Ratatat – Shempi / video

Do you remember the last Ratatat video ? That hacked Paul Simon piece? Well, They did it again, this time the one and only Swedish Quartett was the victim.

Do you remember the last Ratatat video ? That hacked Paul Simon piece? Well, They did it again, this time the one and only Swedish Quartett was the victim.
The KLEF – You shook me [MP3 Mediafire]
This one’s just insane. The KLEF took like a handful of MY favorite tracks and turned them into a mash-up that will definitely leave a smile on your face. It sure did so on mine. Check it out. Each instrument comes from a different source. Full tracklist after the jump.

A plus D – Dancing Lollipop Queen [mp3]
Lil Wayne VS ABBA
A plus D been dead busy in the last couple of weeks so they simply had no chance to post the Bootie TOP 10 in August. But it means double fun in September ;) hehehe Go and check out both charts on the Bootie Blog, we have the brand new A plus D mash to make you move!

Here is a new video for a ‘not so new’ Copycat Mash. In the track Abba’s fuzzy, groovy and not so very tight seventies style of playing
and producing meets with Shelley’s clinical, edgy and cool programmed
electric sound of the early eighties. The contrast of the elements been used in this mix is even better and more obvious by watching the video.
The four members of pop group Abba have attended the Swedish premiere of Mamma Mia, the film which features 22 of their songs.
Several thousand fans cheered as Benny Andersson, Bjorn Ulvaeus, Anni-Frid Lyngstad and Agnetha Faltskog walked down the red carpet in Stockholm.
Lyngstad and Faltskog also embraced Meryl Streep, one of the movie’s stars.
The group had not met up since the original Mamma Mia musical opened in Sweden in February 2005, Lyngstad said.[read more and watch the video @ BBC NEWS]
Copycat: Does your homosapien know? [mp3 Mediafire]
Pete Shelley VS ABBA
Who can make better Abba mashups then a Swedish bootlegger? Copycat just made another winner mix with those softporn star looking family fun compatible megastars. This time Abba’s fuzzy, groovy and not so very tight seventies style of playing and producing meets with Shelley’s clinical, edgy and cool programmed electric sound of the early eighties. Top track!