: Released in mid-to-late 1978 as a single from Lear's second studio album, Sweet Revenge .
Beyond the charts, the song became a pop culture fixture, famously featured in Kinder Bueno television commercials across Central and Eastern Europe in 2004, which sparked a massive revival of interest in Lear's discography. The DJ Plastic-Enigma Collaboration
: Lear performed the track in the finale of the erotic documentary Follie di notte (1978). : A new documentary titled
During the Kazaa/LimeWire days, users would often incorrectly tag tracks. It is possible that “Dj Plastic-Enigma” was a one-off alias used for a remix competition, or simply a misspelling of “DJ Plastic” + “Enigma (the artist)”.
This phantom track likely exists because of . A music recommendation engine, tasked with finding “moody, female-vocal electronic music from the 1990s,” might splice metadata: Amanda Lear (voice) + Enigma (style) + a common verb (give) + a random noun. Or, it is a crowdsourced memory : a user on a forum misremembered a B-side from a 1996 compilation, typed the title, and the search engine indexed it as fact.
Many DJs create edits for their Patreon or for private DJ pools. The file might only exist as a WAV file shared in a Facebook group dedicated to “Italo Disco Bootlegs.”
One of the reasons resonates so deeply with audiences is the preservation of Lear’s lyrical persona. The lyrics are typically sparse but effective, serving as a hypnotic mantra rather than a complex narrative.
If you have typed into Spotify, Apple Music, or Tidal, you have likely found nothing. Here is why:
: Released in mid-to-late 1978 as a single from Lear's second studio album, Sweet Revenge .
Beyond the charts, the song became a pop culture fixture, famously featured in Kinder Bueno television commercials across Central and Eastern Europe in 2004, which sparked a massive revival of interest in Lear's discography. The DJ Plastic-Enigma Collaboration
: Lear performed the track in the finale of the erotic documentary Follie di notte (1978). : A new documentary titled Amanda Lear x Dj Plastic-Enigma -Give A Bit Of ...
During the Kazaa/LimeWire days, users would often incorrectly tag tracks. It is possible that “Dj Plastic-Enigma” was a one-off alias used for a remix competition, or simply a misspelling of “DJ Plastic” + “Enigma (the artist)”.
This phantom track likely exists because of . A music recommendation engine, tasked with finding “moody, female-vocal electronic music from the 1990s,” might splice metadata: Amanda Lear (voice) + Enigma (style) + a common verb (give) + a random noun. Or, it is a crowdsourced memory : a user on a forum misremembered a B-side from a 1996 compilation, typed the title, and the search engine indexed it as fact. : Released in mid-to-late 1978 as a single
Many DJs create edits for their Patreon or for private DJ pools. The file might only exist as a WAV file shared in a Facebook group dedicated to “Italo Disco Bootlegs.”
One of the reasons resonates so deeply with audiences is the preservation of Lear’s lyrical persona. The lyrics are typically sparse but effective, serving as a hypnotic mantra rather than a complex narrative. : A new documentary titled During the Kazaa/LimeWire
If you have typed into Spotify, Apple Music, or Tidal, you have likely found nothing. Here is why: