Ulterior Motives (song)

1986 song by Christopher and Philip Booth From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Ulterior Motives" is a song recorded by British-Canadian musicians and filmmakers Christopher and Philip Booth, first appearing in the 1986 pornographic film Angels of Passion.[8] It gained popularity since 2021 after a seventeen-second snippet of the song, at the time unidentified, was posted online. The song was colloquially dubbed "Everyone Knows That" (commonly abbreviated EKT) or "Ulterior Motives", both derived from the then-debated lyrics of the snippet.[a]

Published1986
Released
  • 23 June 2024 (re-recorded version)[4]
  • 29 May 2026 (original master from 1985)
RecordedAugust 1985[5]
StudioChristopher and Philip Booth's home studio, Encino, California
Quick facts Song by Christopher and Philip Booth, from the album ...
"Ulterior Motives"
This image of the NextPlay "Pink Funk" boombox became closely associated with the song.[1][2][3]
Song by Christopher and Philip Booth
from the album Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album)
Published1986
Released
  • 23 June 2024 (re-recorded version)[4]
  • 29 May 2026 (original master from 1985)
RecordedAugust 1985[5]
StudioChristopher and Philip Booth's home studio, Encino, California
Genre
Length
  • 3:33 (original 1985 master)
LabelSpooked Music Releasing
SongwritersChristopher Booth, Philip Booth
Producers
Original snippet
The original 17-second snippet of the song that was uploaded to WatZatSong by carl92 in 2021
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The snippet was uploaded to song identification website WatZatSong in 2021 by Spanish user carl92[6][9] who claimed to have discovered the recording in an old DVD backup. He speculated that the file was leftover from when he was learning to record audio. It was shared across various social media sites and internet communities, initiating a widespread search for the full song and information about its origin. In February 2024, The Guardian named it "one of the biggest and most enduring musical mysteries on the internet".[10]

On 28 April 2024, Reddit users identified the snippet's origin as being from Angels of Passion. At the time, the vocals, guitar and synth tracks for the original recording were deemed lost, so the Booth brothers re-recorded the song and included it on their album Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album), released digitally on 23 June 2024 and on CD two weeks later.[11][8][12] The album was credited to Who's Who?, a name the Booth brothers had performed under at various points in the 1980s.

In October 2024, the Booth brothers announced that they were investigating a 'new lead' in the search for the original master of "Ulterior Motives." They suggested that a tape recording of the original version is in the possession of a copyright registration office whom they contacted to request its release. Christopher stated that if the office can return the tape to them, they will release it "as soon as [they] find it".[13] On 28 April 2026, the Booth brothers announced that the original studio master of Ulterior Motives had been found.[14] The following month, the song was included in a scene in the horror film Backrooms.

Background and composition

"Ulterior Motives" was recorded in August 1985 by Christopher and Philip Booth at their home studio in Encino, Los Angeles.[15] Because they were "doing anything to make money", they worked as production assistants on films. One of their friends, who made pornographic films, needed music for one of their works and, according to Christopher, "they gave us quite a bit of money just to give them some music to use behind the scenes". As such, "Ulterior Motives", which was originally recorded as a pop song, was used in the soundtrack of the 1986 pornographic film Angels of Passion.[8] Christopher said that the lyrics of the song were inspired by "a girl that cheated", saying "she was saying one thing and you found out that she did another thing".[8] The song has been described as new wave[6] and synth-pop.[7]

On 7 October 2021, user carl92 uploaded a 17-second snippet of the song to WatZatSong and asked for help identifying it. He wrote that he "rediscover[ed] this sample between a bunch of very old files in a DVD backup. Probably I was simply learning how to capture audio and this was a left over."[16] The song was thought to have been recorded in the 1980s due to its stylistic similarities to pop music of that time, specifically after 1983, since the LinnDrum drum machine and the Yamaha DX7 synthesizer were thought by the sleuths to have been used in the song.[10][17] Some users created reconstructions from the original snippet to have an idea of what the full song could be like, while others theorised that the song was a hoax "planted by a troll".[16] It became WatZatSong's "most infamous and enduring submission", receiving the most comments since the site's launch in 2006.[16]

The song gained popularity online in late 2022 and 2023, and a subreddit dedicated to finding the song and its artist was launched in June 2023.[6] On 7 January 2024, two members of the subreddit were interviewed by French commercial television network TF1.[18]

The search for the song was initially slow to gain traction, but gained a dedicated following over time.[6] Search participants theorised that the source for the song might be a 1990s MTV broadcast, a piece of production music, or a commercial jingle.[6] In August 2023, user u/HeyScarlett found a registered song by the name "Ulterior Motives" in Canadian music database SOCAN under the shareholders' names "Booth Christopher David" and "Booth Philip".[3][19]

Discovery

On 28 April 2024, following a lead from Reddit user u/One-Truth-5867 who had found a similar sounding song by the same artist, user u/south_pole_ball identified the song, including its name and artists.[20] The snippet was discovered to be from the 1986 pornographic film Angels of Passion.[3]

On 29 April 2024, Booth publicly made an Instagram post regarding the discovery of the song's source and the artists.[21] He later uploaded a reel showcasing the original lyrics for the song within his recording studio, revealing that the original lyrics were "everyone knows it" instead of "everyone knows that".[22] In a CBC News podcast, Booth claimed that the song was not written exclusively for the film.[23][24] On 1 May 2024, in a Rolling Stone interview, Booth revealed plans to release a new album with songs similar to "Ulterior Motives"; he had already found the song's original "rhythm track" but not the vocal track.[8] Several days later, he gave an interview with a Redditor, in which he clarified that he located the guitar, bass, and drum tracks, but not the original vocal or synth tracks.[25] In another interview the Booth brothers conducted on 15 May, Christopher stated that he believed the rest of the masters for "Ulterior Motives" to be in the possession of his recently deceased friend, whose niece had planned to send the Booths a box of masters once in the possession of her relative.[26] On 7 June 2024, when responding to a Redditor asking if the vocal track was indeed in that box of masters, Christopher confirmed that the masters had arrived and that he had located other songs from them, but not the vocal track, which he would re-record along with the guitar track.[27]

On 19 June 2024, the Booth brothers released a trailer for Ulterior Motives – The Lost Album, showcasing their new version of "Ulterior Motives".[28] The album was finally released on all streaming platforms on 23 June 2024, under the name Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album). In an Instagram Q&A conducted on 29 June, Christopher confirmed the rhythm track of the original "Ulterior Motives" was used in the remake.[29]

On 28 April 2026, the Booth brothers announced on YouTube that a cassette containing the original 1985 master recording of "Ulterior Motives" had been found. At the end of the video, it was also announced that the song would be released on a bonus CD to be bundled with a DVD containing a documentary about the search.[14] On 29 May 2026, the full version of the master recording was released.

Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album)

Quick facts Studio album by Christopher and Philip Booth (as Who's Who?), Released ...
Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album)
Studio album by
Released23 June 2024[4]
Recorded1980s
2024 (Ulterior Motives re-recording)
StudioChristopher and Philip Booth's home studio, Encino, California
Genre
Length53:19 (digital), 57:07 (CD)
LabelSpooked Music Releasing
ProducerChristopher Saint Booth
Christopher and Philip Booth (as Who's Who?) chronology
Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album)
(2024)
Animal in Me (The Lost Album Vol. 2)
(2024)
Singles from Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album)
  1. "Chemistry"
    Released: 6 June 2024
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Ulterior Motives (The Lost Album) was released on 23 June 2024; it contains both the Booth brothers' remake of its title track as well as twelve other 1980s-era recordings found while searching for the masters to said song. Due to the DistroKid preview being leaked, the album was released ahead of schedule.

Tracklist

All tracks are written by Christopher Saint Booth and Philip Adrian Booth.

More information No., Title ...
No.TitleLength
1."Chemistry"3:18
2."Your Guy"4:12
3."Ulterior Motives (2024 re-recording)"3:48
4."Man Needs Love"2:48
5."So in Love"5:04
6."You Turn Me On"5:00
7."Rock Me to Sleep"6:43
8."Think I'm Gonna Cry"2:17
9."Potion of Emotion"4:18
10."One Last Look"3:37
11."Nothing Lasts Forever"4:20
12."Language of Love"3:50
13."Lie School"4:04
14."Ulterior Motives (2024 re-recording) (Instrumental)[30]" (CD-exclusive bonus track)3:48
Total length:53:19 (digital)
57:07 (CD)
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Personnel

See also

Notes

  1. "Ulterior Motives" was correctly implied to be the song's name, and the lyric turned out to be "Everyone knows it".

References

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