Come Under My Spell 1981 Exclusive File

In the age of algorithmic abundance, where every song ever recorded is supposedly two clicks away, “Come Under My Spell” stands as a rebel. It demands effort. It demands night drives in the rain, flipping through dusty milk crates, and the quiet thrill of hearing that first crackle of vinyl before Escher’s voice materializes from the noise floor.

. While it was originally released theatrically around 1979–1981, it gained modern recognition through an "exclusive" restoration by the cult-cinema preservation label Vinegar Syndrome , which released it as part of their Letterboxd Plot and Production come under my spell 1981 exclusive

released their synth-pop masterpiece Speak & Spell . In the age of algorithmic abundance, where every

Unlike the later 1983 commercial re-release (which featured a heavy, overproduced saxophone solo), the is raw. It is vulnerable. The track opens not with a drum machine, but with the sound of rain against a window pane—an auditory cue that producer Arthur “Midnight” Croft allegedly recorded during a thunderstorm in Soho, London. It is vulnerable