Originally posted by Halcyon+On+On
No, but I also don't drink out of a fucking sippy-cup you goddamned Appalachian.
Sep-01-2009 15:41
InDeepSpace
Junglelist Soldier
Registered: Dec 2003
Location: Baltic Sea
quote:
Originally posted by Guest
please give examples of how he advanced genres
I think Alcatraz - Give Me Luv was setting a new trand in music. Also their mix of De'Lacy - Hideaway was big. In the 90ties deep dish owned. I dont forgive them Flashdance.
Last edited by InDeepSpace on Sep-01-2009 at 21:56
Sep-01-2009 19:11
bas
Stronger Lover
Registered: Jul 2004
Location: Here I Am Baby
quote:
Originally posted by Adam420
So is their label still around or what?
Yes, Yoshitoshi is still around.
Back when Deep Dish was in their stride they were a fantastic DJ/production team. Their Toronto & Moscow GUs were pretty fun CDs, and yes their tracks/remixes had a pretty big pop appeal but it was FUN pop appeal. They could play deep/housey when they wanted to and they could play kinda commercial when they wanted to, and they did what they did very well. It's obvious, today, that Sharam had the pop appeal and Dubfire had the club appeal (not necessarily 'underground').
Unfortunately for them it will take a long time to escape the Deep Dish stigma, and there will always be a divide among fans of Deep Dish when they were Deep Dish and Ali & Sharam. Maybe in the next 5-10 years when the current, fresh group of clubbers has been around for a while they will no longer have the argument of "what happened to Deep Dish ". It's pretty obvious that anyone that likes Dubfire or Sharam on their own vs them as Deep Dish has only been into dance music for about 4-5 years
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Sep-01-2009 19:45
refuge
That 303 Guy
Registered: Dec 2002
Location: Somewhere in L.A.
quote:
Originally posted by bas
Yes, Yoshitoshi is still around.
Back when Deep Dish was in their stride they were a fantastic DJ/production team. Their Toronto & Moscow GUs were pretty fun CDs, and yes their tracks/remixes had a pretty big pop appeal but it was FUN pop appeal. They could play deep/housey when they wanted to and they could play kinda commercial when they wanted to, and they did what they did very well. It's obvious, today, that Sharam had the pop appeal and Dubfire had the club appeal (not necessarily 'underground').
Unfortunately for them it will take a long time to escape the Deep Dish stigma, and there will always be a divide among fans of Deep Dish when they were Deep Dish and Ali & Sharam. Maybe in the next 5-10 years when the current, fresh group of clubbers has been around for a while they will no longer have the argument of "what happened to Deep Dish ". It's pretty obvious that anyone that likes Dubfire or Sharam on their own vs them as Deep Dish has only been into dance music for about 4-5 years
+1 That deserves a Family Guy Jesus Dadadandandadadadan!