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Space Invaders (Player One song)

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Wikipedia article




'"Space Invaders"' is a song by Australian songwriters Russell Dunlop and Bruce Brown, recording under the band name 'Player One' (commonly stylised as 'Player [1]') in 1979. The song is based on the hugely successful 1978 video game 'Space Invaders'. It was a novelty hit in Australia,[http://www.smh.com.au/national/obituaries/a-drummer-for-all-times-20090618-clxo.html A drummer for all times: Russell Dunlop, 1945-2009] ('Sydney Morning Herald', 19 June 2009) peaking at No.3 on the Kent Music Report charts, and ending up as the seventh best selling single in Australia for 1980. It spent 28 weeks on the Australian charts. Australian Chart Book (1970-1992) Page:391, 432 - David Kent The song approached Platinum status in Australia as of October 1980.

The single was very popular in South Africa and received much airplay. It also reached #20 in the New Zealand charts.

History



The arcade game of the same name, 'Space Invaders', was released by Japanese company Taito in 1978 and had become a global phenomenon by 1979. The Warner Music office in Sydney had its own arcade cabinet of the game, which prompted the idea of a song cashing in on the game's popularity. They took the project to Sydney producer duo Russell Dunlop and Bruce Brown, who took inspiration from the 'Space Invaders' game to create the song's bassline. According to Brown: "We actually went out with a machine before we did the record and recorded all the sound effects of it and had a little fiddle around with it".

Dunlop and Brown also released an album as Player One, 'Game Over'. Dunlop recalled: "We sat down and wrote a bunch of space songs, but instead of sticking to the concept of the hit, we wandered off into the 'clever' musical genre with fancy time signatures, radical chord progressions and so on. The reply came back for the States that this was intended for 13- to 14-year-olds: 'You've lost us.'"

The song was released internationally but failed to chart outside Australia. The single and album were released in the US under the band name 'Playback', which Brown and Dunlop had used for other projects, to avoid confusion with the US band Player. The US version of the album was titled 'Space Invaders'.

Legacy



"Space Invaders" was influential in the history of electronic dance music: the bassline was re-used by Jesse Saunders for what is commonly held to be the first Chicago house record, "On and On" (1984), based on a bootleg mashup called "On And On" that used the original recording of "Space Invaders".

Charts



Weekly charts



Year-end charts



Certifications



References



Category:Australian songs

Category:Australian dance songs

Category:1979 singles

Category:Music based on video games

Category:Songs about video games

Category:1979 songs

Category:Warner Music Group singles

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