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"Cognoscenti Vs. Intelligentsia" is a song by the Cuban Boys. The song consists almost in its entirety of a sampled loop of a fictitious yodeling hamster, a cover of a loop taken from the website Hampsterdance.com (http://www.hampsterdance.com) (see The Hamster Dance), although the original source is said to be Walt Disney's 1973 animated version of Robin Hood. The song's closing lines are of an announcer of a children's radio show:
The last line is usually omitted on radioplay. The song was first aired on John Peel's BBC Radio 1 show on April 7 1999 and quickly became one of the most requested songs on his show, surpassing even "God Save the Queen" by the Sex Pistols. After being included on a free sampler CD on the industry magazine The Tip Sheet, the song caught the attention of numerous large record labels including EMI, Parlophone and RCA, thanks mostly to the efforts of Jonathan King. The band eventually signed for EMI. They were given £25,000 to record a video for the song which ended up featuring a giant fibreglass melon covered in trifle and a live-action hamster singing along. Originally scheduled for release as a single in November 1999, the release date was threatened to be pushed back to some time in January 2000 until the song was played on Jo Whiley's afternoon radio show. It received much the same attention as when it had been played on Peel's show. The decision was made to move the release to December 13 to put it in line for the Christmas number 1 slot. It managed to get to number 4, being beaten by Westlife's "I Have a Dream". The song did however top John Peel's Festive Fifty for that year. Because of the relative obscurity of the Cuban Boys both before and after the single, they are generally considered to be a one-hit wonder. The people behind the Cuban Boys went on to score further one-hit wonder successes with a remake of "Rhinestone Cowboy" with Glen Campbell, a novelty kids band called the Barndance Boys, and the US club hit "I Am Gothic" under the name Spray. Spray website (http://www.spraynet.co.uk/)
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:: About Us This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Cognoscenti Vs. Intelligentsia". |