I was about to post your s.cloud eddie :p so much quality music there!
GrimReaper
quote:
Originally posted by Unique2701
Hmm.. for whatever reason, I can't find it on Juno. Or is this another lame territory restricted thing?
:(
No digital release, only vinyl and it's out of stock which is why you couldn't find it unless you included also out of stock items in the search terms. >clickety<
PSi
So I moved to a new city, Fort McMurray to be exact, I work at an Oil and Gas facility in the far north of Canada and the greyhound bus collects all the staff at the break of dawn
The view: Millions of trees around you...birch, maple and evergreen....and the blue horizon ahead of you....
I put on this track.....this morning, and I still remember how it made me feel at night.....sends shivers down my spine....
Unreal:
SYSTEM-J
quote:
Originally posted by corjay9
System-J's mix is ing incredible.
Also, I have something similar planned at the moment.
Fledz
quote:
Originally posted by PSi
I remember this stuff was growin in popularity early to mid 2000's. Guys like Phil K, Chable, Freeland, Infusion, Momu pumping out some great remixes?
like take this one for ex:
This is absolutely beautiful man
wing
Just stumbled on this one
This is def my favourite For An Angel remix :toothless
PSi
I have a question:
When Sasha and Digweed recorded Northern Exposure 1 and Northern Exposure 2 (East Coast) there were some heavily breakbeat influenced tracks on there.
Now....why is it that there are hardly any other sets by them or other DJ's playing this kind of sound.
Becasue lets face it, the Breakbeat elements were lost after Northern Exposure East Coast, all the other albums were more Progressive House and Trance.
The two breakbeat albums were in my opinion unlike any other sounds they have played throughout their careers.
Someone point me in the right direction for more sounds like this at that time circa 1996/7/8
Cheers!
SYSTEM-J
You do realise that the tracks on the first Northern Exposure were not from 1996? I don't think there was a single contemporary track on the first disc. They were all old selections from the early 90s. No coincidence that at that time breakbeat hardcore was one of the most popular types of dance music.
Northern Exposure is not a classic because the breakbeat scene was so awesome in 1996. It's a classic because Sasha & Diggers picked ten tracks from six years of music which they really loved and wanted to play together.
NE2 did feature a lot of the early progressive breaks: by 1997 breakbeat was hugely popular again because big-beat was at its commercial peak. The basic point is that both of these supposed golden-eras of breakbeat music only existed because breaks were so popular at the time. Today breakbeats are not popular at all, so you don't hear anyone in the progressive scene playing breaks. They're all influenced by tech house or electro house instead, because they're popular now.
Anyway, a couple of compilations from that era you should check out: