Found a couple of 12-inch Sergios and The Real Thing*

Harry

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While trolling eBay a week or so ago, I spotted a seller with two different 12-inch records of Sergio Mendes from the '80s.

One was "Voodoo" (A&M SP-12068), which had a "specially remixed version" on one side and an instrumental version on the other side.

The other one was "Dance Attack" (A&M SP-12103). This one had a "Club Mix" on one side, and a "Dub Mix" on the other.

I was never overly fond of "Dance Attack", but I like "Voodoo" in its various incarnations (or is that 'incantations'?).

Harry
 
Voodoo was one of the most intrigueing tracks sergio did at the time I never knew there were 12 Inch versions of anything by sergio until now I still enjoy those occasional instrumentals he did. In the 60 s and onward. But im happy you found some more treasures.
 
From the Brain Cells Dying Off Department, I came home for a short trip to find a latest eBay purchase awaiting me. I'd seen the item and bought it rather quickly - not realizing that I'd bought this very same "Voodoo" 12" single a year ago. I had no memories of it at all. When I went to start a thread here extolling its virtues, I found that indeed, I'd purchased the same record AND posted about it a year ago.

The newer one is in nice shape - I haven't had the heart to check the older one...

:doh:

Harry
 
Wow...I had that 12" since it was first released. I stumbled across a used promo in the discount bin at Car City Classics IIRC.
 
My favorite 12-inch was "The Real Thing" by Sergio Mendes & The New Brasil '77. Bought it back when it was released. Just about played the grooves off of it. Don't recall what was on the B-side, but I think it was an instrumental.

Whatever the case, it was awesome.

Jon...the "Brasil Nut"
 
We should probably change the thread title. I keep thinking of this little Sergio dude, about a foot tall... :D
 
Listening this morning to THE NEW SERGIO MENDES AND BRASIL '77 album, I got to "The Real Thing" and thought about the 12" single that I never got and had never heard.

So I looked it up on YouTube and there are a couple of iterations of it there, and I gave it a listen. To me, it didn't seem all that different from the album version, so I started a comparison using Audacity.

Laying the 12" tracks down first and then the album version underneath, I could see the difference in length immediately. The 12" runs close to 6 minutes and the album version runs 4:43. After a slight speed adjustment, I tracked the two simultaneously and they stayed together all the way through, with the album version fading out sooner.

There's a section of "doot-doot-oot-doo-doos" at the end that seems to be repeated on the longer version. I can't tell if it's looped or a real extension. Anyway, with some editing and repetition, one can make the long version from the CD master.
 
I was never a fan of "disco Sergio," but "The Real Thing" is one of my favorite songs from that era. It's catchy. My real faves on the New Brasil '77 album are the instrumentals, especially "Mozambique." I always like any Sergio song with wordless vocals in it. That'd make a nice playlist, actually....wordless-vocals songs. [[ heads off to computer room ]]
 
Great song...
But too fast, wrong key. To my ear, anyway.
So I brought it back to the original key and tempo.

 
Depending on who remixed a 12", they occasionally sped up the tune. I can think of a couple on A&M that were sped up--"Strawberry Letter #23" up half a tone, and Bryan Adams' "Let Me Take You Dancing" by a full tone.
 
Here's the 12" 45 RPM of Sergio's "Non Stop", originally from BRASIL '86. This is the extended remix version.




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In this area, once a couple of songs from Vintage 74 had their run of airplay, I never heard any new Sergio Mendes songs until Never Gonna Let You Go, Alibis and Take This Love. I really liked the latter.
 
In this area, once a couple of songs from Vintage 74 had their run of airplay, I never heard any new Sergio Mendes songs until Never Gonna Let You Go, Alibis and Take This Love. I really liked the latter.
I only ever heard "Never Gonna Let You Go" on the radio here. None of the other tracks ever made a dent on our local stations. The only 70s album tracks I ever heard were from Home Cooking.
 
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