Little Fluffy Clouds
"Little Fluffy Clouds" is a single released by the British ambient house group The Orb. It was originally released in November 1990 on the record label Big Life and peaked at #87 on the UK Singles Chart. 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 #10 in the UK.
"Little Fluffy Clouds" | ||||
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Single by The Orb | ||||
from the album The Orb's Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld | ||||
B-side | "Into the Fourth Dimension" | |||
Released | November 1990 | |||
Genre | Ambient house | |||
Length | 4:27 (Album version) | |||
Label | Big Life | |||
Songwriter(s) | Martin Glover, Alex Paterson, Steve Reich | |||
Producer(s) | The Orb | |||
The Orb singles chronology | ||||
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It ranked number 275 in NME's list of The 500 Greatest Songs of All Time.[1] Pitchfork Media ranked it at number 40 on their list of the Top 200 Tracks of the 1990s.[2]
Production
Alex Paterson had previously worked with Jimmy Cauty as The Orb. Upon Cauty's departure from The Orb, Paterson began work on "Little Fluffy Clouds" with ex-Killing Joke member Martin "Youth" Glover.[3] However, because of other production obligations, Glover did not become a permanent member of The Orb. Kris "Thrash" Weston joined The Orb soon after. Weston mixed and engineered several versions of "Little Fluffy Clouds", including the version on The Orb's Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld.[4]
Samples
"Little Fluffy Clouds" makes extensive use of clips from an interview with American singer Rickie Lee Jones[5] in which she recalls picturesque images of her childhood. Critics and fans sometimes attribute the odd nasal tone of Jones' voice to drug use, though Jones later said she had had a heavy cold.[6] The samples are widely believed to have come from a conversation between Jones and LeVar Burton on the children's television program Reading Rainbow,[3] but in fact originated from an interview disc that was issued with some promotional boxed copies of her album Flying Cowboys. The interview was not conducted by Burton.[7] The interviewer is not identified on the recording or in the boxed set's liner notes, though a 1993 profile in The Independent identifies him as "an American DJ" with a "syrupy, Simon Bates-style tone."[8]
- Interviewer: "What were the skies like when you were young?"
- Jones: "They went on forever – They - When I w- We lived in Arizona, and the skies always had little fluffy clouds in 'em, and, uh... they were long... and clear and... there were lots of stars at night. And, uh, when it would rain, it would all turn - it- They were beautiful, the most beautiful skies as a matter of fact. Um, the sunsets were purple and red and yellow and on fire, and the clouds would catch the colours everywhere. That's uh, neat 'cause I used to look at them all the time, when I was little. You don't see that. You might still see them in the desert."
Jones' record company was upset at the unauthorized use of her voice and initially sought to pursue a claim via the legal system.[3] Big Life chose to settle out of court for an undisclosed sum of money for use of her voice on The Orb's recording: in 2016, Paterson said the record company paid $5,000 to use the sample.[9] Asked about the sample in an interview years later, Jones referred to The Orb as "those fuckers."[10]
The song also uses a harmonica sample from Ennio Morricone's The Man With The Harmonica (from the film Once Upon a Time in the West) and parts of Electric Counterpoint, a piece for multi-tracked guitars composed by Steve Reich and recorded by Pat Metheny. According to Glover, the inspiration for the track came when an Orb fan who worked in a Birmingham record shop sent him a tape with Electric Counterpoint on one side and the Rickie Lee Jones interview on the other.[9] Reich was "genuinely flattered"[11] by The Orb's use of his work and instructed his record company not to sue.[12] Despite this The Orb did receive a letter from Reich's lawyers several years later, but Paterson described Reich as "a proper gentleman: he wanted 20% from then on and asked us to do a remix of one of his tunes, which we did".[9] Alex Paterson also suggested that the drum track is sampled: “If anyone actually knew where the drums on 'Little Fluffy Clouds' came from, they'd all just die, but I'm not at liberty to tell. Record companies have always warned me, ‘Don't tell anyone where you got your samples until we get them cleared!’”.[13] He later said that the drum track was sampled from Harry Nilsson's album Nilsson Schmilsson,[14] and others have specifically identified this as a sample of Jim Gordon's drum solo from "Jump Into the Fire", slowed down approximately from 45 to 33 rpm.[15] The use of a slowed-down "Jump Into the Fire" was acknowledged by Paterson in a 2016 interview with The Guardian, in which he also said the track included a Lee "Scratch" Perry sample.[9]
In 2006 a previously uncredited sample from "Little Fluffy Clouds" was recognised by MTV label director Dan Waite, who identified the first voice heard on the song as that of his cousin John Waite. A 1990 John Waite BBC Radio 4 broadcast for the programme You and Yours was sampled and features at the beginning of the track. John Waite can clearly be heard saying, "Over the past few years, to the traditional sounds of an English summer, the drone of lawnmowers, the smack of leather on willow, has been added a new noise...". In 2013 the Orb management asked John Waite to join them on their 25th Anniversary tour to read the classic line live on stage.
Commercial reception
"Little Fluffy Clouds" reached #87 on the UK Singles Chart and was a dancefloor success.[3] After the popularity of following Orb albums, "Little Fluffy Clouds" was re-released several times, including a 1993 edition which peaked at #10 on the UK charts.
Track listing
7": Big Life / BLR 33 (UK)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [seven inch mk 1]" (4:05)
- "Little Fluffy Clounds [ambient mk 1]" (4:29)
- Released November 1990
12": Big Life / BLR 33T (UK)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [dance mk 2]" (8:26)
- "Into The Fourth Dimension [edit]" (7:03)
- "Little Fluffy Clounds [ambient mk 1]" (4:29)
- Released November 1990
- Into The Fourth Dimension mix also called "essenes beyond control" version
- also released on CD - BLR 33CD
12": Big Life / BLR 33R (UK)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds (drum & vox version)" (7:10)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [seven inch mk 1]" (4:05)
- "Into The Fourth Extension" (9:05)
- Released November 1990
- Remix 12"
- Reissued November 1993
CD: Big Life / BLRD 98 (UK)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [seven inch mk 1]" (4:05)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [dance mk 2]" (8:26)
- "Into The Fourth Dimension [edit]" (7:03)
- "Little Fluffy Clounds [ambient mk 1]" (4:29)
- Re-released 1 November 1993
12": Mercury / 865139-1 (US)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Cumulonimbus Mix]" (6:10)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Dis joint don't argue mix]" (6:38)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Seven Inch MK 1]" (4:05)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Inner Master Mix]" (3:58)
- "Outlands [Fountain of Elisha]" (8:00)
- Released November 1991
CD: Mercury / 865139-2 (US)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Seven Inch MK 1]" (4:05)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Inner Master Mix]" (3:58)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Cumulonimbus Mix]" (6:10)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Dance MK 2]" (8:26)
- "Little Fluffy Clouds [Heavyweight Dub]" (6:30)
- "Outlands [Fountain of Elisha]" (8:00)
- Released November 1991
Charts
Chart (1990) | Peak position |
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UK Singles (OCC)[16] | 87 |
Chart (1993) | Peak position |
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UK Singles (OCC)[16] | 10 |
References
- NME staff and writers (8 February 2014). "NME 500 Greatest Songs Of All Time".
- "The Top 200 Tracks of the 1990s: 50-21". pitchfork.com. Condé Nast. 2 September 2010.
- Bush, John. "The Orb Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 2006-10-09.
- Kris Weston. "rant". Archived from the original on 23 July 2014.
- "The Orb's Samples". Melody Maker. October 1993. Retrieved 2008-08-28.
- McCusker, Eamonn (2003-10-15). "The Orb - Adventures Beyond the Ultraworld". CD Times. Archived from the original on 2006-03-15.
- Goodes, Grant (1999-02-16). "Rickie Lee Jones Sample in LFC Confirmed". KLF Online. Archived from the original on July 17, 2011.
- "POP MUSIC / Every little fluffy cloud has a silver lining: The sky's". The Independent. 1993-11-11. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
- Simpson, Dave (7 June 2016). "How we made the Orb's Little Fluffy Clouds". theguardian.com. Retrieved 7 June 2016.
- "Joy and Defiance: A Conversation with Rickie Lee Jones". Aquarium Drunkard. 2019-05-10. Retrieved 2020-11-15.
- "Steve Reich". The Wire. 1996-11-01.
- Martin Johnson. "Classical Composer Steve Reich Gets Remixed and Loves It". Barnes & Noble. Retrieved 2006-10-11.
- Silva, Joe (2001-02-01). "Living in Orblivion". Remix Magazine. Archived from the original on 2006-05-07.
- Thomas, Rich. "In About Four Seconds A Teacher Will Begin To Speak—Dr. Alex Paterson Of The Orb". Interview.
- "The Orb's 'Little Fluffy Clouds' sample of Harry Nilsson's 'Jump Into the Fire'". www.whosampled.com. Retrieved 16 May 2015.
- "The Orb: Artist Chart History". Official Charts Company. Retrieved 7 August 2017.