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Posted by DJ Intrigue on May-01-2006 21:33:

quote:
Originally posted by Phortastic
1 word: KEVIN YOST


Yes, definitely. His Future Flashback Remixed and Hypnotic Progressions cd's are well worth the listen. Also, I'd like to suggest:

Marlow
Hakan Lidbo
Frankman
Pete Moss
Babak Shayan
Jon Silva
Matthias Tanzmann


Posted by noikeee on May-01-2006 21:43:

quote:
Originally posted by DJ Intrigue
Yes, definitely. His Future Flashback Remixed and Hypnotic Progressions cd's are well worth the listen. Also, I'd like to suggest:

Marlow
Hakan Lidbo
Frankman
Pete Moss
Babak Shayan
Jon Silva
Matthias Tanzmann


Lidbo makes some nice stuff


Posted by Phortastic on May-02-2006 00:34:

quote:
Originally posted by DJ Intrigue
Yes, definitely. His Future Flashback Remixed and Hypnotic Progressions cd's are well worth the listen. Also, I'd like to suggest:



Future Flashback Remixed is best artist album of last year IMO

Brilliant stuff


Posted by benni on May-02-2006 00:55:

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
Anyone else like Chuck Love?. He has had many successful releases on OM Records and Salted. Most of his stuff is brilliant in my opinion! Really groovy, sexy deep house that gets you moving


Check out this set from him:

Chuck Love - Oasis Of Luxury Mix

1. Chuck Love vs Tiger Stripes - Ven Sembar / El Divorcee
2. Li'Sha Project - Feel (Chuck Love's Feelup Vocal)
3. Chuck Love - Something Right
4. Nu Rhythmix - Origins (Neo-Funk Mix)
5. Joey Youngman - Vibes Alive
6. Chuck Love - Spread The Love (Chuck Love's Swing Out Mix)
7. Troydon - Live And Learn
8. Chuck Love - Funky-ass-beat
9. Formibible Force - Affection
10. Bryan Gerrard feat. Whiskey Tornado - Get A Hold Of You
11. Chuck Love - Livin At Night
12. Chuck Love - Beatdown
13. Chuck Love - Soul Symphony


DOWNLOAD LINK:

http://www.chucklove.com/CHUCKLOVEOASISOFLUXURY1.mp3


hey A.J

thanks for that, really enjoyed this mix


Posted by Tayfoon on May-02-2006 02:17:

You guys are confusing Chicago house with Deep House


Chicago house is soulfull cheese



Deep house is dark and driven


Posted by A.J. on May-02-2006 03:09:

Well, that's your opinion.

Let's not forget that many deep house luminaries have actually come from Chicago


Posted by BeeJay on May-02-2006 03:15:

Re: Deep house

quote:
Originally posted by Sami.H
I love this gengre, yet don't know anything about it.

Who are the biggest djs?

Where can I download some proper deep house sets?

Thanks in advance


Who defines such styles? I allready read a few replies with different statements of deep house, what kind of suggestions do you want to hear? It's pretty obvious that nobody exactly knows what it is.


Posted by Allied Nations on May-02-2006 06:02:

quote:
Originally posted by Tayfoon

Deep house is dark and driven


Deep house is not dark!!


Posted by Ishkur on May-02-2006 06:19:

quote:
Originally posted by Tayfoon
You guys are confusing Chicago house with Deep House

Chicago house is soulfull cheese

Deep house is dark and driven


No we're not. This thread is rife with the finest examples of deep house that electronic music can summon......most of the names listed are from San Francisco, not Chicago.

You have an amazing capacity for being consistently wrong, Tayfoon.


Posted by Allied Nations on May-02-2006 06:31:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
No we're not. This thread is rife with the finest examples of deep house that electronic music can summon......most of the names listed are from San Francisco, not Chicago.

You have an amazing capacity for being consistently wrong, Tayfoon.


A large portion are from San Francisco, because that's where deep house moved. The new deep house movement. Actually, SF is really home to a huge ethnic music movement. Lots of crossover stuff over there, lots of fusion music mixing more traditional instruments with "beats" etc. However, There is a huge underground deep house scene in the Northeastern part of the US, which stays local - It's not exported worldwide like the SF deep house scene. It's a different mentality over there.... Unfortunately I'm not knowledgeable enough to be able to start name dropping the big local djs over there.


Posted by Tayfoon on May-02-2006 08:40:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
No we're not. This thread is rife with the finest examples of deep house that electronic music can summon......most of the names listed are from San Francisco, not Chicago.

You have an amazing capacity for being consistently wrong, Tayfoon.



Dont lose your hair over it


Posted by Ishkur on May-02-2006 08:50:

Stop being wrong.


Posted by humilis on May-06-2006 14:55:

By the way, one �me's DJ-set can be downloaded from here

Direct link here

Very good mix IMO.


Posted by Phortastic on May-06-2006 15:48:

If its the �me i think it is, then its not deep house at all. Its minimal / tech house. At least i know his productions are, maybe he spins totally different, but i would be very surprised if he would spin deep house


Posted by humilis on May-06-2006 16:06:

quote:
Originally posted by Phortastic
If its the �me i think it is, then its not deep house at all. Its minimal / tech house. At least i know his productions are, maybe he spins totally different, but i would be very surprised if he would spin deep house


I think you're talking about Rej / Basic Track / Where We At, which aren't deep house. Check out their other productions, I listed some to previous page IMO they're (one kind of) deep house at it's best. Detroitish stuff


Posted by Estella on May-06-2006 16:11:

quote:
Originally posted by humilis
By the way, one �me's DJ-set can be downloaded from here

Direct link here

Very good mix IMO.
On it!

I haven't had a listen, but a good handful of tracks in here:

;D


Posted by Phortastic on May-06-2006 16:30:

quote:
Originally posted by humilis
I think you're talking about Rej / Basic Track / Where We At, which aren't deep house. Check out their other productions, I listed some to previous page IMO they're (one kind of) deep house at it's best. Detroitish stuff


Yeah you are totally right. I was indeed referring to those tracks and didnt realise he made deep house in the past

Checking discogs atm, and he seems to have made quite alot of deep house. Sorry for jumping to conclusions so fast


Posted by Estella on May-07-2006 15:12:

Humilis -

Great, great original set. Very refined. I'll be using this for my long car ride out-of-town. I really like that opener and kept backwarding during a track towards the end of the set, geared more toward tech & minimal.

Thank you! So good.

*Kristian from Ame:
1. Coldcut - Walk A Mile (Henrik Schwarz Remix) - Ninja Tune
2. Kelly Polar - Ashamed Of Myself (Edit) - Environ
3. Frontera - Rouge - Music for Dreams
4. I:Cube - - Versatile
5. Isolee - Plue - Playhouse
6. Kawabata - Kadena - Drum Poet
7. Akabu - Phuture Bound (Ame Remix) - Z
8. Karma - Father (Marcus Worgull Remix) - Compost
9. Rodamaal - Insomnia (Ame remix) - Buzzin Fly
10. ? - Sleepy Hollow - Innervisions
11. Marcelino Galan - House And Art (Charles Webster Remix) - Miso
12. Frank West - Backyard - Joho Lab
13. Chateau Flight - ? - Innervisions
Part 2
13. Chateau Flight - ? - Innervisions
14. Kerrier District - Silhouettes (Dixon Edit) - Rephlex
15. Yello - Greg Wilson Edit - Tirk
16. J.E.N. - Afro Maniac - Freestyle Ltd
*Tim Sweeney takes over:
17. Eddy Grant - Living On The Front Line - Ice
18. Padded Cell - Konkorde Lafayette - DC
19. Moodymann - Foreverevermore - KDJ
20. Tronik House - Multifunction - R&S
21. - Jungle DJ (Prins Thomas Edit) - Rong
22. Lil Louis - I Called U (Why'd U Fall) - Epic
23. Jungle Wonz - Bird In A Guilded Cage - Trax
24. - Yes I'm An Indian 2 - Magick Edit Allstars
25. Wefunk - We're On the Move -



CLASS!
Looking for pt.2 *Found


Posted by Cloud on May-07-2006 15:48:

quote:
Originally posted by Tayfoon
Chicago house is soulfull cheese


?

what the...


Posted by DJ Shibby on May-08-2006 01:46:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
BEFORE ANYONE PIPES IN WITH WRONG, STUPID, OR COMPLETELY IDIOTIC SUGGESTIONS, let me get something across first:

A track with a brooding bassline does not make it deep.

Deep House refers to the groove, the rhythm, the feeling of being chilled, laidback, and smooth/grooved (aka smooved). That's why it's called Deep House. It's a house thing. It's chiefly exported from San Francisco and Chicago. Things that make it extra special that differentiate it from other forms of house (including "progressive"): real instruments. Saxophones, cellos, pianos. It is closer in relation to acid jazz and the swanky, soulful downtempo scene than it does with anything coming out of the asscrack of bloated brit former trance labels.

I like Nick Holder, Sunday Brunch, Miguel Migs, Kevin Yost, Blue Six, The Rurals, Mark Farina, Solar House, Demarkus Lewis, Dimitri from Paris, Fred Everything, Ian Pooley, Eddie Amador. The San Francisco scene has got to be the best Deep House scene in the world. So chill, so real, so right.


It's called Deep House because the groove and bassline are very involving and "thick"; very well patterned sub basslines give strong depth to the lowend. The title of the genre exactly fits what the emotion and feel of the sound is.

Personally, I love Deep House, props to the thread starter. :P


Posted by wotyzoid on Jun-11-2008 16:09:

Bump

Summer puts me in a deep house kinda mood..

Manuscript Records = NICE


Anton Lanski - Fifi


Posted by Max Thomson on Jun-11-2008 16:20:

cates & dpL, recently signed to OM RECORDS


Posted by nefardec on Jun-11-2008 16:56:

always on a deep house tip



please do yourselves a favor and check out david moufang aka 'move d'

here are some sets for you to get started. this guy got started making ambient techno and trance records in the early 90s - a lot of collaborations with peter kuhlmann (pete namlook, 4voice)

he plays a lot of really quirky, tight, soulful space jams that range from dub to minimal techno to blues to deep acid grooves


Download many of his sets here:
http://podcastload.de/


enjoy




quote:
If talent converted into record sales, David Moufang would be a very rich man. His records with partner Jonas Grossmann as Deep Space Network and his own solo releases as Move D are among the furthest outreaches of techno's push towards the stars. Moufang grew up in Heidelberg listening to his parents' collection of early Pink Floyd and Kraftwerk records but the most overwhelming influence on his childhood was outer space, the result of a trip to the cinema with his father to see 2001: A Space Odyssey. "I was space crazy as a child," Moufang told journalist Tony Marcus in 1995, "when the other kids were riding around in their little cars I'd be building my own spacecraft. I'd put in a small engine, put rubber on the wheels so it made some noise and stand there with a walkie-talkie and my headphones on. It was very techno..."
Moufang's grandmothers were both classical concert pianists. He can still remember favourite childhood moments, sitting under the piano as they played, surrounded and lost in sound. By the age of 12, he taken up drums (he eventually went on to study classical percussion) and took up the guitar a few years later, this time taking lessons from two separate jazz guitar teachers. He played guitar in a band called Rivers & Trains well into the '90s. Occasionally he even plied his trade as a DJ, spinning electro, funk and jazz. It wasn't until 1989 that he discovered techno when a friend of his, D-Man, invited him to a club he was running in the industrial suburb of Mannheim. When Moufang walked into the Milk! Club that night - like so many others before and after him - he discovered a scene that changed his life. Discovering Detroit, 808 State, Nexus 21 and the first stirrings of ambient techno, Moufang became a committed clubber. Through D-Man, he met Redagain P who converted Moufang's nickname "Mufti" into the more kinetic Move D.
Moufang's first records were made with Grossmann as Deep Space Network. Their first two albums, EARTH TO INFINITY (1992) and BIG ROOMS (1993) suggested a significant, unpredictable and innovative talent which was confirmed by the release of HOMEWORKS (1993), a Source Records compilation that included solo tracks such as "Pulsar" and "I've Been On Drugs" alongside collaborations with D-Man. Ranging from subtle, Detroit-inflected grooves to wired electronic jazz, Moufang's music seemed to operate on ambience, slow motion and subdued rhythm, a sound that was rooted, as Tony Marcus later pointed out, "in the jazzy, laid-back but still hip-tugging tradition of Larry Heard, Carl Craig's "Microlovr" or "The Wonders Of Wishing" and New York's Burrell Brothers... listening to [Moufang's records] is like a sweet and lazy adventure into sound, a space where time and stress are suspended."
REAGENZ (1994), a collaboration with SpaceTime Continuum's Jonah Sharp, was an astonishing fusion of beautiful, experimental electronics that reached out to a point that even Detroit's most visionary producers hadn't yet achieved. Recorded between Heidelberg and San Francisco, it sounded like pianist Bill Evans might have if he'd grown up surrounded by Star Trek instead of modal jazz.
Moufang's debut album, KUNSTSTOFF (1995), was equally remarkable. Tracks such as "Soap Bubbles" and "In/Out" oscillated between soft, dreamlike textures and the spiked electronics that Detroit was beginning to explore. The glittering production surfaces were a legacy of Moufang's days as a student at the School of Audio Engineering, but the music they encompassed was equally compelling. It was an album full of contrasts - between the jagged drugfloor grooves of, say, "Nimm 2" and the gentle, synthetic lullaby of "Beyond The Machine" or between the pristine sounds Moufang conjured with and the haloes of analogue noise which surrounded others. Amazingly pretty and wildly innovative, KUNSTSTOFF remains one of the most accomplished techno albums to emerge from Europe so far.
The collaborative ventures that followed - including EXPLORING THE PSYCHEDELIC LANDSCAPE (1996) and A DAY IN THE LIVE (1997) with Pete Namlook - preceded an experimental single for Sheffield's Warp label. Moufang had been a big fan of the label's "bleep techno" output in the early '90s and "Cymbelin" was, in some ways, a homage to that sound, twisting beats and synths into a bass heavy groove. But the producer's ability to soften almost any structure with aching prettiness transformed the record into a unique fusion.
Another unique fusion was suggested by the release of CONJOINT (1997). A collaboration between Moufang, jazz veteran Karl Berger, Jamie Hodge (of Born Under A Rhyming Planet) and Gunter "Ruit" Kraus, it was Moufang's most overtly jazzed outing so far, but provided spectacular evidence of his growing abilities as a producer and composer. Currently working on a number of new projects - including a new Deep Space Network album and a second Conjoint album - Moufang continues to explore the boundaries of electronic music.


Posted by rawbound on Jun-13-2008 11:36:

HERE is a pretty new unmixed cd with some great deep house tracks on it (samples included).


Posted by Gauss on Jun-13-2008 12:21:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
BEFORE ANYONE PIPES IN WITH WRONG, STUPID, OR COMPLETELY IDIOTIC SUGGESTIONS, let me get something across first:

A track with a brooding bassline does not make it deep.

Deep House refers to the groove, the rhythm, the feeling of being chilled, laidback, and smooth/grooved (aka smooved). That's why it's called Deep House. It's a house thing. It's chiefly exported from San Francisco and Chicago. Things that make it extra special that differentiate it from other forms of house (including "progressive"): real instruments. Saxophones, cellos, pianos. It is closer in relation to acid jazz and the swanky, soulful downtempo scene than it does with anything coming out of the asscrack of bloated brit former trance labels.

I like Nick Holder, Sunday Brunch, Miguel Migs, Kevin Yost, Blue Six, The Rurals, Mark Farina, Solar House, Demarkus Lewis, Dimitri from Paris, Fred Everything, Ian Pooley, Eddie Amador. The San Francisco scene has got to be the best Deep House scene in the world. So chill, so real, so right.

Interestingly enough, I always thought that deep house and acid jazz had something in common.


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