version sounds relatively unknown to my ears...
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 29/04/2010 - 14:58
by dan gillgrass
Did you also know, that, (thanks to Mr. Carr outing himself as a Lionel Richie fan) it would seem Jeroen Tel likes a bit of his music as well... check out these chords at 0:34 and then listen to Cybernoid 2 sid.... fess up Tel!
Ok, i have another one, too.
Maybe a little far fetched, because it's a standard chord progression, but I always thought that Rob Hubbard's Game Over tune from "Monty on the Run" was heavily inspired by Nazareth's "Love Hurts".
I have mixed two short parts of both tracks together (had to slow down Monty a little bit), check it out here: monty_hurts.mp3 - 0.38MB
Ok, i have another one, too.
Maybe a little far fetched, because it's a standard chord progression, but I always thought that Rob Hubbard's Game Over tune from "Monty on the Run" was heavily inspired by Nazareth's "Love Hurts".
I have mixed two short parts of both tracks together (had to slow down Monty a little bit), check it out here: monty_hurts.mp3 - 0.38MB
What do you think?
I really can't see Rob being a fan of the group "Nazareth"
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 02/05/2010 - 7:36
by dan gillgrass
Chris Abbott wrote:
I really can't see Rob being a fan of the group "Nazareth"
Dark horse? U prob thought Rob didnt drink until that night in Manc... oh no.. he sat at our table... that was probably our fault tbh... oh well.......
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 13/09/2018 - 20:27
by Monty
Well, once in a while I happen to stumble across familiar sounding melody lines...
This time I was watching the movie "The Long Good Friday" from 1980 starring Bob Hoskins and was suddenly thinking I was playing Nemesis the Warlock: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=empcYO0UXBE#t=98m25s
Maybe Rob once sat on his sofa and watched that Bob Hoskins shower scene over and over again (scnr Rob!) and a few years later that melody crept (unnoticed?) into one of his tunes...who knows?
Of course Rob made the definitive version (as always).
Cheers, Monty
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 14/09/2018 - 7:35
by LMan
It's actually a thing I love about music. Everything is inspired by something that was before, nothing is really new, and everything has a long history of predecessors.
Re: Did you know?
Posted: 14/09/2018 - 18:09
by Waz
Notably, the composer of the soundtrack for The Long Good Friday, Francis Monkman, was formerly of the band Curved Air and then the progressive band Sky, whose track "Hotta" was that covered by Antony Crowther in the title theme for Suicide Express:
And Francis knocked up this rather ace theme tune for The Kick Off Match, shown locally in the North West of England in the ITV Granada region in the late 1970s, cue classic Granada logo!