Dizzy (The Flying Lizards): Difference between revisions

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{{Infobox Lostwave
|Box = BoxGreen
|ShowBox = Yes
|Name = Dizzy
|Image = Dizzy The Flying Lizards.png
|Caption = The cover art.
|Alt_name = Amigos Míos
|Artist = The Flying Lizards
|Year = 1984
|Status = Solved
|OP = Redoalfo
|Search_started =  2012
|Search_ended = 2020
|Media =DizzyFlyingLizards.mp3
}}
'''Dizzy''' (previously known as '''"Amigos Míos"''') is a solved lostwave by British new-wave band The Flying Lizards. It was first posted by Youtube user Redoalfo in 2012.
 
==Background==
On November 25th, 2012, Youtube user Redoalfo, a collector of mysterious and obscure songs, first uploaded a version of the song to their channel.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40AgF9YTgjc</ref>
 
The upload received very little attention until 2019 (as shown by the first comment being from that year<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40AgF9YTgjc&lc=UgzgW2KrfBgtUYgydCJ4AaABAg</ref>), so the unknown song remained undiscovered until it was realized that Redoalfo uploaded a snippet of "[[The Most Mysterious Song On The Internet]]" in 2011, 8 years before it became popular.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qus5eOALnMY</ref>
 
The song grew in popularity around this time and was subsequently featured in C.W. Schultz's video: Top 10 Most Mysterious Songs, released on October 20th 2019.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dT90KQramio</ref> C.W. Schultz suggested in their video that the lyrics of the song may have been sampled from various audio tracks, as they appeared to be random phrases.<ref>https://youtu.be/dT90KQramio?t=552</ref>
 
==The Search==
On r/TheMysteriousSong, Reddit user boederman suggested that the DJ's dialect throughout the song was from Spain, not South America. The instruments were analyzed, and the song was dated to the mid-1980s. There was speculation that the song was created in the 1990s, when the Spanish club scene was taking off, and may have simply used older instruments.<ref>https://www.reddit.com/r/TheMysteriousSong/comments/d8wwl0/comment/f1hlru5/</ref> 
 
The Weathermen, a partly-satirical Belgian EBM (Electronic Body Music) band, became an early lead for the artist after Redoalfo mentioned them in the song's description as a possible artist.<ref>https://www.discogs.com/artist/26732-The-Weathermen</ref>
 
==Discovery==
On October 24th, 2019, YouTube user Psyche-HQ suggested that the song could be a sped up version of the song Gyrotastics or Dizzy by the band The Flying Lizards, identifying that the EP that the song was on was called Dizzy Miss Lizzie.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=40AgF9YTgjc&lc=Ugwpe0UclFB2XPLxT8h4AaABAg</ref> 
 
This claim was discussed on the TMMS Discord, and user Bluey Grifter decided to back up Psyche's speculation by getting a copy of the single and proving that the song Dizzy was the B-Side for the 7" vinyl, but the second track on the A-side for the 12".<ref>https://www.reddit.com/r/Lostwave/comments/hx04q4/amigos_m%C3%ADos_possibly_found_dizzy_by_the_flying/</ref>
 
The full high-quality version of the song was uploaded to YouTube by user K.S. Archives on July 24th, 2020,<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tXnBPfX9IZw</ref> and was later reuploaded in higher quality by user VCC.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UhV5HpLPKRY</ref> The Spanish DJ on the Redoalfo upload remains unknown, as well as the other song in the video, which Dizzy transitions into at the three-minute mark.
 
==References==
<references />
[[Category:Identified]]
[[Category:Instrumental]]

Latest revision as of 10:46, 16 August 2024

ⓘ This lostwave is classified as solved.

Dizzy

The cover art.
Alternative name(s) Amigos Míos
Artist(s) The Flying Lizards
Year 1984
Status Solved
Original poster Redoalfo
Search duration 2012 - 2020
File:DizzyFlyingLizards.mp3

Dizzy (previously known as "Amigos Míos") is a solved lostwave by British new-wave band The Flying Lizards. It was first posted by Youtube user Redoalfo in 2012.

Background[edit | edit source]

On November 25th, 2012, Youtube user Redoalfo, a collector of mysterious and obscure songs, first uploaded a version of the song to their channel.[1]

The upload received very little attention until 2019 (as shown by the first comment being from that year[2]), so the unknown song remained undiscovered until it was realized that Redoalfo uploaded a snippet of "The Most Mysterious Song On The Internet" in 2011, 8 years before it became popular.[3]

The song grew in popularity around this time and was subsequently featured in C.W. Schultz's video: Top 10 Most Mysterious Songs, released on October 20th 2019.[4] C.W. Schultz suggested in their video that the lyrics of the song may have been sampled from various audio tracks, as they appeared to be random phrases.[5]

The Search[edit | edit source]

On r/TheMysteriousSong, Reddit user boederman suggested that the DJ's dialect throughout the song was from Spain, not South America. The instruments were analyzed, and the song was dated to the mid-1980s. There was speculation that the song was created in the 1990s, when the Spanish club scene was taking off, and may have simply used older instruments.[6]

The Weathermen, a partly-satirical Belgian EBM (Electronic Body Music) band, became an early lead for the artist after Redoalfo mentioned them in the song's description as a possible artist.[7]

Discovery[edit | edit source]

On October 24th, 2019, YouTube user Psyche-HQ suggested that the song could be a sped up version of the song Gyrotastics or Dizzy by the band The Flying Lizards, identifying that the EP that the song was on was called Dizzy Miss Lizzie.[8]

This claim was discussed on the TMMS Discord, and user Bluey Grifter decided to back up Psyche's speculation by getting a copy of the single and proving that the song Dizzy was the B-Side for the 7" vinyl, but the second track on the A-side for the 12".[9]

The full high-quality version of the song was uploaded to YouTube by user K.S. Archives on July 24th, 2020,[10] and was later reuploaded in higher quality by user VCC.[11] The Spanish DJ on the Redoalfo upload remains unknown, as well as the other song in the video, which Dizzy transitions into at the three-minute mark.

References[edit | edit source]