Pet Shop Boys ‎– DJ Culture

Label:
Parlophone – 12R 6301
Format:
Vinyl, 12", 45 RPM
Country:
Released:
Genre:
Style:

Tracklist Hide Credits

A DJ Culture (Extended Mix)
Engineer – Paul Wright Guitar – Greg Bone Percussion – Andy Duncan Remix, Producer – Brothers In Rhythm Scratches – DJ Reckless Vocals [Additional] – Tessa Niles
6:51
B1 Music For Boys
Engineer – Ren Swan
3:43
B2 Music For Boys (Part 2)
Engineer – Ren Swan
6:10

Companies etc

Credits

Notes

Published by Cage Music Ltd/10 Music Ltd.
℗ 1991 The copyright in this sound recording is owned by Pet Shop Boys Partnership under exclusive license to EMI Records Ltd.
© 1991 Pet Shop Boys Partnership under exclusive license to EMI Records Ltd.
2045496

Barcode and Other Identifiers

  • Barcode: 5099920454968

Other Versions (Showing 5 of 15) View All

Title, Format Label Cat# Country Year
DJ Culture (CD, Single) Parlophone, Parlophone CDR 6301, 2045492 UK 1991
DJ Culture (7", Single) Parlophone, Parlophone R 6301, 2045497 UK 1991
DJ Culture (7") Parlophone 20 4549 7 Netherlands 1991
DJ Culture (7", Single) Parlophone, EMI 006 2045497, 006-20 4549 7 Germany 1991
DJ Culture (12") Parlophone 060-20 4549 6 Europe 1991
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Reviews & Discussion

Review by Sep 09, 2005 (edited over 6 years ago)
In reviewing the Pet Shop Boys back catalogue, it's amazing to discover that they always seem to leave 'hints' of certain ideas they would more or less continue to expand upon on future releases. For any artist, such a trait indicates a truely inherited musical talent. While I've never doubted the brilliant musicmanship of the duo, I still continue to awe at their consistently ingenius productions. Their uncanny ability to merge with current trends as opposed to give into them is one of the reasons why they've maintained a certain integrity amongst critics and fans alike. So in the early 1990s, when House music had risen from the underground and hip-hop was at its peak, the PSB typically decided to combine the best both worlds to create a decidedly unique and stylish sound. 'DJ Culture' was the result and perfectly encapsulated the early 90s music scene within four and a half minutes. If the lush, digital symphonies fused with funk guitar licks and breakbeat backing and scratching weren't enough to get your attention, then the vocoded chorus and lyrics dealing with everything from the Gulf War of '91 to the disposable attitudes of shallow masses were enough for it to show up on your radar.

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[r98720]
3.58 / 5 (24 ratings)
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