Dewdrops in the Garden

Dewdrops in the Garden
Studio album by Deee-Lite
Released July 12, 1994
Recorded July - December 1993
Genre
Length 67:58
Label Elektra
Producer Deee-Lite
Deee-Lite chronology
Infinity Within
(1992)
Dewdrops in the Garden
(1994)
Dewdrops in the Remix
(1994)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Robert Christgau[2]
Entertainment WeeklyB−[3]
Q[4]
Slant Magazine[5]

Dewdrops in the Garden is the third and final studio album by the house-music group Deee-Lite, released in July 1994 via Elektra Records. The album moved away from the overtly political lyrical content of the previous album.

Background

At the time of the release of Dewdrops in the Garden, Lady Kier had compared it with Infinity Within by saying:

The album drew inspiration from Lady Kier's travels to the Hopi ruins in the Painted Desert and pyramids in the Yucatan and Dmitri's travels to the Grand Canyon and Joshua Tree. The inspiration was clear in Lady Kier's description of the track "Music Selector is the Soul Reflector":

Most of the work on Dewdrops in the Garden was done by Super DJ Dmitri and Lady Miss Kier joined by junglist DJ Ani (On-E). Towa Tei had left the band to do some work on Japanese pop star Nokko's album and his own debut solo album Future Listening! (however, Tei contributed to the track "Call Me"). He was said to be back for the band's fourth album, which was never made.

A companion album titled Dewdrops in the Remix was released in Japan shortly after the album's release, containing four remixes of "Picnic in the Summertime," four mixes of "Bring Me Your Love," and six mixes of "Call Me." "Bring Me Your Love" and "Call Me" became their last two #1 hits on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart.

Track listing

All tracks by Deee-Lite

  1. "Say Ahhh..." – 4:10
  2. "Mind Melt" – 0:33
  3. "Bittersweet Loving" – 3:42
  4. "River of Freedom" – 4:06
  5. "Somebody" – 3:30
  6. "When You Told Me You Loved Me" – 3:00
  7. "Stay in Bed, Forget the Rest" – 3:10
  8. "Call Me" – 3:50
  9. "Music Selector is the Soul Reflector" – 4:30
  10. "Sampladelic" – 0:47
  11. "Bring Me Your Love" – 3:40
  12. "Picnic in the Summertime" – 3:32
  13. "Apple Juice Kissing" – 3:13
  14. "Party Happening People" – 4:00
  15. "DMT (Dance Music Trance)" – 4:27
  16. "What is this Music?" - 17:50
  • The song "What is this Music" ends at minute 0:28. After 4 minutes of silence (0:28 - 4:28), begins an untitled brief hidden track, that begins at 4:28 and ends at 4:40. After 2 minutes of silence (4:40 - 6:40), begins an hidden track: it's an untitled and instrumental song, that begins at 6:40 and ends at 10:03. After 2 minutes of silence (10:03 - 12:03), begins a hidden track: it's the song "Bring Me Your Love" (Johnny Vicious Cosmic Isness Remix), that begins at 12:03 and ends at 17:50.

Chart performance

Chart (1994) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200[7] 127

References

  1. Allmusic review
  2. http://www.robertchristgau.com/get_artist.php?name=Deee-Lite
  3. http://www.ew.com/article/1994/08/05/dewdrops-garden
  4. Cranna, Ian. "Review: Deee-Lite, Dew Drops In The Garden". Q. EMAP Metro Ltd (Q95, August 1994): 100.
  5. Cinquemani, Sal (January 23, 2002). "Review: Deee-Lite - Dewdrops in the Garden". slantmagazine.com. Archived from the original on 30 September 2007. Retrieved 13 August 2009.
  6. "Deee-lite - A Deee-Liteful Experience". Haktanir.org. Archived from the original on 2012-02-04. Retrieved 2012-02-13.
  7. Billboard.cpm, artist chart history
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