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Mr.Mystery
Static Guru

Registered: Dec 2001
Location: Vantaa
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Apr-20-2018 18:19
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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Not to shit on the dead, I don't' really get this statement (that keeps getting repeated) about him being one of the biggest influences as the timing is all off?
I moved to the USA in 2007 and dance music was exploding. Even the stuff I didn't care for like SHM and EC twins were huge, and Calvin Harris and the Mau5 were killing it on the big stages.
Then 4 years later Avicii cashes in on an already booming scene and now he's one of the most influential?
I get it maybe as an inspiration for Martin Garrix but christ, Joel was trolling Avicii
and Garrix (and their crowd) to their faces for being lowest common denominator tripe.
Don't get me wrong, levels was played at sports events etc, but so was Jump Around and Zombie Nation.
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Apr-21-2018 21:47
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Sykonee
Supreme EMCritic

Registered: Dec 2004
Location: Vancouver, Canada
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| quote: | Originally posted by DJ RANN
Not to shit on the dead, I don't' really get this statement (that keeps getting repeated) about him being one of the biggest influences as the timing is all off?
I moved to the USA in 2007 and dance music was exploding. Even the stuff I didn't care for like SHM and EC twins were huge, and Calvin Harris and the Mau5 were killing it on the big stages.
Then 4 years later Avicii cashes in on an already booming scene and now he's one of the most influential?
I get it maybe as an inspiration for Martin Garrix but christ, Joel was trolling Avicii
and Garrix (and their crowd) to their faces for being lowest common denominator tripe.
Don't get me wrong, levels was played at sports events etc, but so was Jump Around and Zombie Nation. |
Dance music may have been on an uptick in 2007, but it had absolutely no mainstream market penetration compared to the hottest music at the time (crunk/autotune rap, reggaeton, emo/indie rock). Then David Guetta changed all that by getting features from popular rap and R&B singers around 2009, which clued the American Mainstream to House music (again).
That's when things in America started taking off. By the time Avicii's Levels dropped, the US was primed for the 'EDM Revolution', which he capitalized on. Throw in the killer combo of Millenials now coming of age to go to clubs, and he was basically right time, right place for a new generation to discover big, pop club anthems all over again. Others made similar music before him sooner, but they didn't catch the crest of the wave like he did.
Edit: Also, he did successfully do that country-house hybrid thing. Not a new gimmick -- Bob Sinclar had done it not even a half-decade prior -- but again, right time, right place.
___________________
Everyone has an opinion. Mine just happens to be a little more informed than most.
Electronic Music Critic: Near-Daily Ruminations Of Music I Own, In Alphabetical Order!
Last edited by Sykonee on Apr-22-2018 at 00:18
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Apr-22-2018 00:10
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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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Apr-22-2018 11:03
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