Electro Kitsch
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I Need Some Sheep. Vocal Mix
Excellent work on this track.Just love the guitar on the chorus very catchy and a cool sound.Mr Wolf singing about sheep!!! ha :) The track is certainly a wolf in sheeps clothing.A real grower the more you listen to it.
Just love reggae with its gorgeousness constructed expertly as in this track. Well done.
great job on this tune FBro.... here is the video... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m3FH1oU-HEY
Loved the original version of this, this one is cool too! I dig the reggae take on it. This is like the "after" version of the song, after of couple tokes. Hahaha! Yeah, this is cool.
Unmistakable Bob B vocal, great version guys. Thumbs, Gibbo
Funky...wah/distortion pedal.....and Bob's vox...great backing track ..."I Need Some Sheep"...followers ...willing victims ...scary thought well expressed in this tune...brr..r.r.. chillin' me...and that's not because it's -25C outside without the windchill ;) This track is creeping me out...gotta have another morbid listen ;) Thumbs for everyone!
Very different!..Top marks for originality...lovin' that fuzz guitar sound! Wont be getting any 'sleep'...err I mean sheep! tonight either...
Lovely laid back reggae that gets the feet going.. and who wouldn´t love that singalong chorus (well I was) LOL.. Guitar fx are great and almost sounds like a muted trumpet in places. Very well done guys!!!
Wild track! Lyric is original that's for sure. Nice laid back rythm to this. Cool guitar leads too. Unique sound to this whole song which works. Nice job! Thumbs
The Fondue Brothers
It’s hard to believe that it’s nearly forty years since the dance floors of the world pulsated to the sound of DISCO. From New York to Tokyo the fashionable elite would boogie to the sounds of Earth Wind And Fire, Chic and Gloria Gaynor.
One of the leading exponents of the high energy dance scene were The Fondue Brothers with hits such as "Gonna Lurve Ya Body", "Get Up, Get Down" and "Blow Your Funky Horn". But their story goes back much further.
Born at a very early age in Hicksville West Virginia, Carl and Bobby were the youngest of nine children. Their parents, Reg and Maud raised them the best they could in the post war depression. Like most Baptist families the Fondues were regular churchgoers and it was at the passionate gospel services that Carl and Bobby honed their singing voices.
In their adolescent years the brothers toured local youth clubs and retirement homes as part of the harmony vocal group The Edsels. It was around this time that their potential was spotted by Platter Records producer Tony Salami. The first disc they cut with Platter Records "Please Don’t Cry On Me" was an early success, charting at number 51.
During the turbulent decade of the Sixties, after a brief tour in Vietnam, the brothers found themselves in San Francisco. In the latter half of that crazy decade they fronted Psychedelic Funk band Sons Of The Purple Mushroom. However after several onstage busts and a conservative backlash over their massive hit "I’ll Be Your Pimp" the band split and the Fondues retreated into a life of Transcendental meditation.
After almost a decade in the musical wilderness a former high school friend Joey Dyson, now a successful TV producer persuaded the brothers to provide the Theme tune for the (now cult) cop series LA Dog Patrol. Several TV and Movie offers followed including Jaws 6, Agent Brad Colon and The Sister Mary Maguire hour.
Then, In the mid 70’s the DISCO phenomenon exploded onto the worlds dance floors. Instantly Carl and Bobby knew (in their own words) "This was the reason they had been put on this Earth". They teamed up with legendary producer Chuck Merengue and the rest they say is history.
Who can forget the massive floor fillers "Kung Fu Bump", "Handbag Hustle" and "Bongo Baby" (recently sampled by Lil Winky).
Carl and Bobby now live in Cleethorpes England where they still tour the UK and Europe.