Mixed Up
File:The Cure Mixed Up.jpg
Remix album by The Cure
Released November 20, 1990
Recorded 1989–1990 at Outside Studios, England
Genre Gothic rock, alternative rock, new wave
Length 73:04 (CD only)
81:12 (cassette/LP)
Label Fiction Records (UK)
Elektra Records (U.S.)
Producer Robert Smith
Chris Parry
Mark Saunders
Dave Allen
The Cure compilations chronology
Standing on a Beach
(1986)
Mixed Up
(1990)
Galore
(1997)
Singles from Mixed Up
  1. "Never Enough"
    Released: September 17, 1990
  2. "Close to Me (remix)"
    Released: October 22, 1990
  3. "A Forest (Tree Mix)"
    Released: December 6, 1990[1]
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars[2]

Mixed Up is a 1990 remix album by The Cure. The songs are remixes of some of their hits.

Most of the songs are extended mixes. Several had been previously released on 12" singles, but some are completely remade, with Smith recutting vocals due to the original tapes not being available. The record closes with the extended version of a new single, "Never Enough". The remix of "Pictures of You" was originally released under the title "(Strange Mix)". In an interview featured on the Trilogy DVD, singer Robert Smith described the remix album as something "fun after the doom and gloom of Disintegration".

Contents

Track listing [link]

LP edition [link]

Side A
No. Title Length
1. "Lullaby (Extended Mix)"   7:43
2. "Close to Me (Closer Mix)"   5:44
3. "Fascination Street (Extended Mix)"   8:47
Side B
No. Title Length
4. "The Walk (Everything Mix)"   5:27
5. "Lovesong (Extended Mix)"   6:19
6. "A Forest (Tree Mix)"   6:55
Side C
No. Title Length
7. "Pictures of You (Extended Dub Mix)"   6:41
8. "Hot Hot Hot!!! (Extended Mix)"   7:01
9. "Why Can't I Be You? (Extended Remix)" (Appears on the French 5 CD version, LP and cassette versions only) 8:07
Side D
No. Title Length
10. "The Caterpillar (Flicker Mix)"   5:40
11. "In Between Days (Shiver Mix)"   6:22
12. "Never Enough (Big Mix)"   6:07

CD edition [link]

  • CD editions do not include "Why Can't I Be You? (Extended Remix)", this was due to the 74-minute limit necessary to be compliant with the Compact Disc standard.

Notes [link]

  • As the original master tapes could not be found, "The Walk" and "A Forest" are not remixes, they are re-recordings.
  • Over time, the CD edition has slightly changed. At the time of release, the words "Mixed Up" at the bottom of the cover were white in a box, but have sinced changed to black in a box. Also, the order of text on the CD disc has slightly been rearranged. Also, the track listing on the back cover, text in the liner notes and the text on the album cover (bar the small "Mixed Up" at the bottom) were originally a metallic. Now they are grey.

Personnel [link]

References [link]


https://wn.com/Mixed_Up

Mixed Up (I've Sound album)

Mixed Up: I've Remix Style is a remix album by Japanese music production unit I've Sound. It was released on December 29, 2004 at the 2004 winter Comic Market event. Each of the I've Sound composers contribute to the rearrangement of one or more of the ten tracks performed by ten different singers.

Track listing


Mixed Up (Praga Khan album)

Mixed Up is the second remix album by Praga Khan. It was released in 2001.

Track listing

  • "Luv U Still (Empirion Mix)" – 7:00
  • "Breakfast in Vegas (Insider Remix)" – 4:32
  • "The Jean Genie" – 4:54
  • "Supersonic Lovetoy (Sonic Dub)" – 4:45
  • "Lonely (Fuzz Mix)" – 7:09
  • "Phantasia Forever (Live Version)" – 6:03
  • "Love (Insider Remix)" – 6:12
  • "Far Beyond The Sun (Adrift On Oscillators Mix)" – 4:32
  • "The Moon (C.S.Johansen Remix)" – 4:28
  • "Lady Alcohol (Where the Fuck Am I? Mix)" – 7:09
  • "Lust for Life (Live Version)" – 3:56
  • "One Foot in the Grave (Artificial Life Mix)" – 5:33
  • "The Power of the Flower (Junkie XL Remix)" – 3:57
  • "Visions & Imaginations (Box Energy Mix)" – 3:49
  • References

    Mixed

    Mixed is the past tense of mix. It may also refer to:

  • Mixed breed (disambiguation), an animal whose parents are from different breeds or species
  • Mixed anomaly, in theoretical physics, an example of an anomaly
  • Mixed data sampling, an econometric model developed by Ghysels
  • Mixed Doubles (play), a 1969 play that was first performed
  • Mixed drink, see cocktail
  • Mixed feelings, ambivalence
  • Mixed forest, see Temperate broadleaf and mixed forests
  • Mixed gauge, see Dual gauge
  • Mixed government, a form of government that integrated facets of democracy, oligarchy, and monarchy
  • Mixed inhibition, a combination of two different types of reversible enzyme inhibition
  • Mixed language, a language that arises when two languages are in contact
  • Mixed martial arts, a combat sport in which two competitors use different martial arts for fighting
  • Mixed media, in visual art, refers to an artwork in the making of which more than one medium has been employed
  • Mixed metaphor, see Metaphor (language)
  • Mixed oxide fuel, see Nuclear reprocessing
  • Mixed (United Kingdom ethnicity category)

    Mixed is an ethnicity category that has been used by the United Kingdom's Office for National Statistics since the 1991 Census. Colloquially it refers to British citizens or residents whose parents are of two or more different races or ethnic backgrounds. Mixed-race people are the fastest growing ethnic group in the UK and numbered 1.25 million in the 2011 census.

    Statistics

    In the 2001 census, 677,177 classified themselves as of mixed race, making up 1.2 per cent of the UK population.Office for National Statistics estimates suggest that 956,700 mixed race people were resident in England (as opposed to the whole of the UK) as of mid-2009, compared to 654,000 at mid-2001. As of May 2011, this figure surpassed 1 million. It has been estimated that, by 2020, 1.24 million people in the UK will be of mixed race. Research conducted by the BBC, however, suggests that the mixed race population could already be twice the official estimate figure - up to 2 million.

    Mixed (album)

    Mixed is a compilation album of two avant-garde jazz sessions featuring performances by the Cecil Taylor Unit and the Roswell Rudd Sextet. The album was released on the Impulse! label in 1998 and collects three performances by Taylor with Archie Shepp, Jimmy Lyons, Henry Grimes and Sunny Murray with Ted Curson and Roswell Rudd added on one track which were originally released under Gil Evans' name on Into the Hot (1961). The remaining tracks feature Rudd with Giuseppi Logan, Lewis Worrell, Charlie Haden, Beaver Harris and Robin Kenyatta and were originally released as Everywhere (1966). Essentially these are the three Cecil Taylor tracks form the "Gil Evans album" (i.e. Evans was not meaningfully involved but Impulse had printed the album covers) teamed with Roswell Rudd's Impulse album Everywhere, in its entirety.

    Reception

    The Allmusic review by Scott Yanow states "Although not Roswell Rudd's greatest album, there are enough fascinating ensembles on this set for it to nearly hold its own with Cecil Taylor's more essential session".

    Polyvinyl chloride

    Polyvinyl chloride, more correctly but unusually poly(vinyl chloride), commonly abbreviated PVC, is the third-most widely produced synthetic plastic polymer, after polyethylene and polypropylene.

    PVC comes in two basic forms: rigid (sometimes abbreviated as RPVC) and flexible. The rigid form of PVC is used in construction for pipe and in profile applications such as doors and windows. It is also used for bottles, other non-food packaging, and cards (such as bank or membership cards). It can be made softer and more flexible by the addition of plasticizers, the most widely used being phthalates. In this form, it is also used in plumbing, electrical cable insulation, imitation leather, signage, inflatable products, and many applications where it replaces rubber.

    Pure poly (vinyl chloride) is a white, brittle solid. It is insoluble in alcohol but slightly soluble in tetrahydrofuran.

    Discovery

    PVC was accidentally synthesized in 1872 by German chemist Eugen Baumann. The polymer appeared as a white solid inside a flask of vinyl chloride that had been left exposed to sunlight. In the early 20th century the Russian chemist Ivan Ostromislensky and Fritz Klatte of the German chemical company Griesheim-Elektron both attempted to use PVC in commercial products, but difficulties in processing the rigid, sometimes brittle polymer thwarted their efforts. Waldo Semon and the B.F. Goodrich Company developed a method in 1926 to plasticize PVC by blending it with various additives. The result was a more flexible and more easily processed material that soon achieved widespread commercial use.

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