Come Under My Spell 1981 Exclusive -

This article explores the plot, production eccentricities, historical relevance, and modern physical media revival of this obscure slice of 1981 exploitation cinema. The Plot: Hypnotism, Hijinks, and Retro San Francisco

The “Come Under My Spell 1981 Exclusive” is more than a collector’s item; it’s a reminder of when music felt personal, limited, and a little dangerous. Whether you eventually track down a copy or simply enjoy the lore, let its mystique inspire you to dig deeper into the forgotten corners of 1981—a year when magic still slipped through the analog cracks.

In the age of streaming, the word “exclusive” has lost its weight. Today, it usually means “paywalled for 24 hours.” But in 1981, an exclusive pressing meant you carried the soul of the club in your record bag.

For nearly 30 years, “Come Under My Spell 1981 Exclusive” existed only in memory and on dusty Discogs wantlists. Then, in 2013, a YouTuber named VinylScars posted a 30-second snippet. The internet lost its mind. come under my spell 1981 exclusive

: Carlos Tobalina (credited under his frequent pseudonym, Troy Benny). Screenwriter : Tom Anderson. Cinematography : William Larson J. and Paul Ford.

To understand the power of this exclusive, you have to understand the musical landscape of 1981. The infamous “Disco Demolition Night” of 1979 had driven the genre underground. In its place, a hybrid emerged: . It was leaner, meaner, and heavily reliant on drum machines (specifically the Roland TR-808, released in 1980) and synthesizers.

The “Exclusive” tag in the title isn't marketing hype. It was literal. According to a 1985 article in Disco Golden Years magazine, the pressing plant in Philadelphia produced only . They were intended solely for radio DJs at WKTU and a few select clubs in the Northeast corridor. In the age of streaming, the word “exclusive”

Owning the “Come Under My Spell 1981 Exclusive” meant you had the weapon. DJs who possessed it would guard the record with their lives, often sanding down the label to prevent rival DJs from identifying the track. For dancers, hearing that needle drop on a Friday night at 2 AM was a religious experience. You couldn’t find it at Sam Goody. You couldn’t hear it on rotation. You had to be there .

In 2018, a near-mint copy (VG+ cover, NM vinyl) sold on eBay for . The seller was based in Rome, Italy. How did an exclusive US promo end up in Rome? Another mystery.

Unlike the slashers that dominated the decade, films like this relied on the uncanny . The threat wasn't a man with a knife; it was a loss of control. The "spell" in the title suggests a surrender of the will, tapping into the era's fascination with hypnosis and the occult (a trend solidified by films like The Legacy or The Fury ). It is a film that asks the audience to give in to its bizarre logic, offering a trance-like experience rather than a narrative puzzle. Then, in 2013, a YouTuber named VinylScars posted

, which Fernando uses to seduce various women, culminating in a large-scale hypnotism of an entire wedding party. Production Details

Critics often note the film's "cheesy charm," guerrilla-style filmmaking, and period-specific music as highlights for fans of 1970s and 80s cult aesthetics. Come Under My Spell (1979) - IMDb

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