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slinkyhead
Still a tranceaddict.....

Registered: Apr 2003
Location: Kilburn, London, England
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Re: sorry if this is off track...
| quote: | Originally posted by Digital Aura
What about Europe...
I know the best DJ's are Dutch, but is the biggest and best Trance scene also in Holland?
Just wondered cuz lil ol' me has NEVER NEVER been to a club before and I will be in Holland this coming summer for 2 weeks and thought I'd like to check into this.
hey, lemme know! |
you'd be surprised how little clubs there are that have the big name djs playing in Holland, but if your here in the sunmmer then your in luck. EVERY weekend in the summer there is a big trance/dance outside festival with one of the BIG 3 (AvB, Tiesto, Ferry) always in attendance. In the UK the trance scene has gone back to its roots.
In 2000/1 every bar/club played trance and it got way too big. Now many of the big nights have all but vanished eg. Gatecrasher, Cream, MoS. Everyweek there is a quality trance line-up somewhere in the country mainly Godskitchen, Passion, Slinky, Gatecrasher (monthly Sheffied/London) but you need to travel now. IMO the scene is a lot friendlier now as people go coz they like the music as oppposed to it being the "cool" thing to do!
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Dec-04-2003 21:10
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Cobalt
Trance Isn't Trance

Registered: Apr 2002
Location: Vancouver, BC
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The US scene -- much smaller in scale than the scene in Europe, first off -- seems to be in the midst of conflict between the commerical European big-hitters such as Oakenfold, Tiesto, Paul van Dyk, Ferry, etc., and the native underground such as Christopher Lawrence, particularly here in California. You have fans of EDM who have come in contact with the music via the European media outlets versus the acidy techno and breaks that have been around for years from the desert raves.
I remember back in 2001 or so, when the electronica section in my local CD store grew fivefold, the United States was billed by many as the Next Big Thing in electronic music. I think Bunkka was Oakie's attempt to catch this failed wave, as the album has seen much more popularity here, I think, than anywhere in Europe.
Then you had the Gabriel & Dresden and Markus Schulz crowd emerge, which I think is going to develop into the American variety of 'mainstream' trance and progressive, perhaps to forge a new genre or two as well. I'd rather see the dark and hard style of underground trance, which only Lawrence has really broken out of, become more popular in the United States, but in doing so it might lose that very sound which makes it unique, restricting it indefinitely to a supporting role.
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Dec-04-2003 22:17
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