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MrJiveBoJingles
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: U.S.
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| quote: | Originally posted by Zombie0915
We need a return to craziness, a party you can show up to with blinking lights in your hair and sweat dripping off yer face and have nobody give you a dirty look, I doubt people could even get in the door like that anymore. |
| quote: | Originally posted by Cobalt
Even if the music justified it, going mental to a set is uncool these days. You don't want to sound like some gushy '99 trance kid, do you? |
| quote: | Originally posted by Simplistic
This thread stems from my observations of the typical raver and Trance fan. Um, they aren't that cool, in the fashion sense. Here's a question; why would you leave your house and go to a club, knowing you're going to be drawing attention to yourself by glowsticking/stringing, and dress like a complete slag? Sweat pants? Big baggy shirts? Faded fabrics?
In my opinion, the proper dress code for a Trance dancer is; regular fit jeans, high-top brand new sneakers with big Nike/Puma/whatever logo on them, tight white undershirt with size small/medium t-shirt/shirt on top, armband/s, silver chain around neck, wet/futuristic type hair.
Seriously, some kids are out of shape and oily and very unattractive. They should stay off the dance floor until they lose weight and get a sense of style. |
| quote: | Originally posted by Zombie0915
Kids all clique together acting like a high school dance with the fashion and the judgement, nobody does anything really bold or crazy for fear of standing out too much. I feel like todays EDM parties are about magnifying the world of social pretensiousness, rather than being a rejection of the usual they are instead an exageration of it.
...when I found party reports and stuff about this music it made me think that there was a movement of people out there manifesting my fantasies in real life, but I entered this game too late it seems, by the time I started going to these parties those ideals were dead and all that was left was this really vain bullshit. |
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Apr-14-2008 21:33
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MrJiveBoJingles
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jun 2004
Location: U.S.
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I think this is a general trend that applies to more than just music.
Unguarded enthusiasm and overt expression of emotion are out.
Sarcasm, the appearance of apathy, and ridicule are in. Those are what get you cool points. Their translation into music becomes "subtlety."
EDM is at a musical place similar to where classical was in the early 20th century, IMO.
At that time the fashionable composers felt that it would be "kitsch" to keep using the emotional gestures of the 19th century Romantic composers (similar to how producers today view the excesses of '90s trance). They thought of the melodically rich compositions and sweeping arrangements of those compositions as "old hat," part of an outmoded era of music, quite similar to how that RA reviewer spoke about the new Seaman Renaissance compilation. It was uncool to write such "obvious" stuff anymore. They thought it was beneath them, childish, to attempt to "move" people with music -- or at least it become "uncool" to try to do so in an open and accessible manner.
So what did they do?
They started writing atonal and process music, purposefully divorcing themselves from any close relationship to the emotions of their audiences, and striving for originality by going "beyond" tonality.
The EDM analogue to these atonal works are the complex, effects-laden but melodically sparse sounds adopted by so many "minimal" and tech-house producers. Going "beyond" the easy openness, enthusiasm, and frank expression of emotion that was so prevalent in '90s dance music.
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Apr-14-2008 21:52
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