Artists

Orbital – Belfast

This is my favourite track of all time.

Orbital – III
Released on FFRR (FX 149) on 07/01/1991

A1 Satan
A2 LC1
B1 Belfast

As you can see from the tracklist above, Belfast was tucked away on this release as a B side track with many DJs at the time preferring the harder Satan.

What hit me when I first heard Belfast was just how pure it sounded and like nothing else at that time. The same feeling is still with me all these years later and it’s a track that I never get sick of hearing and having experienced it played in Ibiza at Mambo’s as the sun set one evening which made it even more of a magical aural delight and evoked a lot of emotions.

Many years ago when MySpace was a thing (remember that?) I asked Phil Hartnoll what was used to create the bassline for Belfast and he kindly told me it was a Roland SH-09.

So, what is there to say about such a masterpiece? Well, let’s see what Paul said about it some ten years back and there’s also a chance to hear the very first incarnation of it before the vocal sample was added on the released track!

Paul Hartnoll wrote the following on his blog back on 06/09/2015:

“I’ve been trying to remember exactly when I recorded it. It comes from the era between my first ever release on the House Sound Of London under the name ‘DS Building Contractors’ and buying our first Orbital D.A.T. after getting a proper record deal with Pete Tong at FFRR. I know it was recorded after Chime because the track on the tape before it is a more typical House track that has elements of Chime and Belfast in it.”

“I think it was probably winter 1990 and in the months between Jazzy M putting out Chime on Oh-Zone and its release on FFRR. Because it was influenced by the wave of Ambient House spearheaded by The Orb and their A Huge Ever Growing Pulsating Brain That Rules From The Centre Of The Ultraworld (EP) that came out early 1990 I believe.”

“It must have been then as Chime was out and the Orbital name was already launched because the simple truth is I wouldn’t have called Orbital – Orbital if id seen The Orb first, that would have been mad right? Far too confusing having Orbital, Orbit and The Orb around at the same time. Funnily enough someone asked me if I’d written Little Fluffy Clouds just the other day at Solfest. That’s been happening for 25 years. I wonder if Alex Paterson gets asked if he wrote Chime?”

“Anyway so there I was just finished an early shift at Pizza Piazza in Sevenoaks.  I decided to make an Ambient song, it was a rainy melancholy mid-week kind of afternoon. I got the chords first and just went from there. Got it all in place as a drumless Ambient piece, but I just couldn’t resist the call of the TR-909 drum machine.

So in went the drums. Much better! So what you hear here is the Jam I did on a rainy afternoon, after work and before catching up with my friends for the evening. At the time I remember thinking, it was ok but I wasn’t over impressed. This was all recorded in my parents living room in the stairs alcove studio, that all the early stuff was written in, up to and including the first Green album.”

“So, months latter after the success of Chime in March 1990, I got a call from David Holmes, DJ, club runner and hairdresser from Belfast. Would Orbital like to play at the Art College in Belfast? Yes! So after the gig, in Davids Mum’s house’s spare bedroom David asked if we had any Demo’s. I gave him a tape with two tracks on. Two weeks later David rings up and tells me that him and his friends all love the second track on the tape . We called it Belfast after the brilliant time we had there. So the track was named after, and dedicated to, David and all his friends.”

“Where is the vocal?”

“Well, when we were making the Orbital EP III, we decided to put a version of Belfast on it, while I was re-recording it with all the lovely new gear we had bought from the record deal, Phil was making a birthing tape for the imminent arrival of his second child. So he was at my Dad’s hi-fi with the headphones on, while I was at the computer and sampler playing through the track. He popped the headphones off and said listen to this, it sounds brilliant. So he turned the speakers up and hey presto! Hildegard Of Bingen ‘O Euchari’ burst through, in tune, in time, Job done!”

“I met up with David this May, he’d just won the Ivor Novello for best film score for 71. We were in the pub afterwards and he spoke about our trip to Belfast and the tape and how much it all meant to him and his mates at the time. I asked him if he still had it, as I thought it was the only one and had been quite curious to hear the other track. But alas, he said he had no idea where it went. So imagine how pleased I was when i discovered the original recording on Wednesday as I was setting up and listening to the old tapes and realised I’d only give him a copy, not the original after all.”

“Here it is, all these years later. The Original Belfast”

The magnificent vocal which was added to the released track:
Hildegard Von Bingen’s – O Euchari

Orbital are still creating incredible music and to date have released 10 studio albums, plus live albums, compilations and soundtracks. They continue to play live – see their official website for upcoming tour dates:

https://www.orbitalofficial.com/

M.V.I.T.A

M.V.I.T.A – Manchester Vibes In The Area

Formed at the Midland in West Didsbury at the start of 1988 after being inspired by the Reno club, Moss Side’s legendary late-night soul and funk club which was demolished in 1987.

“The Midland was a pub in West Didsbury we turned into our own night club playing on Thursday and Saturday night’s, the landlord was great because he’d let us do what we wanted so we’d get the curtains shut blocking the day light out, turn all the lights off, cover the pool table then bring in our own gear, put our flag up and we were away, it was just absolutely mind blowing really, it was brilliant.”

M.V.I.T.A was a sound system but later wrote their own music and they comprised of;

Alfonso Buller (MC)
Himat Singh (Percussionist)
Anton Behrendt (Keyboards/Bass Guitar)

M.V.I.T.A DJs were;

Darren Green
Stefan Juniper

They played a lot of after parties for the Happy Mondays, The Stone Roses, New Order and 808 State which saw them soon get a name for themselves and they went on to play at Spike Island sharing the stage with JAM MCs and then Glastonbury for 6 years consecutively.

Their roots were mostly Reggae, Soul and Funk and they embraced the explosion of Madchester and the differing types of Dance Music that were emerging at the time, preferring the more House and Garage styles and incorporating those records into their sets.

Photographer, Ian Tilton cited Alfonso Buller as the first guy with the Manchester swag/cool which later became an influence on Ian Brown and Liam Gallagher who has in very recent times started saying “Manchester Vibes In The Area”. Let’s not forget that it was Alfonso that coined that phrase as translated from M.V.I.T.A.

M.V.I.T.A featured on the 808 State show several times and on one date they showcased 4 tracks from an EP that was meant to get a release on Graham Massey’s Cut Deep label, sadly this never happened as the label folded.

You can hear the tracks and the interview in full here:

808 State show on 4th September 1990 (right click and choose save as to download)

The details and tracks scheduled for the EP were to be:

M.V.I.T.A – Pyramid Sun EP (CUT 90 12008) for an October 1990 release

M.V.I.T.A – Pyramid Sun
M.V.I.T.A – Movin’
M.V.I.T.A – More House
M.V.I.T.A – Dance

One of the very best gigs they did was with 808 State (DJ Set) K-Klass and Evolution at King George’s Hall, Blackburn in 1990.

M.V.I.T.A continue to fly the flag of the pyramid sun and are still active today.

M.V.I.T.A on YouTube: