Talk:Movement in Still Life

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Satellite starts and ends with what sounds like a recording from a NASA mission:

"We can see the satellite at uh, a distance of about uh, I guess over 15 miles here. It looked like a star as you looked up. See here, we have a beautiful view of the earth down below as the satellite departs."

Anybody know what this might be from? --anon


I used to have a 2-disc version of this CD, which had the UK version and on the 2nd disc 'Never Gonna Come Back Down', 'Fibonacci Sequence' and some remixes of the other songs. Can't remember the tracklisting, but does anyone else have this version? (It has the same cover as the US edition) -- John


I had that one too, it came in a cardboard digicover similar to the US version but with orange instead of green background. the 2nd disc tracklist was "Never Gonna Come Back Down", "Fibonacci Sequence', Godspeed (Hybrid mix), Mercury and Solace (Mark Shimmon Mix), Dreaming (evolution mix), Dreaming (Libra mix), Namaste (Extended mix). shame my copy got stolen out of my car, all i have left is the case. --Kommando 12:55, 6 May 2007 (UTC)


It seems worth mentioning that the chord progression, indeed the bass line and rhythmic structure of track 4 ("Shame") from the US release comes directly from the last track ("Slo Crostic") of Fugazi's album Instrument Soundtrack. I say this first because even a cursory listen to both will indicate this, second, the timing of release dates works out, and third, BT and Fugazi are from roughly the same music scene (Washington, D.C.). Regarding timing, "Shame" didn't appear till 2000 on the US release, and since Instrument Soundtrack was out early in '99 (the U.K. release of Movement... was later that year), that would have given B.T. time to not only see the documentary Instrument but also create "Shame" based on its soundtrack. --Sparsematrix (talk) 06:08, 13 December 2007 (UTC)