Spikee

"Spikee" / "Dogman Go Woof"
Single by Underworld
B-side "Dogman Go Woof"
Released 6 December 1993
Format 12" vinyl, CD
Genre Techno, trance
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
"Rez"
(1993)
"Spikee" / "Dogman Go Woof"
(1993)
"Dark & Long"
(1994)

"Rez"
(1993)
"Spikee" / "Dogman Go Woof"
(1993)
"Dark & Long"
(1994)

"Spikee" is a non-album single by Underworld, originally released on 6 December 1993 in the UK. It entered the UK chart at #63 on 18 December 1993 for one week.[1]

Track listing

12": JBO / JBO 17 (UK)

  1. "Spikee" – 12:34 (Hyde/Smith/Emerson)
  2. "Dogman Go Woof" – 12:13 (Smith/Emerson)

CD: JBO / JBO 17 CD (UK)

  1. "Spikee" – 12:34
  2. "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.
  • 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.
  • 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

  1. "Chart Stats". Retrieved 2008-06-21.
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