TranceAddict Forums

TranceAddict Forums (www.tranceaddict.com/forums)
- DJ Promotion
-- Too Stoned To Mix - Early Progressive Rhythms (1992'93)


Posted by Magnetonium on Sep-22-2011 19:07:

Too Stoned To Mix - Early Progressive Rhythms (1992'93)



With no intro needed, here's a mix of a couple of my favourite progressive house and trance tracks from the era. Obviously there's a lot of Guerilla stuff in here (and mostly UK tracks as well). Hope you like it!

P1280530 - Untitled
[One of my photos ... yeah I take pictures of everything (NOT my flower)]


TRACKLISTING:

01. Leftfield - Song Of Life (The Lemon Interupt Mix) (1992, Hard Hands)
02. Marky B. - Memories Of Love (1993, MCM-Music)
03. Trance Induction - On Starland (1993, Guerilla)
04. Gypsy - I Trance You (1992, Limbo Records)
05. Jaco - Show Some Love (Rhythm Invention Remix) (1992, Warp Records)
06. React 2 Rhythm - I Know You Like It (1992, Guerilla)
07. Spooky - Little Bullet (High Velocity Mix) (1993, Guerilla)
08. Chameleon Project - Feel (Spooky Remix Part 2) (1993, Guerilla)
09. D.O.P. - Together (1993, Guerilla)
10. Sound Clash Republic - Too Stoned To Mix (1993, Shiva Shanti)
11. Herbal Infusion - The Hunter (Returns) (1992, Zoom Records)
12. Time Warp - Birdrave (1992, ESP Records)

ENJOY!!!

Magnetonium - Early 1990s Progressive Mix (House & Trance) by Magnetonium5


Other mixes in my series, "What is electronic music?":

Detroit Techno Mix (1987-1995)
Golden Days of Trance (1995-2001)
Italian Deep House, Part 2 (1988-1996)
Deep N Atmospheric UK Drum & Bass (1992-1997)
Italodance Mix 1995
The Majestic Sound Of Italian House, Part 1 - Deep House (1988-1996)
Speed Garage 'N House Mix (1996-1998)
Mag's Underground Italo-Disco Mix (1980-1985)
Canadian House 1990-1994, Vol. 1
Underground Disco Mix '79
Ambient Trance Compilation '90s
1990s Canadian Eurodance Mix
Oldskool Trance Mix, Vol. 1 (1990-1996) acid / acid trance influences


Posted by Mattsanity. on Sep-22-2011 22:51:

looks impeccable


Posted by Adam420 on Sep-22-2011 23:21:

YES PLEASE!!


Posted by Mattsanity. on Sep-23-2011 02:09:

that was a solid hour. you probably have the best taste on this site.


Posted by ziptnf on Sep-23-2011 02:13:

Oh I'm so in.


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Sep-23-2011 13:54:

I'll give this a listen. Props for trying to play a bit of the lesser-known Guerilla stuff, only four or five obvious classics in there.


Posted by nefardec on Sep-23-2011 14:14:

quote:
Originally posted by Mattinsanity
that was a solid hour. you probably have the best record collection on this site.


fixed


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Sep-23-2011 17:07:

quote:
Originally posted by nefardec
fixed


Is there a difference?


Posted by nefardec on Sep-23-2011 17:17:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Is there a difference?


yes, of course. some people have great taste but not the cash or dedication to support it with physical documentation. it doesn't matter how great your taste is as a dj if you don't have the records to back it up.


Posted by Greeny1210 on Sep-23-2011 18:42:

Nice looking tracklist, will give this a whirl dude.


Posted by Mattsanity. on Sep-23-2011 21:10:

quote:
Originally posted by nefardec
yes, of course. some people have great taste but not the cash or dedication to support it with physical documentation. it doesn't matter how great your taste is as a dj if you don't have the records to back it up.


so who has a great taste but doesn't support it?


Posted by Magnetonium on Sep-23-2011 23:28:


Thanks for the compliments and feedback - as for the support of the scene I think every member of this forum, especially on this thread and similar old-school threads by all users, who still listen to old-school electronic music - they support it by doing that alone. Those who can afford to buy and collect it - they have an advantage - as DJ's in particularly, and maybe selection-wise, but that's it. I never play that card though

So it all comes down to taste - supported by feedback. Thats the most important thing, when you have a good taste in music and you suit the crowd well at the right audience, mood/moment or for the right event type. Because where I live music scene and peoples' taste is absolute remarkable shit. I rarely get to play music like this, apart from maybe an occasional Whigfield track or Culture Beat.

So its nice to see here on TA and on some other music forums (Discogs, etc.) that people still appreciate and like this amazing selection of old-school electronic music. Keep up the vibe, guys. Decades from now these CDs and records will be worth a lot of money and will be sought after. Its seminal material, this stuff will be sampled again and again. And people will be asking you this music. Hey, they ask me now already, even here in my local country/rock-music loving shanty-town.


Posted by Unique2701 on Oct-09-2011 22:17:

this is one amazing mix. great track selection, lots of tracks i didn't know before, which makes it overall sound so refreshing to me. as soon as it was finished playing, i wanted to hit the "play" button again. i also recommended this to another friend who can appreciate the old school prog sound.

by the way, from all your old school themed mixes i pressumed you were some 40 year old dude but you're even younger than me? haha, awesome man


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Oct-10-2011 00:48:

quote:
Originally posted by Unique2701
by the way, from all your old school themed mixes i pressumed you were some 40 year old dude but you're even younger than me? haha, awesome man


Unless you lied in your profile, he's seven months older than you.


Posted by Unique2701 on Oct-10-2011 06:23:

right, guess it was beyond bedtime when I posted that


Posted by ziptnf on Oct-12-2011 17:53:

Really nice mix, man, I enjoyed it. Chunky and funky, just the way I like it.


Posted by RJT on Oct-12-2011 18:02:

Well shit, this looks like the little something different I could use today, and I'm never one to shy away from a set from Mag.

Super in.


Posted by RJT on Oct-12-2011 22:02:

Well that was about as good as could be expected, which largely means it'll join your Italo and Detroit sets in the permanent backup file on the old music external.

Your historical perspective on electronic music might only be rivaled by the likes of montana or SYSTEM-J in quality. If electronic music were a course of study at university, the three of you would chair the department.



Powered by: vBulletin
Copyright © 2000-2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.