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Lustral - Broken (pg. 3)
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| DJ Mikey Mike |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj_kane
ive seen people on here call agnelli and nelson cheese yet they are not even similar to ian van dahl. broken is a commerical track imo. it was played on radio after pop songs. that to me puts it in the commercial market. |
You really are a flid. El Nino, Everyday, etc. used to get radio play after 'pop songs' as well. |
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| dj_kane |
| quote: | Originally posted by DJ Mikey Mike
You really are a flid. El Nino, Everyday, etc. used to get radio play after 'pop songs' as well. |
lucky you i havent. |
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| SYSTEM-J |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj_kane
commercial dance is a genre you ignoramous |
Well for a start you're wrong there. Secondly, even assuming that's true, you still said "I wouldn't call it cheese, maybe commercial". If you're saying "commercial" is a genre but cheese isn't, that statement was completely ing retarded. And I know for a fact you did consider cheese a genre, because you alluded to it in the very next sentence. So stop backtracking, you idiot. |
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| dj_kane |
| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Well for a start you're wrong there. Secondly, even assuming that's true, you still said "I wouldn't call it cheese, maybe commercial". If you're saying "commercial" is a genre but cheese isn't, that statement was completely ing retarded. And I know for a fact you did consider cheese a genre, because you alluded to it in the very next sentence. So stop backtracking, you idiot. |
everyone knows cheese is slang you in clown. catch a grip. |
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| SYSTEM-J |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj_kane
everyone knows cheese is slang you in clown. catch a grip. |
What is your point? You classified something not as cheese but as commercial, then said something about classifying by genre. In a conversation about whether something was cheese or not. Now either you're too stupid to realise that the property of being cheesy (and therefore being cheese) is something that can be said regardless of genre or you think cheese is a genre all of its own. Either way, you're wrong. |
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| dj_kane |
| quote: | Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
What is your point? You classified something not as cheese but as commercial, then said something about classifying by genre. In a conversation about whether something was cheese or not. Now either you're too stupid to realise that the property of being cheesy (and therefore being cheese) is something that can be said regardless of genre or you think cheese is a genre all of its own. Either way, you're wrong. |
right no problem merlin keep it real :wtf: |
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| music_flick |
| i haven't encountered an original version of this song too. |
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| Verona^My |
| quote: | Originally posted by dj_kane
sometimes i wonder how people classify tracks in genres on this site. |
Who cares? |
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| aloep |
To answer the original question, the Way Out West Mix is technically the original. It was written by Ricky Simmonds and Stephen Jones and they hired Way Out West to produce this one after being impressed by their remix of "Everytime". This version was the one featured as the original on The Space Brothers website back in Summer 2001 which was over a year prior to it's release on Lost Language around October 2002.
For the record, I think it's a fantastic track in both the Lustral Mix and the original Way Out West Mix and is not something I'd personally class within the "cheese" boundaries.
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| kr00t0n |
Broken (Way Out West), Stealth (Nu Breed), Everytime (Mike Koglin)
I must say, I love the remixes that Lustral tracks get :D |
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