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Italian-Belgian producer Vito Lucente (Junior Jack) created "Stupidisco" as a last-minute addition to his album Trust It . After finishing his planned tracks, he spent three hours producing one final "stupid" record using a disco sample. The track famously samples . The Controversial Video

The house music scene in 2004 was a shimmering landscape of filtered basslines and neon aesthetics, but nothing captured the era’s cheeky, high-energy spirit quite like Junior Jack’s "Stupidisco." While the track itself is a masterclass in French-touch-inspired groove, its legacy is inseparable from the legendary, "uncensored" music video that pushed the boundaries of early 2000s music television. The Beat and the Sample junior-jack-stupidisco-uncensored

(Vito Lucente), who released in 2004—a track that would become as famous for its visual controversy as its infectious groove. The Sound: A Filtered House Masterpiece The Controversial Video The house music scene in

“Every clock has a story,” Alden said, his voice a low chime. “And every story needs a keeper.” “And every story needs a keeper

"Stupidisco" by Junior Jack (Vito Lucente) is a seminal house anthem released in 2004, famously sampling The Pointer Sisters. The "uncensored" version refers to the original music video

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