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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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Apr-03-2016 18:17
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DJ RANN
Supreme tranceaddict
Registered: May 2001
Location: Hollywood....
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| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Au contraire. I remember well the era when you could walk into a Tesco and find trance mix compilations side-by-side with Now That's What I Call Music 45. |
So lets say we take the anecdote as factual, you're confirming the point, NTWICM 45 was released in......wait for it... mid 2000 - and as I said was the point that Tiesto had sold out. In fact by 1999, the scene was dying, all the weekly trance clubs were closing apart from a few hangons up north and MoS and by 2001 it was all but dead.
| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
There were two Tiesto tracks on the first mix CD I ever bought when I was 13. He was a figurehead of trance at its most commercial. The notion that he was as respected as the likes of Jeff Mills, Andrew Weatherall or Laurent Garnier is risible. |
He became the figurehead of commercial dance music, but for the "golden age" of trance he was well liked and I would go as far as to say respected. It's a little silly to try to compare him to Mills or Laurent garnier but I think you know that.
I know it's cool to bash that ilk now, but it's a little rich given that he was playing alongside Sasha, BT et al in their prime.
Again, I really have no dog in the race of defending him but given that you were 13 in what, 2000? 2001? and never saw or hear Tiesto in a club, you're really talking about a time that you have no personal reference for. In fact, go get some old copies of Mixmag or flyers for events of the time and you'll see that tiesto wasn't the commercial vehicle he later became.
Last edited by DJ RANN on Apr-03-2016 at 19:46
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Apr-03-2016 19:30
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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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| quote: | Originally posted by DJ RANN
He became the figurehead of commercial dance music, but for the "golden age" of trance he was well liked and I would go as far as to say respected. It's a little silly to try to compare him to Mills or Laurent garnier but I think you know that. |
Well, you did say:
| quote: | | Tiesto, his later sellout notwithstanding, was as respected at one point as any other big name in the dance music. |
As far as I'm aware, Tiesto wasn't doing anything radically different in 1998-1999 to what he was doing in 2000-2002. Certainly all his tracklists, mix CDs and live sets look like exactly the same kind of commercial supermarket trance right through that spell.
From everything I've read, heard and listened to from that era, my impression is firmly that trance fans were convinced they were the centre of clubbing cool in that era, but every other scene was face-palming hard. An enduring affliction of trance fans, it seems.
___________________
Mixes:
> Maximum Elevation [Progressive House]
> DI.FM 26th Anniversary Guest Mix [Progressive House]
> Live @ Dance:Love:Hub London, 11.10.2025
> Higher Peaks [Progressive House]
> Dance:Love:Hub Afterparty (The Return) 23.11.24
Like these sets? Come see me play live at Kibosh in Manchester: https://www.instagram.com/kibosh.mcr/
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Apr-03-2016 19:59
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Jon_Snow
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
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| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
You're talking bullshit, as ever, IGK. There are countless DJs, musicians and people of all creative paths who've managed to maintain what originally made them great for decades without going to shit. Their style might change with the times, but that doesn't automatically equate to becoming more calculatingly accessible.
There's nothing more annoying than a DJ or producer or anyone who's creative output you used to revere and rely upon blatantly selling themselves down the river and descending into shit. Some people just lose their touch and that's understandable because everyone is human, but when someone capable of greatness willingly waters themselves down to make more cash (when they weren't exactly broke to begin with) you have lost a source of musical joy for no better reason than greed.
Granted, none of the DJs being discussed in this thread were any good to begin with and nor were they well-respected, but that's Woony's argument and nothing to do with yours. |
I spend my time enjoying the music I like instead of bitterly complaining that someone sold out. I don't use music to enhance my status or identity. It's the highest form of ignorance as a spectator to presume your opinion or taste has any significance outside of yourself. You just come off as an arrogant self important ass.
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Apr-03-2016 22:40
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Jon_Snow
Guest
Registered: Not Yet
Location:
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| quote: | Originally posted by MSZ
Im here to argue about Tiesto |
I don't even know why I'm defending him.
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Apr-03-2016 23:37
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Alex
Suck a cheetah's dick

Registered: Apr 2005
Location: Montreal
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| quote: | Originally posted by Jon_Snow
I spend my time enjoying the music I like instead of bitterly complaining that someone sold out. I don't use music to enhance my status or identity. It's the highest form of ignorance as a spectator to presume your opinion or taste has any significance outside of yourself. You just come off as an arrogant self important ass. |
Have to agree.
Attachment to an artist will end up pissing you off in the future, unless they just die before what you liked about them changes, or your tastes change.
I used to get all militant about EDM and other music and throw out the sell-out bombs and all that crap, but I grew up and realized that there are about a billion different artists out there and if I don't like the direction of an artist I previously enjoyed, no biggie, I find new stuff to enjoy.
And while I frequently find your posts amusing, System-J, you come across as militant about music.
Shit sounds different to different people. All musicians that have audiences have a certain amount of talent, what they choose to do with that talent is up to them and them alone, and doesn't make the music I once enjoyed bad.
The notion that an artist that influenced you went on to become mega rich and apply their talents elsewhere is an affront to music and their potential is petty. Maybe their true talent was working with other people, organizing projects, seeing talent in others, spotting trends or in rare cases they just felt like doing Jesus poses for pictures.
Chances are fans of music don't personally know the ambitions, desires or the hidden talents of the artists they love.
Also, priorities change. Devoting your entire life to pleasing an existing fan base will take an enormous toll, and for DJs that you consider "wealthy" that went on to an easier path, well you probably have no idea what it's like to devote a huge part of your life to pleasing small groups of people in dozens of countries. They have to travel, please people, travel, worry about their girlfriends getting jealous and banging stock brokers, travel, and all of a sudden that perceived wealth that we thought they had doesn't seem as significant because they've fucked themselves in all manner of ways.
___________________
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Apr-04-2016 00:19
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