Dance Remixes
Dance Remixes | ||||
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Remix album by Mylène Farmer | ||||
Released | November 23, 1992 | |||
Genre | Pop, dance-pop, electronic | |||
Length | 1:50:00 | |||
Label | Polydor | |||
Producer | Laurent Boutonnat | |||
Mylène Farmer chronology | ||||
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Alternative cover | ||||
International CD |
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Singles from Remixes | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Fnac | [2] |
Dance Remixes is the first remix album by Mylène Farmer, released on November 23, 1992.
Background, writing and release
This album was made to make the fans wait until the following album, postponed because of the Giorgino 's shooting.[3]
However, rather than a simple compilation, the album contains two CDs in its French version, including the remixes of fifteen songs on the singer. These remixes, all made by Laurent Boutonnat and Thierry Rogen (for the latter, it was his last collaboration), have mostly been published previously as vinyl's B-sides of Mylène Farmer's singles, except "We'll Never Die" (Techno Remix) and "Libertine" (Carnal Sins Remix), made for the occasion, as the "Extended Dance Remix" of the new song "Que mon cœur lâche". This song, whose video was directed by Luc Besson, was the only single released to promote the album, and the last vinyl of the singer.[4]
"We'll Never Die" is the only song available on this album that was never released as a single.
An international version of the album was also released. It contains only ten remixes, including the remix of "My Soul Is Slashed", the English version of "Que mon cœur lâche". Apart from the number of titles, the two covers also are distinguished by the color of the cover (black for the French version, white for the International).[4]
The booklet's pictures, made by Marianne Rosenstiehl, show Mylène Farmer training in a gym.[5]
There were two singles from this album: "Que mon cœur lâche", and its English-language version "My Soul Is Slashed" (only available on the European CD album).
The album peaked at #3 on the French Compilations Chart on December 9, 1992. It was re-issued in 2005 in a digipack version and was therefore charted on the Albums Charts, reaching #108 on April 9, 2005 and stayed in the top 200 for four weeks.
Formats
- Double CD
- Double 12" - Limited edition (5,000)
- CD - Germany (1)
- CD - Japan (1)
- CD - Republic of China (1)
- Cassette (2)
(1) Only 10 remixes
(2) Only 12 remixes
Track listings
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A-side :
B-side :
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Versions
Version | Length | Also available on | Year | Comment[6] |
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"À quoi je sers..." (club remix) | 7:50 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1989 | There are more musical bridges. At the end, a male voice saying "Quoi" can be heard. |
"Ainsi soit je..." (maxi remix) | 7:10 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1988 | This version is so slow and melancholy as the original one, with more music and refrains. There are also more percussion that punctuated the title throughout the song. Farmer sings "soit je" several times at the beginning of this remix. |
"Allan" (extended mix) | 7:57 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1990 | Devoted to discothèques, this version includes a new orchestration with a fast tempo. There are more refrains. |
"Beyond My Control" (godforsaken mix) | 8:03 | CD maxi, 12" maxi, CD single (Canada) | 1992 | In this version, the introduction (about 2:00) is composed of guitar riffs, John Malkovich's voice, the word "Lâche" repeated by Farmer and a cry of a man. |
"Désenchantée" (remix club) | 8:10 | CD maxi, cassette, 7" maxi (Germany, Canada) | 1991 | The song begins with the sounds of children in a playground, and then with a musical introduction in which the words "génération", "désenchantée" and "tout est chaos" are sampled. The music is accelerated and the bridge is extanded. |
"Je t'aime mélancolie" (extended club remix) | 7:45 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1991 | The song is punctuated by the phrase "Je t'aime, je t'aime, je t'aime mélancolie", sung by Farmer. |
"Libertine" (carnal sins remix) | 7:00 | 1992 | This version adds suggestive sighs and cries of Farmer. | |
"My Soul Is Slashed" (the rubber remix) | 7:34 | CD maxi, CD single (promo, France) | 1992 | This is a dance version with a musical introduction that lasts about two minutes. |
"Plus grandir" (mother's live remix) | 6:25 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1989 | This remixed version, a disco duet with Carole Fredericks, was aired in many discothèques. The song starts with a dialogue between Fredericks and Farmer (as for the Live Mix, Fredericks' words are originally recorded for "Maman a tort"). English words, particularly the phrase "Who's my mother ?" that Farmer repeats throughout the song, have been added in this version. |
"Pourvu qu'elles soient douces" (remix club) | 6:30 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1988 | This is a remixed version including many gimmicks and scratches in the musical bridge. |
"Que mon cœur lâche" (extended dance remix) | 8:10 | 7" maxi, CD maxi (Germany) of "My Soul Is Slashed" | 1992 | This is a dance remix devoted to the nightclubs. |
"Regrets" (extended club remix) | 7:13 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1991 | This version contains a long introduction in which the two singers are answering each other with words not sung. Words are actually sampled in a phonetic reversal. All the lyrics from the original version are sung. |
"Sans contrefaçon" (boy remix) | 5:55 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1987 | This dance remix had an introduction of 1:30. |
"Sans logique" (illogical club remix) | 7:11 | CD maxi, 7" maxi | 1989 | In this dance remix, the phrase "This is a blank formatted disket" is mixed with a voice of a man. |
"Tristana" (remix club) | 7:10 | 7" maxi, cassette, Cendres de Lune | 1987 | This dance remix uses a lot of drum machines and many echoes. |
"We'll Never Die" (techno remix) | 7:30 | 1992 | This remix has techno sonorities. |
Credits
- Text: Mylène Farmer
- Except: "Libertine": Laurent Boutonnat
- Music: Laurent Boutonnat
- Except: "Libertine": Jean-Claude Dequéant
- Editions: Bertrand Le Page / Polygram Music
- Except: "À quoi je sers...": Requiem Publishing / Bertrand Le Page; "Que mon cœur lâche", "Je t'aime mélancolie", "Regrets", "Beyond My Control", "Désenchantée": Requiem Publishing
- Record label: Polydor
- Production: Laurent Boutonnat
- Remixes produced by Laurent Boutonnat and Thierry Rogen
- Sound Engineer: Thierry Rogen (Studio Mega)
- Management: Thierry Suc
- Engraving: André Perriat (Top Master)
- Photography: Marianne Rosenstiehl (Sygma)
- Design: Com' N.B
Certifications and sales
Country | Certification | Date | Sales certified | Physical sales |
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France | 2 x Gold[7] | 1994 | 200,000 | 200,000 |
Charts
Chart (1992–1993) | Peak position |
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French SNEP Compilations Chart[8][9] | 3 |
Chart (2005) | Peak position |
French SNEP Albums Chart[10] | 108 |
References
- ↑ Allmusic review
- ↑ Fnac review
- ↑ Dance Remixes Mylene.net (Retrieved January 14, 2008)
- 1 2 Dance Remixes Mylenefarmeriscalled.net (Retrieved January 14, 2008)
- ↑ Mylène Farmer, le culte - L'envers du décor, Sophie Khairallah, 2007, Why Not Ed., p. 55
- ↑ Le Dictionnaire des Chansons de Mylène Farmer, Benoît Cachin, 2006, Tournon Ed., p. 23,29,35,56,89,139,157,173,198,206,222,230,240,245,266
- ↑ Mylène Farmer's certifications Chartsinfrance.net (Retrieved January 14, 2008)
- ↑ Elia Habib, Muz hit. tubes, p. 585 (ISBN 2-9518832-0-X)
- ↑ Dance Remixes, French Compilations Chart See: "Selection des autres artistes" => "Mylène Farmer" Infodisc.fr (Retrieved December 6, 2008)
- ↑ Dance Remixes, French Albums Chart Lescharts.com (Retrieved December 6, 2008)
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