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Ventolin (EP)

Ventolin
Ventolin.jpg
EP by Aphex Twin
Released 27 March 1995
Length 26:27
Label Warp Records (UK)
Sire/Elektra Records (rest of world)
Producer Aphex Twin
Aphex Twin chronology
Classics
(1994)
Ventolin
(1995)
...I Care Because You Do
(1995)

"Ventolin" is a piece of electronic music composed by the Cornish musician Richard D James. It is noted for its harsh, abrasive sound. James recorded numerous versions of the piece under his Aphex Twin alias.

The piece is named after a trade name for the drug Salbutamol, which is prescribed for the treatment of asthma. A reported side effect of this drug is tinnitus, a high pitched ringing in the ears. James utilized this effect in "Ventolin", incorporating a piercing high-pitched ringing sound throughout the track. The music also incorporates heavily distorted techno beats. The resulting effect has been cited as "one of the harshest singles ever recorded".

The song is sampled by the Vancouver industrial band Front Line Assembly in the song "Retribution" on their 1999 album Implode.

The first recording of "Ventolin" (the "video version") appeared on a music video produced to accompany the track. The video consists of a woman being trapped in an elevator with other industrial images interspersed. The "video version" of the track was released a month later on the 1995 Aphex Twin album ...I Care Because You Do.

The "Salbutamol Mix" on this EP is an extended version of the "video version".

In 1995, Warp Records released "Ventolin" as a single in the United Kingdom, on 12" vinyl and CD in two parts, Ventolin and Ventolin Remixes. Between them, these EPs have a further 12 versions of "Ventolin". (The United States release, by Sire Records, collects all of the tracks on a single CD.)


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