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2007 "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life" (re-release) (featuring KayJay) - #6 Finland, #13 UK; 2007 "If" - (With Paul Emanuel featuring Robert Owens) 2008 "Head To Toe" (featuring Doug Lazy) 2008 "24 Hours (Nice Tight Derriere)" (With Lords Of Flatbush) 2009 "The Pressure" (With Paul Emanuel featuring Beverly Knight & Bryan Chambers)
The song was remixed by DJ Kambel and MC Magika in 2002, appearing on Dancemania Speed 8 with the name "Last Nite Kambel Saved My Life". [36] The song is featured in the 2002 video game Grand Theft Auto: Vice City on "Fever 105", one of the in-game radio stations accessed while driving. The song appears in the 2006 feature film Cashback. [37]
Seamus Haji had a number one on the UK Dance Chart, with a cover of Indeep's "Last Night a DJ Saved My Life".He originally released this as a single in 2004. [1] The single originally reached #69 on the UK Singles Chart, [2] and #13 on re-issue in March 2007 and #1 on the UK Dance Chart.
As acclaimed in the authoritative Last Night a DJ Saved My Life: The Story of the Disc Jockey, [1] Journeys by DJ (JDJ) was the first label to release full-length mixes of live DJ sets on CD. Other labels since the 70s released recordings of DJs spinning live, along with DJ-friendly vinyl "megamixes", and the 80s saw innumerable illegal mix ...
In the 2000 book Last Night A DJ Saved My Life by Bill Brewster and Frank Broughton, a chart was detailed that listed the "Top 100" of the Paradise Garage, selected by "The Committee". [24] It is unclear whether this list represents the hundred most played songs at the club or the hundred fan-favorite/DJ favorite tracks.
"Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life", a 1982 single by Indeep Last Night a DJ Saved My Life (book) , a 2000 book by Frank Broughton and Bill Brewster with an accompanying album Topics referred to by the same term
"Last Night a D.J. Saved My Life" was released on Sound of New York/Becket Records in 1982 and peaked in early 1983, reaching the top 10 on the US R&B and No. 2 on the US Club charts as well as the Top 3 in the Dutch Top 40 and the Top 15 in the UK, [3] [4] and was certified for gold-level sales in France. The 12" mix was notable at the time ...
Starting from Jimmy Savile, Broughton and Brewster track the rise of the DJ as a figure in music. [4] [5] The authors champion the idea that the DJ is an "unsung hero" of popular music and is an artist himself. [1] In examining the place of a DJ over time, Last Night... also follows the rise and fall of various musical genres and subcultures. [1]