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Melon
by Matt McGee
U2
fans practically came out of the woodwork to join "Propaganda,"
the band's official fan club, in late 1994/early 1995. U2 wasn't
on tour, so it had nothing to do with the promise of getting
great seats at an upcoming gig. It had everything to do with
Melon, a fan club-only CD filled with nine remixes of
U2 tracks. The CD was issued in conjunction with Issue #21 of
the official fan club magazine. According to a later issue of
the magazine, "Melon was prompted by the Edge's
concern that fans were being forced to stump up increasingly
large sums to keep their collections complete."
Some of the remixes had never before seen the light of day,
and others had only been available before on rare promo-only
releases. The nine tracks on the CD included remixes done by
seven different artists including David Morales, Paul Oakenfold,
Massive Attack, and the Soul Assassins.
Melon
Tracklist
- Lemon (The Perfecto Mix), remixed by Paul Oakenfold and
Steve Osborne
- Salome (Zooromancer remix), remixed by Pete Heller and Terry
Farley
- Numb (Gimme Some More Dignity Mix), remixed by Rollo and
Rob D
- Mysterious Ways (The Perfecto Mix), remixed by Paul Oakenfold
and Steve Osborne
- Stay (Underdog Mix), remixed by Underdog
- Numb (The Soul Assassins Mix), remixed by The Soul Assassins
- Mysterious Ways, remixed by Massive Attack
- Even Better Than the Real Thing (The Perfecto Mix), remixed
by Paul Oakenfold and Steve Osborne
- Lemon (Bad Yard Club Mix), remixed by David Morales
The Melon CD was limited to 20,000 copies worldwide, more than
the typical "limited edition" release. But due to
the nature of the release -- fan club-only, and not available
in any regular retail outlet -- Melon became an instant
collectible.
Bootleg producers picked up on the momentum of the release,
quickly churning out a bootleg version of Melon. How
can you tell the difference? It should be easy: The official
CD is ONLY available in a yellow cardboard sleeve; the bootleg
Melon was typically found in a standard plastic jewel
case.
Bootleg producers also picked up on the growing interest in
remixes and dance music, throwing just about any and every U2
remix and rare track they could find onto a series of bootleg
CDs that shared their names with various other fruits. New "fruitlegs"
(as they're known) are coming out all the time it seems; the
latest list we're aware of is:
- Melon
- More Melon
- Pineapple
- Grapes
- Orange
- Mango
- Kiwi
- Banana
- Papaya
Each of these CDs is labeled to look as official as possible
(of course), and include the same tagline used on the real Melon
CD: "Remixes for Propaganda". Don't be fooled; none
of them are even remotely official.
The official and legitimate version of Melon is a nice
collectible, but what hurts the value of this item is that it's
all studio work by other remixers ... so the casual collector
or casual U2 fan is likely to be more than happy with just the
bootleg version.
One last note: in conjunction with the Melon CD sent
to the fan club, Island also distributed 800 promo 12"
singles to DJs. This vinyl release included four mixes from
the fan club CD, and is more difficult to find -- and slightly
more valuable!
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