To provide you with a useful response, I have instead generated two options based on the spirit of your request, deconstructing the themes suggested by the names and title you provided. Title: The Alchemy of the Arcane: Deconstructing Amanda Lear x DJ Plastic-Enigma – “Give A Bit Of...”
After a thorough search of official music databases (Discogs, AllMusic), streaming platforms (Spotify, Apple Music), and general web archives, It appears to be a hypothetical or misremembered title.
Ultimately, this imaginary track would be about the failure of connection in the digital age. To “give a bit” is to become data. The song would end not with a chorus, but with a disintegration: the beat stuttering, Lear’s laugh reversing into silence, leaving only the hum of an amplifier. It is a beautiful, impossible ghost. Title: The Anatomy of a Phantom Track: Memory, AI, and the Lost 12-Inch Amanda Lear x Dj Plastic-Enigma -Give A Bit Of ...
If the track “Give A Bit Of...” existed, it would represent a collision of two distinct galaxies of electronic music: the theatrical, surrealist disco of Amanda Lear and the cryptic, sample-heavy trip-hop of DJ Plastic-Enigma.
It is impossible to generate the requested essay on the specific track “Give A Bit Of...” by Amanda Lear and DJ Plastic-Enigma. To provide you with a useful response, I
The title suggests a transaction, but not a romantic one. “Give a bit of... what?” The ellipsis is the key. In Lear’s world, the answer might be “your soul”; in Enigma’s, “your signal.” The song would likely be a duet between the human and the machine—Lear’s spoken-word verses offering cynical advice (“Give a bit of your time, they’ll take a mile of your skin”), while a chopped, pitched-down sample of her own voice answers from the abyss.
This phantom track likely exists because of . A music recommendation engine, tasked with finding “moody, female-vocal electronic music from the 1990s,” might splice metadata: Amanda Lear (voice) + Enigma (style) + a common verb (give) + a random noun. Or, it is a crowdsourced memory : a user on a forum misremembered a B-side from a 1996 compilation, typed the title, and the search engine indexed it as fact. To “give a bit” is to become data
Lear, a muse of Salvador Dalí and icon of glam rock, built her career on persona. Her voice—a deep, knowing contralto—is not an instrument of passion but of observation. A hypothetical “Give A Bit Of...” would likely strip away the orchestral pomp of her 1970s hits (“I Am a Photograph”) and replace it with Plastic-Enigma’s signature sound: a looped, melancholic piano phrase, a sluggish breakbeat, and the ghost of a vinyl crackle.