Dispepsi
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Dispepsi | ||
Studio album by Negativland | ||
Released | July 29, 1997 | |
Recorded | ??? | |
Genre | Experimental | |
Length | 42:43 | |
Label | Seeland | |
Producer(s) | Negativland | |
Negativland chronology | ||
---|---|---|
Fair Use: The Story of the Letter U and the Numeral 2 (1995) |
Dispepsi (1995) |
Negativ(e)land: Live On Tour 1997
|
Dispepsi is an album by the band Negativland. It was released on July 29, 1997 by Seeland Records, Negativland's record label. The album was an attack on the highly competitive soft drink companies Coca-Cola and Pepsi, who flood the air waves with commercials. Interestingly, the title "Dispepsi" doesn't appear anywhere on the album, but a toll-free telephone number (1-800) was set up to provide the proper title. It is mangled into things like "Pedissip" and such, as the band fear being sued for copyright infringement.
One pressing of the album was inadvertently manufactured with a gospel recording inside (including the Christian anti-homosexual hit "It's Not Natural"), although the disc was silkscreened with the Dispepsi artwork.
- The Smile You Can't Hide
- Drink It Up
- Why Is This Commercial?
- Happy Hero
- A Most Successful Formula
- The Greatest Taste Around
- Hyper Real
- All She Called About
- I Believe It's L
- Humanitarian Effort
- Voice Inside My Head
- Aluminum Or Glass: The Memo
- Bite Back
[edit] Notes on Samples
"All of the cola commercials that were appropriated, transformed, and reused in this recording attempted to assault us in our homes without permission. Other sources reused include: talk radio, MOMMIE DEAREST, tabloid TV, Pepsi and Shirlie, documentary TV, Bryan Ferry, the news, Ice-T, public service announcements, Asha Bhosle, MC Lyte, The Clio Awards, traditional Burmese music, the OJ Simpson trial, motivational marketing tapes by advertising executives." [1]