Spikee
1993 single by Underworld
"Spikee" / "Dogman Go Woof" | ||||
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Single by Underworld | ||||
B-side | "Dogman Go Woof" | |||
Released | 6 December 1993 (1993-12-06)[1] | |||
Length | 12:34 | |||
Label | Junior Boy's Own | |||
Songwriter(s) | Rick Smith, Karl Hyde, Darren Emerson | |||
Producer(s) | Rick Smith, Karl Hyde, Darren Emerson | |||
Underworld singles chronology | ||||
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"Spikee" is a non-album single by British electronic music group Underworld, originally released on 6 December 1993 in the UK. It entered the UK Singles Chart at number 63 on 18 December 1993 for one week.[2]
Track listings
12-inch: JBO / JBO 17 (UK)
- "Spikee" – 12:34 (Hyde/Smith/Emerson)
- "Dogman Go Woof" – 12:13 (Smith/Emerson)
CD: JBO / JBO 17 CD (UK)
- "Spikee" – 12:34
- "Dogman Go Woof" – 12:13
Notes
- Dogman Go Woof written, produced and mixed by Rick Smith and Darren Emerson
- Published by Underworld / Sherlock Holmes Music
- Sleeve design by Third Planet Inc.
- The text 'PICK YOUR OWN' is etched into the run-out groove of the 12".
- The text 'DOGMANGOWOOF' is etched into the run-out groove of the 500-only pressing Underworld 12" single, "Mother Earth / The Hump".
Appearances
- Spikee was released on CD as part of the 1992–2002 Anthology set released worldwide in 2003.
- Spikee appears on Cyberspace 2 (a CD compilation) (1994) in an edited form.
- Spikee appears on Foundations - Coming Up From the Streets (2CD Compilation) (1997)
- Spikee appears on Wax Trax! MasterMix, a 1999 Compilation CD.
- Spikee appears on Dream Injection, Volume 1, a 1995 Compilation CD.
- The Spikee video, directed by Graham Wood (1993), appears on the UK released video compilation Kiteless: A Tomato Project.
- The same video version of Spikee also appears on the US released compilation, Footwear Repairs by Craftsmen at Competitive Prices.
- "Spikee" also appeared on BBC's Saturday Afternoon Grandstand as background music.[citation needed]
- The guitar section from "Spikee" also appeared as the title music for ITV's Saturday lunchtime football magazine On the Ball in the late 1990s and the early 2000s.
References
- v
- t
- e
Underworld
- Karl Hyde
- Rick Smith
- Baz Allen
- Bryn Burrows
- Pascal Consoli
- Darren Emerson
- Darren Price
- Alfie Thomas
- Underneath the Radar
- Change the Weather
- Dubnobasswithmyheadman
- Second Toughest in the Infants
- Beaucoup Fish
- A Hundred Days Off
- Oblivion with Bells
- Barking
- Barbara Barbara, We Face a Shining Future
- Drift Series 1
- Everything, Everything
- Live in Tokyo
- Live Here Now series
- 1992–2002
- The Bells the Bells
- 1992–2012 The Anthology
- A Collection
- Riverrun
- Drift
- Breaking and Entering
- Sunshine
- Frankenstein
- Isles of Wonder
- "Underneath the Radar"
- "Stand Up"
- "Mmm…Skyscraper I Love You"
- "Rez"
- "Spikee"
- "Dark & Long"
- "Cowgirl"
- "Dirty Epic"
- "Born Slippy"
- "Rowla"
- "Pearl's Girl"
- "Born Slippy Nuxx"
- "Juanita"
- "Moaner"
- "Push Upstairs"
- "Jumbo"
- "King of Snake"
- "Bruce Lee"
- Beaucoup Fish Singles
- "Cowgirl (Live)"
- "Two Months Off"
- "Dinosaur Adventure 3D"
- "Born Slippy .NUXX 2003"
- "Crocodile"
- "Scribble"
- "The First Note Is Silent"
- "Caliban's Dream"
- Teatime Dub Encounters
- Everything, Everything
- Book of Jam – Video
- The Bells the Bells
- Barking – The Films
- Drift Series 1 – The Films