"Papua New Guinea" | ||||
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Single by The Future Sound of London | ||||
from the album Accelerator | ||||
Released | 1991 | |||
Format |
CD Vinyl Cassette |
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Recorded | Earthbeat Studios | |||
Genre | Electronica, techno, ambient, breakbeat techno | |||
Length | 6:45 | |||
Label |
Jumpin' & Pumpin' Records Cat. 12 TOT 17 (first pressing) |
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Songwriter(s) |
Brian Dougans Garry Cobain |
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Producer(s) | FSOL Andrew Weatherall Graham Massey Hamish McDonald among others |
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The Future Sound of London singles chronology | ||||
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"Papua New Guinea '92" | ||||
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Single by The Future Sound of London | ||||
Released | 1992 | |||
Songwriter(s) |
Brian Dougans Garry Cobain |
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The Future Sound of London singles chronology | ||||
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"Papua New Guinea 2001" | ||||
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Single by The Future Sound of London | ||||
Released | 2001 | |||
Songwriter(s) |
Brian Dougans Garry Cobain |
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The Future Sound of London singles chronology | ||||
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"Papua New Guinea Translations" | ||||
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Single by The Future Sound of London | ||||
Released | 2002 | |||
Songwriter(s) |
Brian Dougans Garry Cobain |
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The Future Sound of London singles chronology | ||||
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"Papua New Guinea Herd & White remixes" | ||||
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Single by The Future Sound of London | ||||
Released | 2007 | |||
Songwriter(s) |
Brian Dougans Garry Cobain |
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The Future Sound of London singles chronology | ||||
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"Papua New Guinea" is a 1991 song by the electronic music group Future Sound of London. It was the group's debut single and later appeared on their full-length album Accelerator. The single reached #22 on the UK singles chart. The track has been remixed and released many times since its original release, both legitimately and in bootleg format on CD, Vinyl and Cassette.
The song became a popular rave and club track almost immediately upon its release. The original mix notably samples the bassline from Meat Beat Manifesto's proto-jungle track "Radio Babylon", the tambourine from Bobby Byrd's "Hot Pants - I'm Coming, I'm Coming, I'm Coming", vocals of Lisa Gerrard's singing lifted from the Dead Can Dance song "Dawn of the Iconoclast", from their 1987 album 'Within the Realm of a Dying Sun' and "Shelter Me" by Circuit. "Papua New Guinea" was perhaps FSOL's most club-oriented track; most of the remixes on the single are very dancefloor-friendly. After Accelerator's release, however, they moved in increasingly ambient and experimental directions.
In 2001, a new set of remixes was released by FSOL's label, Jumpin' & Pumpin'. Soon after that, Future Sound of London themselves released Papua New Guinea Translations, which extended the track into a 45-minute-long EP.
"Papua New Guinea" was featured in the 1997 Gregg Araki film Nowhere and in the 1992 film Cool World. In the film, Garry Cobain was mis-credited as "Garry Cockbain", which was the original spelling of his name.
The remix version of "Papua New Guinea" was also featured in the 2002 PlayStation 2 game Wipeout Fusion.