Deep Heat (compilation series)

Telstar Records' range of Deep Heat compilation albums were one of the first house music collections to be released by a specialist marketing firm in the United Kingdom.

Format

Launching in March 1989 with the Number 1 album Deep Heat, the brand achieved a successful four-year run and set the footprint for dance music compilations for many years to come. The record company, which had formed in 1982, had achieved modest success with dance-themed multi-artist compilation albums with notable successes in the genre including the Dance Mix collections of 1987 and 1988 and The Best of House '88. What was initially unique about the Deep Heat collections was that they contained exclusive 12" remixes of recent club hits, instead of extended versions of chart hits featured on similar collections such as Now Dance 89 which was charting around the same time as the first Deep Heat albums. The success of the series was partly due to the CD boom of the late 1980s and early 1990s and it was the first time full 12" mixes could be commercially bought on Compact Disc, offering the listener at home a whole new experience of enjoying digitally enhanced dance music. Tracks on the first and longest running release kicked-off with Adeva's version of "Respect" while underground favourites such as "Break 4 Luv" by Raze and Hithouse's "Jack to the Sound of The Underground (Acid Mix)" ensured the album reached the top of the newly created Compilation Chart, the first of many.

Vinyl was still relatively popular with DJs and this format of Deep Heat sold well with each volume being released on vinyl when other companies such as Arcade (who came on board in 1991 with the Groovy Ghetto series) had largely abandoned the format, preferring to concentrate on packing as many tracks as they could onto a 74-minute single CD.

Also unique to the Deep Heat Compilations was that there would often be 'exclusive remixes' of tracks, such as the megamix of Technotronic's biggest hits. This appeared on Deep Heat 7 ~ Seventh Heaven several months before the track was commercially released, while "Exclusive Deep Heat" mixes of tracks by The KLF featured on later editions. It would be these 'exclusive tracks' that would form the focal point of Deep Heat's extensive television advertising campaigns launched by Telstar to promote each release. These would feature clips of videos of the album's biggest club hits, usually with graphics in the style of the album's theme on the sleeve.

Chart success

During 1989, Telstar saw each of their five Deep Heat compilations reach the UK Compilation Chart Top 5, the first four peaked at either #1 or #2, all gaining Gold BPI Awards for UK sales over 250,000. The December release Fight The Flame collected the biggest hits of the year and became one of Telstar's four Platinum selling albums of 1989. An influx of similar releases appeared on rival labels, including Stylus collections, The Right Stuff ~ Remix 89 and Where's The House? who also teamed up with another rival K-Tel for Hip House ~ The Deepest Beats in Town.

During 1990, another five Deep Heat albums were released each with declining popularity. This was due in part to a general swamping of the compilation market of dance collections, with EMI Virgin PolyGram increasing their Ddnce album output with an unprecedented three volumes of their Now Dance spin-off, while a newcomer in the TV-advertised concept-compilation field, Dino Entertainment, would go on to steal the Deep Heat thunder with their Hardcore series that they launched in early 1991. Telstar only added to this 'swamping' effect by launching Get On This! in 1990, and then replacing it with Thin Ice the following year to run concurrently with Deep Heat, often containing very similar track listings. Another factor was the difficulty in licensing tracks from different record companies. By 1991, the major companies were either keeping tracks for their own compilations, or wanting high licensing fees. Furthermore, later editions of the series featured edited 7" Mixes so that each album could contain more tracks, mainly to compete with the other albums on the market. This served however to make them less popular with serious dance music buyers who liked the series' earlier 'underground' feel with rarities and remixes.

Cover artwork

The packaging of each album was also a factor of the album's popularity, with often a striking design gracing the front and interior packaging. Earlier themes revolved around fire, heat, flames, temperatures and burning - metaphorically suggesting the tracks will make the dancefloor burn (an idea used again later with the Megabass track.) Later releases, such as Deep Heat 6 ~ The Sixth Sense used mystic symbols as a theme; Deep Heat 7 ~ Seventh Heaven cools down the collection with heavenly blue skies and angelic artwork; Deep Heat 9 ~ Ninth Life Kiss The Bliss features Egyptian monuments praising heavenly skies and Deep Heat 10 ~ The Awakening contains graphics of an alien being.

Original albums

Year end compilations


In addition, there were two Deep Heat themed compilations collecting the biggest hits of the year. Note all tracks on the year-end collections were the standard radio edits.

Deep Heat 89 ~ Fight The Flame (11/89. #4. 17 wks. Platinum)

Original vinyl album track listing:


Deep Heat 90 (11/90. #3. 12 wks. Platinum)

Original vinyl album track listing:

Brief re-brand

The Deep Heat name was resurrected, albeit briefly, in March 1993, as Deep Heat 93 Volume 1. It differed from the previous releases in that it was a single CD compilation rather than a double collection released between 1989 and 1991.

Re-introduced as a dance companion to the Hits Album series Telstar had effectively relaunched with BMG in January 1993, the Deep Heat version was unsuccessful. It reached #3, bowing out of the Compilation Chart just 7 weeks later. The planned follow-up was never compiled.

Megamixes

An interesting addition to Telstar's marketing of the Deep Heat series was the release of a Megamix of the biggest hits from two albums; Feed The Fever and The Sixth Sense. This was the first time the Megamix had been used to promote a Compilation series, but Telstar would use the gimmick again with the Megabass series (itself a compilation of Megamixes) and a Technotronic Remix Compilation in 1990.

To promote the releases of both Deep Heat 1989 ~ Fight the Flame and Deep Heat 6 ~ The Sixth Sense, Telstar released Megamixes under the guise Latino Rave on 7" and 12" vinyl, and CD single, each featuring the biggest dance hits from each album.

Latino Rave – Deep Heat '89 (12/89. #12. 11 wks)

This Megamix consisted of original excerpts of the following tracks; Pump up the Jam by Technotronic; Stakker Humanoid by Stakker; A Day in the Life by Black Riot; Work it to the Bone by LNR, I Can Dance by Fast Eddie; Voodoo Ray by A Guy Called Gerald; Numero Uno by Starlight; Bango (To The Batmobile) by The Todd Terry Project; Brake 4 Love by Raze; Don't Scandalise Mine by Sugar Bear.

Latino Rave – The Sixth Sense (03/90. #49. 2 wks)

This release coincided with the release of Deep Heat ~ The Sixth Sense and consisted of excerpts of the following tracks; Get Up (Before The Night is Over) by Technotronic; The Magic Number by De La Soul; G'Ding G'Ding (Do You Wanna) by Anna G; Show 'M The Bass by MC Miker G; Eve Of The War by Project D; Moments in Love by 2 To The Power.

A similar marketing ploy was successfully used on the next major Telstar Dance series Megabass.

Other Telstar dance collections

Telstar continued to thrive in the Dance Compilation market with fresh ideas following the demise of the Deep Heat brand in Spring 1993. Some titles ran concurrently.

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