
as a brit i love being reminded that there are actually loads of innovative, buzzing dance music scenes in the US. we don't really see that much of them over here, beyond house, the WMC and lately the west coast shiz...
Ironically, many Americans feel the same way about UK dance music.setspeed wrote:i think it's great
as a brit i love being reminded that there are actually loads of innovative, buzzing dance music scenes in the US. we don't really see that much of them over here, beyond house, the WMC and lately the west coast shiz...
Jodorowsky wrote:Birds born in a cage think flying is an illness.
I just did this. Very good advice.fluffy wrote:Also for a sweet new halftime juke track, listen to Girl Unit - IRL at 160
so what British stuff do you mainly hear over there then? Coldplay and stuff?alphacat wrote:Ironically, many Americans feel the same way about UK dance music.setspeed wrote:i think it's great
as a brit i love being reminded that there are actually loads of innovative, buzzing dance music scenes in the US. we don't really see that much of them over here, beyond house, the WMC and lately the west coast shiz...
This, along with hipsters ironically dancing to electro while wearing stupid glasses and psytrance hippies seeing God while on too many drugs, kept me from enjoying dance music for many years. I just couldn't (and still can't!) identify with quote-unquote clubbing: dressing up in brand name clothes, buying bottles at rip off prices, meeting chicks with half a brain cell rattling in their brains, all to the sound of glossy music for people who don't know shit...that's not disparaging house music itself by the way, just the whole house "scene" in Montreal.alphacat wrote:
For instance, take what house music has become in a lot of places: the safe white alternative to that nasty hip-hop business. It's got a big stupid beat that's so obvious even the most rhythmically-challenged poindexter can count to 4 out loud and stomp along.
yeah it's funny. over here we sometimes perceive the US as being somewhere that doesn't really 'get' dance music (sweeping generalisation alert), which is strange because it's totally at odds with the fact that many (most?) of the biggest, most legendary producers are all US heads; Derrick May, Masters At Work, Jeff Mills, Josh Wink, DJ Sneak, Derrick Carter, Joey Beltram, Armand Van Helden....alphacat wrote:there's often a perception among "underground" types here in the States that the UK is this hotbed of underground originality: in America, you kind of have to be a bit of a hipster in the know to be down with all of the electronic styles you guys have given the world (acid house, 2-step garage, jungle/DnB, dubstep, etc.) and many believe that these styles are clearly more interesting than anything homegrown... which is also stupid because the UK styles have roots in US sounds too, but whatever - for some people the grass is always greener on the other side, you know?
There's also a weird undercurrent to that in terms of race and class stuff that probably deserves a separate discussion in another thread, but suffice to say that some Americans feel alienated or disenfranchised by a lot of our popular dance music and want something to call their own - because they know they wouldn't make it 2 seconds in the 'hood, because they don't identify with the imagery, because they want to project the appearance of being cosmopolitan and not ghetto.
actually no wait there's nothing much halftime about it more than the average juke track. yeah IRL at 160 pretty much just a bangin new juke tracked teach wrote:I just did this. Very good advice.fluffy wrote:Also for a sweet new halftime juke track, listen to Girl Unit - IRL at 160
am gonna try this. irl is a tune alreadyfluffy wrote:actually no wait there's nothing much halftime about it more than the average juke track. yeah IRL at 160 pretty much just a bangin new juke tracked teach wrote:I just did this. Very good advice.fluffy wrote:Also for a sweet new halftime juke track, listen to Girl Unit - IRL at 160
alphacat wrote:house music
I like what you did there!alphacat wrote:poindexter
Has anyone got the tracklist for this, looked everywhere, few interesting bits on therequidz wrote:Check this if you havent already..
http://soundcloud.com/headhunter/headhu ... ember-2009
Dj slugo is a pretty good starting point too..
capo ultra wrote:House -> Garage -> Dubstep -> Garage -> House
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