Resident Advisor (RA) is the world’s largest electronic music community, dedicated to showcasing electronic music, artists, and events across the globe. RA's content offering combines high-quality writing, film features, listings, reviews, video documentaries, and exclusive DJ sets - shining light on emerging talent and profiling many of the industry’s key artists, promoters, and performers.
How stupid you have to be to invest a lot of money in this equipment when you have the option to get a more powerful machine for a lot way more cheap, a MacBook.
Nice to see some more older school artists. I love Steven Waves, it’s really cool to gain some insight into the creation of that. I also love the look of these modular synths or as I call them “spaghetti machines. “
Well! Not only Karachi. In every corner of this universe, all choices are available in some form. Everyone makes their own choices thus will be answerable. If you think, that’s what’s best for you, live it.
Burger bachay !!! an endangered species of karachi, isolated from the rest of the population, living in their DHA habitat, totally disconnected from the local culture, mentally evolved under the influence of Gora complex....
So true- i feel the beating/ hurting while listening to hard techno without nuance and depth.. and i really like deep and hard but with context and a meaning and a journey- let’s hope those kids find their way to quality over quantity 🙏🤗
This is interesting bc I was a big house dancer until around 2002 and haven’t gone out since about a month ago. I was ready to dance again after 20 years, but then saw ppl. just rock back and forth and not really going full force like what I remembered. So I wasn’t sure if it was just the smaller clubs I had gone too. But now with this video, it explains everything and things have changed with house dancing. But even back then, in the west coast ppl. for the most part just rocked back and forth and mot like the east coast or Chicago. Bc the west coast kind of took on more of what was going on in London. So if you were dancing like how the NYC house heads back in the 90’s, you were way stead out here in SF. In fact when I used to go to NYC, I fit right in and ppl. thought I was from the east coast. But tye only thing that made them wonder was I’m Asian and you seldomly saw Asians back then that knew how to dance to house Music or danced house. But when o dance to house now, my body still wanted to dance like the old ways bc that’s how I connect with the house music. So I won’t change now bc rocking back and forth feel like to me, not dancing at all
Not to sound mean, I think that generation that old and stop going out and the next generation to keep that dancing style going. Why dancing is not even part of going out for the millennials. They now just go out to drink and talk and that’s it.
I love getting bargains and finding hidden gems I hate the elitism of some people with records. Where people fervently hide what they are playing, put stickers or tear off labels off records so people can't peep during their set. Music is for everyone. Music should be shared. I LOVE it when someone goes "that's a great song, who did it?" because I can then tell them and they can discover their new fav artist. Maybe that person is still producing, and has just made another essential sale so they are encouraged to carry on doing what they love. I'm definitely a newer record collector, I also don't shy away from new releases, but I just like a bargain (shoutout to Rarekind Records 5 for £10 bin in Brighton) Vinyl is more expensive, more annoying to carry around and often with poorer sound due to scratches, but I still love it, and the ability to flip through something physical allows me to connect with the music far more than reading text on a screen.