Como sonó este tema en 1992 imposible olvidar las noches de disco. Abrazos y saludos a todos desde Buenosa Aires Argentina!!! La música electrónica nunca morirá!!!!
In 1992 I bought the cd Techno Trance. #4 was a complete new sound for me; SPEEDY J. Hooked from the first time I listened to it. Saw Speedy J @ work at Mysteryland a few years ago. Still an excellent performer! This was the beginning for me.
Banger track, absolutely LOVE the way the simple police siren morphs into a musical track and vice versa! Ingenious and the thumping bassline is SICK, goddamn 🔥
Oh I got to say is if you got a a really good stereo system with a powered subwoofer I'm telling you the bass on this it's heavy I've had all these songs since I was like a teenager and of course I lost everything and now I'm just trying to get them all back again all right well everyone have a great time
May Day, Stockholm/Sweden. Strobe inferno, smoke signals and flooded toilets. The spirit and the energy was unique for that time. People really gave it all on the floor.
@@arios1977 Judging from his profile picture, he probably means Kiss FM the London UK radio station. You're thinking of 102.7 KIIS FM in Los Angeles. Also, KIIS was playing songs like Captain Hollywood Project "More and More," Snap "Rhythm Is a Dancer," KWS "Please Don't Go," Culture Beat "Mr. Vain," Real McCoy "Another Night," Corona "The Rhythm of the Night," Haddaway "What Is Love," La Bouche "Be My Lover" and "Sweet Dreams," Ace of Base "It's a Beautiful Life," Real McCoy "Run Away," Amber "This Is Your Night," Gina G "Ooh Aah Just a Little Bit," Crush "Jellyhead," and No Mercy "Where Do You Go" years before Night at the Roxbury was even released. Hell, they were even playing "Techno Syndrome" (the Mortal Kombat theme song) by The Immortals several times a day if you can believe that!😃