The Yellow

The Yellow is the name of the second EP released by electronica duo Lemon Jelly, according to the insert of Lemonjelly.ky, on September 6, 1999. It was limited to 1,000 10" copies, the first 240 of which featured hand screen-printed sleeves. The tracks from the EP were later incorporated for more accessible listening into the critically acclaimed Lemonjelly.ky album. When the inner sleeve was pulled out, the Lemon Jelly logo appears briefly through a series of die-cut holes in the outer sleeve creating a piece of real world animation.[1]

The Yellow
EP by
Released1999
GenreElectronica
Lemon Jelly chronology
The Bath
(1998)
The Yellow
(1999)
The Midnight
(2000)

History

From 1998 to 2000, Franglen and Deakin released three limited-circulation EPs (The Bath (1998), The Yellow (1999), and The_Midnight_(Lemon_Jelly_EP) (2000)), on their own label Impotent Fury.[2] The EPs were a critical success,[3] and led to the duo being signed to XL Recordings.[2]

Track listing

  1. "His Majesty King Raam"
  2. "The Staunton Lick"
  3. "Homage to Patagonia"
  • "His Majesty King Raam" contains elements from "Evergreen", "Two for the Road", "Softly As I Leave You" and "The Greatest Gift" performed by Henry Mancini and his orchestra.
  • "The Staunton Lick" contains an element from "Basic Plucking Of The Ballad Lick" performed by John Pearse, and the bass lick from "Midnight Rider" by The Allman Brothers Band.
  • "Homage to Patagonia" contains an element from "Mas Que Nada" performed by Luiz Henrique.

Personnel

  • Nick Franglen: band member, production
  • Fred Deakin: band member, design, illustration, art direction
gollark: Also, TJ09 probably just treats it as a funny thing to look at in mornings.
gollark: Can be fixed, but people say "butbutbut my rare thing" and it stops.
gollark: I personally diislike it for randomly giving people ultrarares.
gollark: "lalalalala, fulfilling 2G prize IOU... where'd my prize go?!"
gollark: Why not.

See also

References

  1. "Lemon Jelly – The Yellow EP". Fred Deakin. Retrieved 2015-08-17.
  2. "LEMON JELLY Lost Horizon". The Milk Factory. Archived from the original on 2010-02-18. Retrieved 2010-08-18.
  3. Silverman, David (2002-11-20). "BBC - Music - Review of Lemon Jelly - Lost Horizons". BBC. Retrieved 2010-08-21.
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