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-- Silence destroyed trance
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| Originally posted by PezCore what's trance ? |
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| Originally posted by Darkarbiter It was the homosexuals, if they didn't exist... unicorns with rainbows wouldn't exist and therefore trance wouldn't be so cheesy. |
Jenna Jameson killed trance when she shaved her pussy. I really liked that triangle 
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| Originally posted by SYSTEM-J This applies to all club music. "The real problem for house music is that it has never had any critical forum. Those few, like myself, who pipe up when things are patently, obviously fucked up are shouted down by DJs and promoters who should know better. There is still much to celebrate within house, but when the crap rises to the surface, most are either too busy networking, counting their own money or getting shitfaced to speak up. True constructive critisism is born of concern and a dream of just how good things could be. House music doesn't need any more people brushing things under the carpet. It needs more people who are in a position to change things by making their private post-club fears public." -John McCready. |
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| Originally posted by daeus Wow some pretty interesting articles, oldskool club critics always goes back to Chicago and/or the Haciender in Manchester amongst other things lol. I think clubbings changed allot since this guy was involved though, hence the dated articles. I'm in Manchester on Friday for Pete Tong/Chucky |
Robert Miles killed trance. Also because his music began an era where everyone copied the big selling names in EDM.
I still like some of his tunes though
The digital age killed trance
Ferry Corsten killed it.
Trance-Addict.com killed trance.
OLIVER LIEB KILLED TRANCE!!! look into his history its true!
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| Originally posted by Beats and Beeps OLIVER LIEB KILLED TRANCE!!! look into his history its true! |
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| Originally posted by Voci Trance-Addict.com killed trance. |
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| Originally posted by BlueSky Your haircut killed trance. |
Ah silence.. ace track and one of the most influential ever. I reckon this record more than any other signified the sound of the late 90s early millennium and the rise of rave culture in america. I remember sasha & digweed dropping the sanctuary remix and everybody going mental. I even saw people cry. I remember a good looking girl breaking down in tears on the dancefloor.
While this record did not kill trance I reckon this record was indeed about death.
Give me release
Witness me
I am outside* She is knocking on heavens door
give me peace* asking for peace
Heaven holds a sense of wonder and I wanted to believe that I get caught up when the rage in me subsides
In this white wave* everything turns white when you die I am sinking� into death In this silence* Everything turns silent when you die
In this white wave In this silence I believe* she is embracing death
I have seen you in this white wave you are silent
You are breathing but in this white wave I am free.
Another brill and equally influential trance anthem that came out a few years later called As The Rush Comes also explored the theme of death.
Traveling somewhere, could be anywhere
There's a (coldness in the air*) (*death) but I don't care
We drift deeper into sound* they are drifting into death
Life goes on* the words life goes on often used after somebody has passed away
We drift deeper
Into the sound feeling strong* they are not afraid to die they are embracing death
So bring it on
So bring it on
She even sings it on the hook:
* Embrace me
Surround me as the rush comes
Records like silence, as the rush comes, rapture were indeed dark however these were not the death of trance. What killed trance is that it got too bloody big for its own good. The proliferation of music in the 90s, the internet that came and allowed people to network on an international level, the rise of pear to pear sites like napster, the accessible sound of trance which was catchy coupled with the album orientated marketing of labels such as global underground (The 1997 boxed CD GU 007 Paul Oakenfold new york sold 170.000 copies in the US alone) meant that many newcomers were entering the scene and were no longer interested in what was going on in the mainstream american scene as they happily existed outside its sphere of influence. When a subculture running parallel to the mainstream gets too big for its own good it gets shut down with some unseen media hand fueling the process. This is what killed trance mate. Not silence. What killed trance was the endless propaganda in mixmag every month about how it is no longer fashionable to enjoy it. What killed trance was the loss of influential clubs in the uk and abroad that were literally forced at gunpoint to shut down. What killed trance was the endless praise for the shallow music that went on to replace it. What killed trance was the deliberate deception towards artists and label owners from the industry coupled with the lies about how digital distribution has the answer to the decline of record sales.
But let me ask you this, I reckon if digital distribution and experimental music really had the answer and they had about 6 years of it shouldn't we be talking about the increase in label revenue? Shouldn't we be seeing the dance industry recovering from the loss of physical distribution? Shouldn't we be seeing new people entering the scene that are there for the music rather then there for the drugs? But no... everytime we question these schemes we are seen as being blinkered to the bollocks they are force feeding us. There there is a big elephant in the room and mate I reckon this is a classic case of destroy and rebuilt. What we are seeing here is some dodgy media agenda. Erase the scene and replace it with a new one you want to take credit for and the people are too gormless to know any better.
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| Originally posted by Wordsforlove Ah silence.. ace track and one of the most influential ever. I reckon this record more than any other signified the sound of the late 90s early millennium and the rise of rave culture in america. I remember sasha & digweed dropping the sanctuary remix and everybody going mental. I even saw people cry. I remember a good looking girl breaking down in tears on the dancefloor. |
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| Originally posted by orTof�nChiLd +1 |
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| Originally posted by Wordsforlove Records like silence, as the rush comes, rapture were indeed dark however these were not the death of trance. What killed trance is that it got too bloody big for its own good. The proliferation of music in the 90s, the internet that came and allowed people to network on an international level, the rise of pear to pear sites like napster, the accessible sound of trance which was catchy coupled with the album orientated marketing of labels such as global underground (The 1997 boxed CD GU 007 Paul Oakenfold new york sold 170.000 copies in the US alone) meant that many newcomers were entering the scene and were no longer interested in what was going on in the mainstream american scene as they happily existed outside its sphere of influence. When a subculture running parallel to the mainstream gets too big for its own good it gets shut down with some unseen media hand fueling the process. This is what killed trance mate. Not silence. What killed trance was the endless propaganda in mixmag every month about how it is no longer fashionable to enjoy it. What killed trance was the loss of influential clubs in the uk and abroad that were literally forced at gunpoint to shut down. What killed trance was the endless praise for the shallow music that went on to replace it. What killed trance was the deliberate deception towards artists and label owners from the industry coupled with the lies about how digital distribution has the answer to the decline of record sales. But let me ask you this, I reckon if digital distribution and experimental music really had the answer and they had about 6 years of it shouldn't we be talking about the increase in label revenue? Shouldn't we be seeing the dance industry recovering from the loss of physical distribution? Shouldn't we be seeing new people entering the scene that are there for the music rather then there for the drugs? But no... everytime we question these schemes we are seen as being blinkered to the bollocks they are force feeding us. There there is a big elephant in the room and mate I reckon this is a classic case of destroy and rebuilt. What we are seeing here is some dodgy media agenda. Erase the scene and replace it with a new one you want to take credit for and the people are too gormless to know any better. |
what kills trance is that there so few people which knows what is trance ... including the DJs themselves and that is a shame.
Most people nowadays don t want to argue on which style is what record ... so everything is mislabelled.
And i think it was PvD the first to kill trance with "nothing but you" and "another way", i used to call it dance music when i was young, i was very surprised later he was known as a famous trance artist.
(and i won t even speak of ATB
)
Trance killed silence.
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| Originally posted by Wordsforlove Records like silence, as the rush comes, rapture were indeed dark however these were not the death of trance. What killed trance is that it got too bloody big for its own good. |
Yes, it definitely got too big for its own good. The only people who I know that even SEEM to be aware of what trance is even argue its definition amongst themselves. Not to mention that there is simply wayyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy too much garbage to sort through when you're trying to find good music.
One of the posters above me has a sig that reads, "Nobody gives a shit about your SoundCloud" or something like that. That hits the nail on the head.
Every damn time I turn around, I'm getting spammed with all kinds of people trying to promote themselves. I see it on TV, I hear it on the radio, I even read it on this website. As much as I feel like a douche for saying this, sometimes I just wish all these self-centered bastards would shut the fuck up.
I've spent years investing in DJ and production equipment, only to have the entire fucking scene go out with a whimper, because it was flooded with too much garbage and shameless self-promotion. Too many people all claiming to be the next biggest thing.
Yeah, I'd say I'm pretty damn frustrated right now. But it's from the heart, all the way. My apologies.
I'll be happy if I can simply host a weekly mix session in my bedroom studio, with only a few of my friends in attendance...and that's if they aren't already busy trying to host something of their own. There can be no audience if everyone is constantly trying to be in the spotlight.
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| Originally posted by 5HT I agree with you about Silence, but I never found As the Rush Comes to be dark. It's a beautiful tune, but it's clearly about taking ecstacy. "coldness in the air" I always interpreted to be about goosebumps, chill feelings, etc, not death. Plus there were other positive lyrics like "feeling strong". Btw - first post here in 5 years. What killed trance? Me leaving |
No one killed trance, 1000's and 1000's of people still go to trance events and support it today and is still the best version of EDM. Of course it has changed thats life, shit happens.
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| Originally posted by Tipsymacstagger and is still the best version of EDM. |
lol In my house :P
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