Nefertiti: Difference between revisions

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(Created page with "Nefertiti, formerly known as "Egyptian Wife" is an identfied lost song created by the London-based band Two Big Boys in 1987. It was the B Side of their 7" vinyl for the song Monkeys. Nefertiti was part of the first wave of popular lostwave searches following the viral rediscovery of The Most Mysterious Song On The Internet.")
 
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Nefertiti, formerly known as "Egyptian Wife" is an identfied lost song created by the London-based band Two Big Boys in 1987. It was the B Side of their 7" vinyl for the song Monkeys. Nefertiti was part of the first wave of popular lostwave searches following the viral rediscovery of The Most Mysterious Song On The Internet.
{{Infobox Lostwave
|Box = BoxGreen
|ShowBox = Yes
|Name = Nefertiti
|Image = Nefertiti.png
|Caption = Cover art for the Monkeys/Nefertiti single, by Ron Meerbeek.
|Alt_name = Egyptian Wife
|Artist = Two Big Boys
|Genre =Indie Pop
|Year = 1987
|Status = Solved
|Length =
|OP = redoalfo
|Search_started = 2013
|Search_ended = 2020
|Media =Nefertiti.mp3
}}
'''Nefertiti''' (previously known as '''"Egyptian Wife"''') is a solved lostwave by British indie-pop band Two Big Boys, released as the B-Side for their 7" vinyl of the song Monkeys in 1987. It was first posted by Youtube user Redoalfo in 2013.
 
==Background==
On January 3rd, 2013, YouTube user Redoalfo, a collector of mysterious and obscure songs, first uploaded a 1:09 sped-up snippet of the song to their channel, naming the song "Egyptian Wife" and claimed that they got the song from an unidentified collector who was trying to sell the record, but did not provide the name of the song.<ref>https://web.archive.org/web/20201112121634/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JIXbnD6H9NE</ref>
 
The song was first discovered by the New Wave Outpost forums, and admin Analoge-Mechanik investigated it for a short time, but no leads were uncovered.<sup>'''[citation needed]'''</sup>
 
The upload received very little attention until 2019, 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 gained popularity around this time and was later featured in C.W. Schultz's video: Top 10 Most Mysterious Songs, released on October 20th, 2019, listing it as the Third Most Mysterious Song On The Internet.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dT90KQramio</ref>
 
==Discovery==
In May 2020, YouTube user newdarkfades uploaded the full song at the correct speed, along with its name and artist to his channel, but it went undiscovered and was later deleted.<sup>'''[citation needed]'''</sup> 
 
On August 4th, 2020, Nico Zúñiga from Dead Wax Records was contacted and recognized the song, claiming to have it in his collection.<ref>[https://www.reddit.com/r/Lostwave/comments/i3ipad/story_behind_egyptian_wife_found/?sort=top https://www.reddit.com/r/Lostwave/comments/i3ipad/story_behind_egyptian_wife_found/]</ref> On August 27th, 2020, Zúñiga discovered the record in his collection and revealed the title of the song, leading to the discovery of the newdarkfades video and the song being identified as Nefertiti by Two Big Boys. Later that day, Zúñiga uploaded his own remastered version to the Dead Wax Records YouTube channel.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9WYv9hjjaI</ref>
 
The following day, lead singer Vicki Bonet commented on the newly created Discogs page, confirming that she composed the music, played bass, and sang lead vocals on the song, while Ron Meerbeek wrote the lyrics and sang backing vocals.<ref>https://www.discogs.com/release/15796259-Two-Big-Boys-Monkeys-Nefertiti</ref> 
 
On November 4th, 2020, an official new music video for the song was created, consisting of a compilation of movie clips,<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A2c8_UrVxO4</ref> and an original music video shot in the 1980s was released on February 22nd, 2021.<ref>https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GreIHGjoKvY</ref> 
 
== Lyrics ==
{| class="wikitable mw-collapsible" role="presentation"
|'''Presumed Lyrics'''
|-
|'''(Verse 1)'''
There she goes, looking back at you-you
 
There she goes in an Egyptian frou-frou
 
I don't think she's after a taxi
 
I don't think you're gonna see her again
 
There she goes, out of his life
 
Say goodbye to your Egyptian wife
 
I don't think she'll try it again
 
I don't think you're gonna see her again
 
'''(Hook)'''
 
Ooh, I met her as a kid
 
Outside her pyramid
 
There she goes with a smile
 
Floating down the Nile
 
'''(Verse 2)'''
 
Next time you see her she'll be on the TV
 
Say to yourself, she's my little Nefertiti
 
You say, I knew her long ago
 
Now she is on a TV show
 
She's an Egyptian princess
 
She met you and left you in a pretty white dress
 
She won't return your phone call
 
She doesn't wanna see you at all
 
'''(Hook)'''
 
Ooh, I met her as a kid
 
Outside her pyramid
 
There she goes with a smile
 
Floating down the Nile
|}
 
== Personnel ==
[https://www.discogs.com/artist/8105769-Stella-Venucci Vicki Bonet (Stella Venucci)] – lead vocals, bass guitar
 
[https://www.discogs.com/artist/8105768-Ron-Meerbeek Ron Meerbeek] – backing vocals
 
[https://www.discogs.com/artist/8105767-Harry-Day-3 Jeffrey Hildreth (Harry Day)] – guitar
 
[https://www.discogs.com/artist/8105766-Baxter-Martin Martin Wilson (Baxter Martin)] – tenor saxophone
 
==References==
<references />
[[Category: Identified]]
[[Category:Indie Pop]]
[[Category:Music video]]

Latest revision as of 12:40, 16 August 2024

ⓘ This lostwave is classified as solved.

Nefertiti

Cover art for the Monkeys/Nefertiti single, by Ron Meerbeek.
Alternative name(s) Egyptian Wife
Artist(s) Two Big Boys
Genre Indie Pop
Year 1987
Status Solved
Original poster redoalfo
Search duration 2013 - 2020
File:Nefertiti.mp3

Nefertiti (previously known as "Egyptian Wife") is a solved lostwave by British indie-pop band Two Big Boys, released as the B-Side for their 7" vinyl of the song Monkeys in 1987. It was first posted by Youtube user Redoalfo in 2013.

Background[edit | edit source]

On January 3rd, 2013, YouTube user Redoalfo, a collector of mysterious and obscure songs, first uploaded a 1:09 sped-up snippet of the song to their channel, naming the song "Egyptian Wife" and claimed that they got the song from an unidentified collector who was trying to sell the record, but did not provide the name of the song.[1]

The song was first discovered by the New Wave Outpost forums, and admin Analoge-Mechanik investigated it for a short time, but no leads were uncovered.[citation needed]

The upload received very little attention until 2019, 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.[2]

The song gained popularity around this time and was later featured in C.W. Schultz's video: Top 10 Most Mysterious Songs, released on October 20th, 2019, listing it as the Third Most Mysterious Song On The Internet.[3]

Discovery[edit | edit source]

In May 2020, YouTube user newdarkfades uploaded the full song at the correct speed, along with its name and artist to his channel, but it went undiscovered and was later deleted.[citation needed]

On August 4th, 2020, Nico Zúñiga from Dead Wax Records was contacted and recognized the song, claiming to have it in his collection.[4] On August 27th, 2020, Zúñiga discovered the record in his collection and revealed the title of the song, leading to the discovery of the newdarkfades video and the song being identified as Nefertiti by Two Big Boys. Later that day, Zúñiga uploaded his own remastered version to the Dead Wax Records YouTube channel.[5]

The following day, lead singer Vicki Bonet commented on the newly created Discogs page, confirming that she composed the music, played bass, and sang lead vocals on the song, while Ron Meerbeek wrote the lyrics and sang backing vocals.[6]

On November 4th, 2020, an official new music video for the song was created, consisting of a compilation of movie clips,[7] and an original music video shot in the 1980s was released on February 22nd, 2021.[8]

Lyrics[edit | edit source]

Personnel[edit | edit source]

Vicki Bonet (Stella Venucci) – lead vocals, bass guitar

Ron Meerbeek – backing vocals

Jeffrey Hildreth (Harry Day) – guitar

Martin Wilson (Baxter Martin) – tenor saxophone

References[edit | edit source]