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DJ Culture

"DJ Culture"
DJculture.jpg
Single by Pet Shop Boys
from the album Discography: The Complete Singles Collection
B-side "Music for Boys"
Released 14 October 1991
Format 7" Single, 12" Single, CD single, cassette single
Recorded 1991
Genre Synthpop
Length 4:13
Label Parlophone / EMI
Songwriter(s) Neil Tennant, Chris Lowe
Producer(s) Pet Shop Boys, Brothers in Rhythm
Pet Shop Boys singles chronology
"Jealousy"
(1991)
"DJ Culture"
(1991)
"Dj culturemix"
(1991)
"Jealousy"
(1991)
"DJ Culture"
(1991)
"Dj culturemix"
(1991)
"Dj Culturemix"
DJculturemix.jpg
Single by Pet Shop Boys
B-side "Music for Boys (Part 3)", "Overture to Performance"
Released 1991
Format CD single, cassette single, 12"
Recorded 1991
Genre Synthpop
Length 5:51
Label Parlophone / EMI
Songwriter(s) Neil Tennant, Chris Lowe
Producer(s) Pet Shop Boys
Pet Shop Boys singles chronology
"DJ Culture"
(1991)
"Dj Culturemix"
(1991)
"Was It Worth It?"
(1991)
"DJ Culture"
(1991)
"Dj culturemix"
(1991)
"Was It Worth It?"
(1991)

"DJ Culture" is the first single released by British electronic music group Pet Shop Boys from their singles collection album Discography: The Complete Singles Collection. The single peaked at number 13 on the UK Singles Chart in 1991. Another version of the song, remixed by The Grid and entitled "Dj culturemix" was also released as a single and entered the UK charts at number 40. The B-side was "Music for Boys".

According to the singer Neil Tennant, the song concerned the insincerity of how President George H. W. Bush's speeches at the time of the First Gulf War utilised Winston Churchill's wartime rhetoric, in a manner similar to how artists sample music from other artists. The video clip alternately features Neil Tennant and Chris Lowe as a pair of doctors, a pair of soldiers in desert combat dress, a judge presiding over Oscar Wilde (the line "And I my lord, may I say nothing?" is a close paraphrase of Wilde's comment after being sentenced to hard labour for homosexual practices) and a football referee and fan.

The French sample in the song is taken from the 1950 Jean Cocteau movie Orphée: in it coded and poetic messages are sent over the radio.

Track 2 is a remix by Altern-8

Track 3 is an orchestra medley featuring "It's A Sin", "Being Boring", "Opportunities", "So Hard ", "Jealousy", "Suburbia", "How Can You Expect to Be Taken Seriously?", "What Have I Done To Deserve This?", and "West End Girls".


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