Wow !!! This is a voyage beyond belief, where ever it takes me i know its paradise that is for sure. Definitely to another time another dimension. Sept 2020. 👍👍😎😎👍👍🇬🇧🇬🇧
Keep on diggin, and you will find new kids, that keep on doing that kind of music. just dont look for trance. look for something else. never ever stopp diggin. never
the he men, fantastic man, ex-terrestrial, anf to name but a few. Also labels like tone dropout, naff, and superconscious records have got some deep, acidy, feel good choons similar to this track on their releases.
@@eminmovsumov564 because it is... it has all elements of Goa ... in the 90's also they called it ''Sloa'' i'm referring to this type of tracks under 130 bpm
@@eminmovsumov564 Just trance. The distinctions werent very clear back than. Goa and trance could be played at a techno trance or a Goa event. But it doesn't sound very Goa to me. That usually has like this annoying bassline in the back ground. This is more fluid.
There has been a misunderstanding between genres. It was firstly called Trance, but with the apparition of the other side of trance (Psy-trance, goa psychedelic music) people started to call this genre "techno", or more likely "early techno" as it's part of the root of the main genre that is nowadays labelled Techno. So call it whatever people will missunderstand anyway
@@TheTrancemaster90 I'm not just making that up. I was there in 94, we did NOT call this trance. Period. How old were you in 1994? in 1994 I was working as the marketing director for for the founder of the SF Rave scene (Malachy OBrien) at SF's oldest and most prestigious monthly House venue in San Franciscofrom 1989 to 2019, Come-Unity. So, let me give you a little history lesson. It is, in fact, House music. First of all, "House" is short for "Warehouse". There are many sub-genres to House music. The ORIGINAL style was the disco-inspired Chicago-New York style. They're super similar but not the same, they just emerged at the same time and so are BOTH considered the "original" style. It evolved as it traveled. In the 80's House music, Detroit Acid House and Techno (then called "high Tech Soul" by Juan Atkins, Derrick Carter and Kevin Saunderson, it's inventors) traveled across the ocean to the UK who ate it up in a way American record producers were not. British kids partying illegally outdoors to American House music was dubbed "raving" and that's how that happened. Within a few years they gave the world the sub-genres of Garage (aka Deep House), Progressive House (which bears NO relation to what people call Progressive House today) and the "rave style" which you don't hear too much anymore, but was really more grounded in Detroit Techno. And then in the very late 80's a single group of British rave producers called the Tonka Sound System, who's rig was all yellow with big Tonka toy logos on it, flew out to San Francisco and founded semi-independently 4 underground House music crews:, Come-Unity, Pieces, Destiny and Eklipse. As a collective, several of them got together with a generator and decided to try the British -style renegade "rave" here in San Francisco. The group formed for that purpose was called "Wicked" and still exists. This is where I came in. The "Wicked Crew" gave birth to the American Rave with their free, word-of-mouth-only monthly Full Moon Massives. Which despite having not hotline, or flyers and no one having cell phones were attended by crowds. of up to 3000 and were known around the world. The Full Moon crew was Wicked who were Dj's Jeno, Garth, Thomas and Josh (later Markie), hosts Alan and Trish and the location scout (the most important job, really) was Malachy O'Brien of Come-Unity. (My boss of 30ish years) Malachy is rightly considered the founder of the San Francisco Rave scene. His event Come-Unity was the longest running House Music venue on the West Coast for 30 years. I was his advertising/PR director for over 25 years. Since right after the beginning. The style you hear in this track is, most definitely House Music but it's San Francisco-style House not Chicago. What defines SF house? Well it has all the basic elements of House music but very, very stripped down and more psychedelic. SF took British progressive, Chicago groove and detroit minimal (A style invented by Richie Hawtin in the early days of Detroit) and mushed it all together with it's own kinda "cosmic space monkey vibe" thing SF seemed (at the time) to put on everything. Some stuff you should hear: Check out Jondi & Spesh.This is a QUINTESSENTIAL San Francisco House track. They're from here, their music was all produced here and the Video was Shot IN San Fransisco DURING the height of the scene here. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Th9KC8lfSlg.html
@@2trancentral Bruh. I'm the marketing director for the oldest continuously running underground House venue on the West coast: Come-Unity. In my over 30 years of working in the industry, I have worked with the biggest names in global electronic music from Mixmaster Morris (Irresistible Force) to Alex Patterson, Chemical Brothers, Dragonfly, Goa Gil (whom I've known personally since 1989), Green Velvet and many many (hundreds, actually) of producers and DJ's. FFS Evil Eddie (the UK's equivalent to Frankie Knuckles.) even stayed on my couch and played an underground warehouse party for me for free, because we're cool like that. At the time this song came out Come-Unity was among the most famous underground venues in the world along with its sister Wicked. Our 2 clubs were the center of the GLOBAL scene for almost a decade. Sorry but I've probably been deeply a part of this scene as long as you've been alive and in a way that you never could if you spent your whole life trying, so don't embarrass yourself lecture me on genres of 90's music, kid. Here's another example of San Francisco style HOUSE: Jondi & Spesh (RIP, friend) -- ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-Th9KC8lfSlg.html NOT TRANCE.