Como eu procurei por essa música, relembrando uma das melhores fases da minha vida . DJ Gene - C , lembro muito de vc . 😢 Mais alguém ouvindo em pleno 2024 ???
Sugar is Sweeter (Armand Remix) mixed into Professional Widow (Armand Trunked up Remix) and finally into The Dirty Rotten Scoundrels Bootleg of Lisa Stansfield's People Hold on. Didn't matter who was playing or what club you found yourself in, practically every set featured this trio of absolute bangers played back to back end of '96.
What an absolute immortal slab of dancfloor funk . Fuck me we were so spoiled during this truly golden era. Classics seem to just come out every week. It must have been cosmological. Everyone was so on point. Itll never happen again.
Wow, I've suddenly been transported back to 1997....and Turnmills. I'd lost my friends when this track came on, but danced anyway. Maybe I'm biased but imo the 1990's WERE the decade of dance music. Not sure if the 80's or the 00's can compare. Dance music was king in the 90's - the era of 'superstar DJ's'. The 90's were so hedonistic!
@@symun02 ...whatever! it still falls under 'dance music'. Does it really matter whether it is or isn't 'technically' dance music? lordy - some people. lol
@@symun02 - This song falls under the mid 90's house music / dance music category in the United States & Canada. All underground raves and house parties back in '96 &' 97 played some variation of this track. It was literally *everywhere*. The term "speed garage" was more UK & Euro based than North American so really, @Rob Tyman is correct when he calls it "dance music". The song even charted at #1 in the US on Billboard's Hot Dance Club Play chart.
When this came out and I played it the first time, the people on the dancefloor left during the break. Only to storm right back when that bassline hit. Ended up playing this 3 times that night. Legendary track in Aruba.
No I didn't mix that fast. I like to let songs play. Especially when new and really good. Anyhow... I guess you didn't know there's also a long version of this. About 8 or 9 minutes long I think. You see, in the long version the break starts at around 2 minutes. The break itself is about a minute long on it's own. During that one minute people left the dancefloor, but... As I explained previously, they came right back when the bassline hit. Maybe you understand better now.
@@devvvvvvvvvvvv he was trying to take the piss out of all this 'when I got the record the minute it came out and i played it in the club before everyone else and i shocked the crowd and they needed me to play it again twice me me me me' anecdote
1997…Seattle Center in a club called DV8 Place was absolute pandemonium the first time This song played and that bass dropped. I’ll never ever forget that.
Flash back NYC to 1995/6/7 dancing at Roxy, Tunnel, Bliss, Limelight ..... tripping on shrooms, Xtc, LSD ....when this shit hit..... every raver went nuts!!!!!!!! Damn I miss my youth!! 😢😢
Wenn der/ die DJ/ane es im Club nicht geschafft hat die Leute auf den Dancefloor zu bringen, war das immer der Rettungsanker. Was wir damals drauf abgefahren. If the DJ/ane didn't manage to get people to the dance floor in the club, that was always the lifeline. What we went on at the time