Mr. Scorpio
Mr. Scorpio's JournalGawd, Trump just landed here in Macomb County
Glad that I don't have anywhere to go right now, because he's going to fuck our traffic right up.
How a Long-Lost Indian Disco Record Won Over Crate Diggers and Cracked the YouTube Algorithm
In 2014, Debayan Sen found a mysterious album inside of a trunk in his mothers attic, in Kolkata, India. The red-orange record sleeve featured a picture of his mom as a young woman along with her nameRupain big, bold lettering. That was the day Debayan learned about his mothers past life as a singer.
Suddenly reminded of this discovery last year, Debayan decided to Google the record. The results surprised his family: Rupas first and only album, 1982s Disco Jazz, was selling for hundreds of dollars via sites like Discogs. The day I found the record my mom said, Throw it away. It is just pointless, Debayan remembers. I said, What the hell, you made this, why would you throw this away?
Since then, Disco Jazz has been reissued by Numero Group, the well-established archival label. Aaj Shanibar, one of its four tracks, has also started to spread through the strange rabbithole that is YouTubes recommendation algorithm. The most popular upload of the song now boasts more than 1.5 million views, likely thanks to factors including its eight-minute runtime and its high-energy, ever-shifting instrumentals. Its another example of what happens when, with the benefit of time and technology, lost songs reach a new generation of listeners halfway around the world.