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SYSTEM-J
IDKFA.

Registered: Sep 2003
Location: Manchester
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| quote: | Originally posted by idoru
I'm 99% certain that you and I have always had different tastes in, and fundamentally different views towards, dance music. There's no singular "right answer" for what we like or why we like it, yet so many of your posts over the years have talked shit about people who take a different approach. What makes you so uncomfortable with the fact that people like different shit than you do? |
You aren't exactly being live-and-let-live with your own posts, are you? I'm sure he can and will shoot back that you're the one "talking shit" about Cercle for taking a different approach to dance music than you.
And to be honest, this moral panic about "the DJs being bigger than the music" is pretty tired by now. The DJs have been bigger than the music, whatever that means, for 30 years now. They were bigger than the music before you'd ever been to a club. Somehow the culture endures.
Regarding Cercle and the opening question, which was just a poor excuse to farm clicks on the OP's blog, there are a few things to say. Firstly: there will never be a "new Essential Mix". The Essential Mix is a cultural artefact from a different era, when hearing DJs mixing (mostly) uninterrupted for hours at a time was a rarity. Cercle is just one of many DJ mix platforms trying to distinguish itself from the vast online crowd through increasingly photogenic and/or "exclusive" settings. In this sense it's more of a Indiana Jones mimicry of the Boiler Room than anything resembling the Essential Mix.
Really, I think the concept is essentially harmless. It taps into one of the oldest ideals of dance music culture, which is the desire to stage parties in the most unusual and exotic locations, a desire which has lead all kinds of genuinely "underground" entities to shlep into deserts and rainforests and beaches to hold raves and psy trance gatherings down the years.
9 months ago it would be very easy to write sneering tracts about this outlaw spirit being commodified and commercialised for the inauthentic Instagram generation, yadda yadda yadda, but since we're all confined to our homes for the foreseeable future and don't have any opportunity to do this shit authentically, there's suddenly something quite escapist and uplifting in being able to sit on your sofa and watch two blokes play mediocre tech house from the top of some spectacularly impassive geological marvel.
___________________
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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Oct-23-2020 21:58
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idoru
You Can Call Me Al

Registered: May 2004
Location: Cascadia
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| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
You aren't exactly being live-and-let-live with your own posts, are you? I'm sure he can and will shoot back that you're the one "talking shit" about Cercle for taking a different approach to dance music than you. |
I can agree that that is the sentiment conveyed given the tone I used in my first comment, but that's not what I had intended. The thread asks us about our opinions of Cercle, and that's what my first comment was - my opinion of Cercle and nothing more. I haven't slagged anybody off or judged anyone for liking it, nor did I suggest that people shouldn't be watching it, though in hindsight that implication is certainly there. That's my fault for shooting from the hip.
I think Cercle is garbage, everyone else is welcome to enjoy it if they like. Hell, if Cercle's content inspires other people to dig deeper then fuck yeah, but it's still not for me. After all, one man's trash is another man's treasure. 
| quote: | | And to be honest, this moral panic about "the DJs being bigger than the music" is pretty tired by now. The DJs have been bigger than the music, whatever that means, for 30 years now. They were bigger than the music before you'd ever been to a club. Somehow the culture endures. |
I completely agree with that in the broad sense, that's just how I personally enjoy it. There are clubs, artists and promoters that share that view, and there are others that don't. Both will always endure and there will be plenty of outlets for whatever we all like.
Last edited by idoru on Oct-23-2020 at 23:04
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Oct-23-2020 22:44
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