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Paterson and Cauty began DJing and producing music together under the name the Orb. Their first release was a 1988 acid house anthem track, "Tripping on Sunshine", released on Youth's compilation album Eternity Project One. [9] [10] The following year, the Orb released the Kiss EP, a four-track EP based on samples from New York City's KISS FM. [9]
It should only contain pages that are The Orb songs or lists of The Orb songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about The Orb songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
The Orb's second studio album U.F.Orb was released in June 1992 and topped the United Kingdom albums chart. [6] The album's second single " Blue Room " – at a length of 39 minutes and 57 seconds – became the longest-running release to enter the UK Singles Chart, where it peaked at number eight.
No Sounds Are Out of Bounds is the fifteenth studio album by English ambient house duo the Orb.The album was released on 22 June 2018 via Cooking Vinyl. [16] [17] It includes contributions from Youth, Roger Eno, Hollie Cook, Guy Pratt, Jah Wobble, Gaudi, Roney FM and Michael Rendall.
U.F.Off: The Best of the Orb is a greatest hits album by the Orb released in 1998 by Island Records. There is both a double disc and single disc version, the latter being the first disc of the former. The second disc contains alternate mixes of many of the tracks on the first.
"Blue Room" is a single by English electronic music duo the Orb. It was released on 8 June 1992 on Big Life Records.The full 39-minute version features a number of samples, including a small portion of the beginning of "Mysterious Traveller" by Weather Report and a damaged portion of "Happy Birthday to You" by Marilyn Monroe at the end.
The Times described it as "generic ambient music" [10] and The Guardian said it was a low point for Paterson's creativity. [11] [12] Rolling Stone gave the album a more positive reception: naming it their album of the month, and citing its symphonic flow coupled with the Orb's "uniquely British wit". [5] The record reached number 20 on the UK ...
The Orb also included it on their 1991 double album The Orb's Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld. "Little Fluffy Clouds" was re-released several times with different B-sides, with its 1993 re-release reaching number 10 in the UK. It ranked number 275 in NME's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time. [1]