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Joe Muggs of The Arts Desk wrote, "And so, another Yello album, and yes, it sounds like classic Yello. Maier’s vocals were always predicated on an eerie inhumanity – electronic cut-ups and processing making him infernally robotic, a kind of ludic counterpoint to fellow synthpop pioneers Kraftwerk’s deadpanning."
In 1995, a tribute remix album Hands on Yello was released, featuring remixes by Moby, the Orb, Carl Craig, Carl Cox, the Grid and WestBam. [2] In 2005, Yello re-released their early albums Solid Pleasure, Claro Que Si, You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess, Stella, One Second and Flag, [2] all with bonus tracks, as part of the Yello Remaster Series.
The Yello Video Show – Live at the Roxy NY Dec 83: Released: 1989; ... "Waba Duba" 2020 Boris Blank "Out of Sight" N/A (amination) "Spinning My Mind" Dieter Meier
Yello by Yello is a compilation album from Swiss electronic duo Yello. It was released on 5 November 2010 via Polydor label. [ 1 ] There are two versions of the album:
Solid Pleasure is the debut album from Swiss electronic trio Yello. It was first released in 1980 and was reissued in 2005 in part of Yello Remaster Series with rare bonus tracks. It was first released in 1980 and was reissued in 2005 in part of Yello Remaster Series with rare bonus tracks.
You Gotta Say Yes to Another Excess is the third studio album by Swiss electronic band Yello, released in June 1983. It was the last Yello album to feature founding member Carlos Perón . It charted in several countries across Europe, and also peaked at No. 184 on the U.S. Billboard 200 .
"Desire" was released on 4 June 1985. Meier's friend, Swiss TV station owner Paul Grau, had suggested that the video should be shot in Havana in Cuba to match the song's Latin sound, and the video, which included three orchestras and around 150 dancers, was filmed there in May 1985.
One Second is Yello's fifth original studio album, having been preceded by a 'new mix' compilation the previous year. Released in 1987, the album is noteworthy for featuring both Billy Mackenzie [2] and Shirley Bassey, the latter singing vocals on "The Rhythm Divine".