Ladytron (song)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Ladytron_(song) an entity of type: Thing

"Ladytron" is a song by Bryan Ferry, recorded by his band Roxy Music and appearing on their eponymous debut album. The British electronic band Ladytron took their name from this song. The song has distinctive instrumentation, including an oboe solo, liberal use of the mellotron's famous "three violins" tape set, and much processing of the other instruments by Brian Eno via his VCS3 synthesizer and tape echo. The sound in the start of the song was created by Brian Eno, after Bryan Ferry asked him to produce something reminiscent of the Lunar Landing. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Ladytron (song)
rdf:langString Ladytron
rdf:langString Ladytron
xsd:integer 4499477
xsd:integer 1054818736
<second> 266.0
xsd:gMonthDay --03-15
xsd:date 1972-06-16
rdf:langString "Ladytron" is a song by Bryan Ferry, recorded by his band Roxy Music and appearing on their eponymous debut album. The British electronic band Ladytron took their name from this song. The song has distinctive instrumentation, including an oboe solo, liberal use of the mellotron's famous "three violins" tape set, and much processing of the other instruments by Brian Eno via his VCS3 synthesizer and tape echo. The sound in the start of the song was created by Brian Eno, after Bryan Ferry asked him to produce something reminiscent of the Lunar Landing. Lyrically, it presents Ferry as a Casanova-style seducer of women, whilst being simultaneously enraptured by them. Another interpretation is that the Ladytron is a female robot (hence the name), being seduced by Ferry. In 2006, The Times described "Ladytron" as one of Roxy Music's "best loved songs." The haunting oboe melody heard in the intro is reminiscent of a passage in the first movement of Sergei Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 3 in C, Op. 26.
<minute> 4.433333333333334
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2816
xsd:date 1972-03-15
xsd:date 1972-06-16
xsd:double 266.0

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