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Dirty Vegas (album)

Dirty Vegas
Dirty vegas.jpg
Studio album by Dirty Vegas
Released 4 June 2002
Recorded October 2001
Genre House, trance
Length 60:33
Label Capitol
Producer Dirty Vegas
Dirty Vegas chronology
Dirty Vegas
(2002)
One
(2004)
Singles from Singles from Dirty Vegas'
  1. "Days Go By"
    Released: 2002
  2. "Ghosts"
    Released: 2002
  3. "Simple Things, Pt. 2"
    Released: 2002
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 56/100
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 2.5/5 stars
Pitchfork Media (4.4/10)
Guardian 3/5 stars
Robert Christgau C
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars

Dirty Vegas is the self-titled debut album by British house music trio Dirty Vegas, released in the United States on 4 June 2002 (see 2002 in music).

The album was successful in the United States, debuting at number 7 on the Billboard 200. It would spend 19 weeks on the chart and eventually going Gold. The album also spent 16 non consecutive weeks at number-one on the Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums chart.

The album features the radio hit "Days Go By" which was also used in a commercial for the Mitsubishi Eclipse and in the video game, DDRMAX2: Dance Dance Revolution. The album artwork is done by American artist Richard Phillips.

Frontman Paul Harris had worked as a club DJ in Europe prior to forming Dirty Vegas, while Ben Harris worked at a Camden recording studio and Steve Smith was performing as part of a band called Higher Ground. After Higher Ground disbanded, Paul met Smith at a party in Switzerland; the two began performing together. Ben Harris later joined and the trio began to record songs together, the first of which was "Days Go By."

The group released "Days Go By," and the song's striking video was seen by an executive who worked for Mitsubishi Motors. He tracked the group down and got permission to feature the song in an ad for the company. Following the song's licensing, the group returned to the studio to record more songs for a full-length album. Ben Harris commented to MTV that, when recording the album, they were "trying to not really fit anywhere," opting to attempt to create "something unique" instead. The group informed Billboard that they didn't have one specific songwriting strategy for the album: "Ben and I might get a chord sequence going, and then Steve may add the lyrics - or vice versa. We handle it from many different angles." The album's recording was completed in October 2001, shortly before the Mitsubishi ad began running.


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