- published: 17 Jan 2013
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"Plastic Dreams" is a 1992 song recorded by Dutch dance producer Jaydee. It was the artist's debut single and remains generally considered to be one of the classics of the house music genre (initially released on R&S Records). It was successful in European countries and also achieved success in the U.S, where it topped the Billboard charts in two different categories. American music critic Robert Christgau named it the best single of 1993 in his year-end list for the Pazz & Jop critics poll.
The song, an instrumental, features a prominent Hammond organ style synthesizer melody played in a jazzy, improvised manner. With some versions ten minutes long, the number is known for giving dancers a good aerobic workout.
In 1993, "Plastic Dreams" hit number-one on the US Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart. The song continues to be remixed and re-released today by many artists, such as David Morales, mostly on unsolicited White labels. The track has made the British charts on more than one occasion, first in September 1997 when it reached number 18 and again in January 2004 when it reached number 35. In 1993, Epic Records (owned by Sony Music Entertainment) featured the song on the first edition of the compilation "Welcome to the Future". Shortly after, Epic Records negotiated the acquisition of most rights associated with the song.
Plastic Dreams is an album by American jazz group the Modern Jazz Quartet, augmented by a brass section on three tracks, recorded in 1971 and released on the Atlantic label.
At the time of its original release the Gramophone reviewer stated "Plastic Dreams" is an auspicious release for it lacks much of the pretentiousness which I have learned to dread ever since I first saw the Quartet in Paris in 1956".
The Allmusic review stated "Plastic Dreams has never been a critic's favorite, and was an album that mystified many of the group's longtime followers... Plastic Dreams was as close as the MJQ ever got to making a pop album... Indeed, as a whole Plastic Dreams does seem like a final refinement of several idealistic threads found throughout the MJQ's studio work stretching back to about 1960, with generous room made for new directions".
All compositions by John Lewis except as indicated
OP, O.P., Op, or Op. may refer to:
The Order of Preachers (Latin: Ordo Praedicatorum, hence the abbreviation OP used by members), more commonly known after the 15th century as the Dominican Order or Dominicans, is a Roman Catholic religious order founded by the Spanish priest Saint Dominic de Guzman in France and approved by Pope Honorius III (1216–27) on 22 December 1216. Membership in this "mendicant" Order includes friars, nuns, active sisters, and lay or secular Dominicans (formerly known as tertiaries, though recently there has been a growing number of Associates, who are unrelated to the tertiaries) affiliated with the Order.
Founded to preach the Gospel and to combat heresy, the teaching activity of the order and its scholastic organization placed the Preachers in the forefront of the intellectual life of the Middle Ages. The order is famed for its intellectual tradition, having produced many leading theologians and philosophers. The Dominican Order is headed by the Master of the Order, who is currently Bruno Cadoré. Members of the order generally carry the letters O.P., standing for Ordinis Praedicatorum, meaning of the Order of Preachers, after their names.
Phosphorus pentoxide is a chemical compound with molecular formula P4O10 (with its common name derived from its empirical formula, P2O5). This white crystalline solid is the anhydride of phosphoric acid. It is a powerful desiccant and dehydrating agent.
Phosphorus pentoxide crystallizes in at least four forms or polymorphs. The most familiar one, a metastable form, shown in the figure, comprises molecules of P4O10. Weak van der Waals forces hold these molecules together in a hexagonal lattice (However, in spite of the high symmetry of the molecules, the crystal packing is not a close packing). The structure of the P4O10 cage is reminiscent of adamantane with Tdsymmetry point group. It is closely related to the corresponding anhydride of phosphorous acid, P4O6. The latter lacks terminal oxo groups. Its density is 2.30 g/cm3. It boils at 423 °C under atmospheric pressure; if heated more rapidly it can sublimate. This form can be made by condensing the vapor of phosphorus pentoxide rapidly, the result is an extremely hygroscopic solid.
Written-By, Producer, Remix-- Robin "Jaydee" Albers* R & S Records 1993
Remix – David Morales Time – TIME 093 | 1997 Vinyl Rips On This Channel Are Recorded From The Original "12" By Me
Music Of The Manhole
Laidback puts his touch on this already absolute classic from Jaydee - Enjoy !
This bootleg/mashup is just for fun ;-) Download here: https://soundcloud.com/paulo-mewini/jaydee-vs-khomha-it-plastic Thanx for support: https://facebook.com/mewinipaulo
The official music video of "Groove Is In The Heart" by Deee-Lite from the album 'World Clique' (1990) 🔔 Subscribe to the Deee-Lite channel https://lnk.to/YTDeeeLiteSubID Lyrics and melody by: Kier Kirby a.k.a. Lady Miss Kier Music and arrangement by: Dmitry Brill, Kier Kirby a.k.a. Lady Miss Kier, Towa Tei Produced by: Dmitry Brill, Kier Kirby a.k.a. Lady Miss Kier, Towa Tei Published by: De-Lovely Publishing c/o Downtown Music Publishing Listen to more Deee-Lite here https://rhino.lnk.to/DeeeLiteStrAY Stay In Touch with Deee-Lite and Lady Miss Kier… 🌼 Website: http://ladykier.com 🦋 Bandcamp: https://bandcamp.com/skittles22 🍄 SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/lady-miss-kier 🏵️ Lady Miss Kier Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Deeeeeelite/ 🌌 Deee-Lite Facebook: https://www.facebook.c...
Heyyyy guys!!:) I have lately been hearing more to hip-hop songs and I really love it so I am uploading my nightcore version of G-Eazy's track Plastic Dreams and I really lke it!!SO if you guys liked what you saw more like hear lol,press that like and subscribe button for MORE YEY!;D ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anime:Persona 3 Pic link:sry guys I've been searching for like an hour but can't find it anywhere I download the image forgeting about the link lol ^^" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Song:G-Eazy-Plastic Dreams Original Song:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=scniPLM5t2E
please consider supporting my edits! https://www.patreon.com/yotsu track: https://soundcloud.com/engelwoodmusic/crystal-dolphin engelwood: https://soundcloud.com/engelwoodmusic https://engelwood.bandcamp.com/ https://twitter.com/MEngelwood https://www.youtube.com/user/engelwooood anime: Lu Over the Wall
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From the Department of Whimsy Enforcement
"Plastic Dreams" is a 1992 song recorded by Dutch dance producer Jaydee. It was the artist's debut single and remains generally considered to be one of the classics of the house music genre (initially released on R&S Records). It was successful in European countries and also achieved success in the U.S, where it topped the Billboard charts in two different categories. American music critic Robert Christgau named it the best single of 1993 in his year-end list for the Pazz & Jop critics poll.
The song, an instrumental, features a prominent Hammond organ style synthesizer melody played in a jazzy, improvised manner. With some versions ten minutes long, the number is known for giving dancers a good aerobic workout.
In 1993, "Plastic Dreams" hit number-one on the US Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart. The song continues to be remixed and re-released today by many artists, such as David Morales, mostly on unsolicited White labels. The track has made the British charts on more than one occasion, first in September 1997 when it reached number 18 and again in January 2004 when it reached number 35. In 1993, Epic Records (owned by Sony Music Entertainment) featured the song on the first edition of the compilation "Welcome to the Future". Shortly after, Epic Records negotiated the acquisition of most rights associated with the song.