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Cobalt
Trance Isn't Trance

Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Vancouver, BC
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"Proto-trance", that is, music which precipitated the "formal" foundation of trance as a coherent genre in 1990-92 Frankfurt, can be classed in four major groupings:
1. Ambient. Tangerine Dream, Brian Eno, and their many imitators in years following laid the foundation for repetitive, atmospheric textures. Though this was usually beatless, some ambient productions from the late 70s and 80s do use repetitive elements of percussion. Some parts of Phaedra sound remarkably trance-like, and that was 1974.
2. Belgian EBM / New Beat. A lot of industral music from late-80s Belgium was beat-driven, and incorporated repetitive synthesizer loops. Belgian New Beat heavily influenced the German club scene in the late 80s, just prior to trance, and had a shaping influence on its emergence. The classic example of a direct connection between EBM and trance is Force Legato - System by Oliver Lieb and Torsten Fenslau, which was released in 1989.
3. Techno. The diaspora of techno directly preceded the emergence of trance. Stuff from Derrick May and Juan Atkins, which ignited the German techno scene in Berlin around the same time, also shaped trance. Listen to Rhythim Is Rhythim - Strings Of Life, from 1987, which is quite smooth, rolling, and repetitive.
4. The KLF. Okay, maybe acid house. But seriously, they deserve their own category.
I would be tempted to include house selections, but house really didn't affect trance until progressive house started crossing over in the early 90s. If anthing, it was trance that affected progressive house.
Last edited by Cobalt on Sep-12-2006 at 06:17
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Sep-12-2006 05:16
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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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Sep-12-2006 10:06
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FirstBorn
Supreme tranceaddict

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: London, UK
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Sep-12-2006 15:55
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Spacey Orange
still loves trance.

Registered: Jul 2004
Location: California
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| quote: | Originally posted by Cobalt
2. Belgian EBM / New Beat. A lot of industral music from late-80s Belgium was beat-driven, and incorporated repetitive synthesizer loops. Belgian New Beat heavily influenced the German club scene in the late 80s, just prior to trance, and had a shaping influence on its emergence. The classic example of a direct connection between EBM and trance is Force Legato - System by Oliver Lieb and Torsten Fenslau, which was released in 1989. |
this is exactly what i'm looking for: e-beat, new beat-, ebm-influenced trance. i picked up http://www.discogs.com/release/184780 recently and it rectainly rocks, specially New Age.
force legato is good too. i have more e-beat, new beat, ebm stuff but need more trancelike artists, compilations, and tracks influenced by those genres, specifically from the late 80s to early 90s. any direction helps.
___________________
UnauthorizedTranceAddict Youtube Channel where I post older mixes from the TA DJ Promotion Forum
My mixes:
Still up:1:2
Down:3:4:5
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Sep-12-2006 20:48
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Cobalt
Trance Isn't Trance

Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Vancouver, BC
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| quote: | Originally posted by Spacey Orange
this is exactly what i'm looking for: e-beat, new beat-, ebm-influenced trance. i picked up http://www.discogs.com/release/184780 recently and it rectainly rocks, specially New Age.
force legato is good too. i have more e-beat, new beat, ebm stuff but need more trancelike artists, compilations, and tracks influenced by those genres, specifically from the late 80s to early 90s. any direction helps. |
Ishkur could probably help you more here than I could. He knows a good deal about the EBM/trance crossover, whereas I've only recently explored the connection.
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Sep-12-2006 21:07
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Cobalt
Trance Isn't Trance

Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Vancouver, BC
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| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Is this for historical reasons, or would you be happy with anything from the era that sounded like it could be trance if it worked hard at school and ate its greens? Because there's a whole bunch of that stuff. |
Progressive house didn't really exist until about 1991, so it couldn't have been a precursor to trance. The two genres developed in parallel, interbreeding at places (such as Guerilla Records), until finally merging around 1994-95. But this merging was really more of a case of progressive house subsuming trance than trance subsuming progressive house. Li Kwan - Point Zero, Libra pres Taylor - Calling Your Name, and The Qat Collection are all considered classic progressive trance records, but Matt Darey, BT, Taylor, and Sasha all came from progressive house background. Most "true" trance artists left for techno (Hardfloor, Sven Vath), or adopted progressive house structures (Paul van Dyk).
Strictly speaking, house didn't play a huge role in the development of Frankfurt trance, save for what house Belgian Beat might have contained. The whole progressive movement of the mid-nineties, on the other hand, was based on progressive house adopting trance.
Last edited by Cobalt on Sep-12-2006 at 22:06
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Sep-12-2006 21:57
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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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Sep-12-2006 22:06
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Subtle
Subreme tranceaddict

Registered: Nov 2002
Location: Urban Shakedown
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Sep-12-2006 22:16
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