I disagree. You are clearly lot track of the scene and ended up in an entirely new one altogether... There is still a big following for acid techno parties and the good old teknival!
@ppoteacid Thanx for your comment. I thought it to be Lochi - London Acid City.. but thats a tune I know, so I tried the "Jon the Dentist Remix" which eventually was not... The London Acid City is the music CL is mixing with mid clip onwards... but the music starting from 2 is different.. maybe another remix I am not acquainted with... thanx anyway. And btw thanx for posting so many videos.. I m always checking it -)
Amphetamines and acid. Who the fuck has money for cocaine, and who the fuck considers K fun at raves? Not from the UK but god damn, english people can't be as boring, can they?
The video is "Dj Chris LIberator @ Belgrade part 3" or something like that... I could link it here... but I only wanna ask you guys whether u know the song starting from 2minutes ish? thats sick!!
cool, more set i´m | read, its simple, drugs stuff, this is about the article | "EtymologyEdit There are conflicting accounts about how the term acid came to be used to describe this style of house music. One account ties it to Phuture's "Acid Tracks" Before the song was given a title for commercial release, it was played by DJ Ron Hardy at a nightclub[4] where psychedelic drugs were reportedly used.[5] The club's patrons called the song "Ron Hardy's Acid Track" (or "Ron Hardy's Acid Trax").[4] The song was released with the title "Acid Trax" on Larry Sherman's label Trax Records in 1987. Sources differ on whether it was Phuture or Sherman who chose the title; Phuture's DJ Pierre says the group did because the song was already known by that title,[4] but Sherman says he chose the title because the song reminded him of acid rock.[6] Regardless, after the release of Phuture's song, the term acid house came into common parlance.[4] Some accounts say the reference to "acid" may be a celebratory reference to psychedelic drugs in general, such as LSD, as well as the popular club drug Ecstasy (MDMA).[7] According to Rietveld, it was the house sensibility of Chicago, in a club like Hardy's The Music Box, that afforded it its initial meaning. In her view "acid connotes the fragmentation of experience and dislocation of meaning due to the unstructuring effects on thought patterns which the psycho-active drug LSD or 'Acid' can bring about.[8] In the context of the creation of "Acid Tracks" it indicated a concept rather than the use of psycho-active drugs in itself.[9] Some accounts disavow psychedelic connotations. One theory, holding that acid was a derogatory reference towards the use of samples in acid house music, was repeated in the press and in the British House of Commons.[10] In this theory, the term acid came from the slang term "acid burning", which the Oxford Dictionary of New Words calls "a term for stealing."[7] Since acid house makes substantial use of sampling, this can be deemed "stealing from other tracks."[11] In 1991, UK Libertarian advocate Paul Staines claimed that he had coined this theory to discourage the government from adopting anti-rave party legislation.[12][13] Several accounts claim that Genesis P-Orridge coined the term on the Psychic TV single “Tune In (Turn on the Acid House).” Some of these state that s/he combined the terms acid and house after seeing them separately on the covers of albums he saw in a Chicago record store.[14] Other accounts, including one from P-Orridge h/erself, say s/he merely bought records from a bin marked acid.[15] A variation of the story states that the bin's label was a reference to a corrosive liquid, but P-Orridge mistook it as a reference to LSD.[15] One account goes on to say s/he bought the whole bin and played the records at h/er regular DJ gig at Ibiza, where s/he introduced the Chicago sound to the MDMA-using, Osho-following "orange people" there, who discovered the music and drugs complemented each other.[15] P-Orridge's role is disputed by music journalist Simon Reynolds, who calls it a "self-serving myth",[16] and by Fred Giannelli, another member of Psychic TV.[17]"
@ppoteacid Thanx for your comment. I thought it to be Lochi - London Acid City.. but thats a tune I know, so I tried the "Jon the Dentist Remix" which eventually was not... The London Acid City is the music CL is mixing with mid clip onwards... but the music starting from 2 is different.. maybe another remix I am not acquainted with... thanx anyway. And btw thanx for posting so many videos.. I m always checking it -)