― gareth (gareth), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 12:56 (twenty-three years ago)
― Andrew Farrell (afarrell), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:00 (twenty-three years ago)
― Nate Patrin, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:03 (twenty-three years ago)
nate, you heard tb resucitation (the best hardfloor tracks are acperience, trancescript, into the nature, lost in the silver box - and possibly fish&chips)
― gareth (gareth), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:11 (twenty-three years ago)
― michael wells (michael w.), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:13 (twenty-three years ago)
― Marcello Carlin, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:14 (twenty-three years ago)
― jel -- (jel), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:32 (twenty-three years ago)
― Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:33 (twenty-three years ago)
― kephm, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:37 (twenty-three years ago)
― H (Heruy), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:46 (twenty-three years ago)
― David (David), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 13:52 (twenty-three years ago)
― Tom (Groke), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:14 (twenty-three years ago)
― Stewart Osborne (Stewart Osborne), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:17 (twenty-three years ago)
― DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:23 (twenty-three years ago)
― DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:25 (twenty-three years ago)
The Kitchen Nightclub.
My friend Phil who was DJ there and began letting me in free to gigs everywhere when he was promoting them.
And finally drugs.
― Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:27 (twenty-three years ago)
― vic (vicc13), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:29 (twenty-three years ago)
― Lee G (Lee G), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:44 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:47 (twenty-three years ago)
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 14:54 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ronan (Ronan), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:04 (twenty-three years ago)
― Dr. C (Dr. C), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:05 (twenty-three years ago)
― blueski, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:13 (twenty-three years ago)
In my musical infancy I defined myself by not liking dance music- whenever some friend told me about a group and I thought they were shit but didn't wanna hurt their feelings, I just went "well, at least it's not dance music".
I've gradually learned to dig a lot of it, but until very recently I still had to use the excuse that it wasn't *really* Dance music, as in:
Afrika Bambaata- well, that's Hip-Hop!The Madchester scene- well, that's Indie!Human League- well, that's New Wave!
I started running out of excuses at about the time that I started to get into Basement Jaxx ("well, that's...uhm...Prince type stuff!"), Aphex Twin ("well, you..err...can't dance to that, so it can't be dance!") and Tricky ("that's, uhhm, mumbling Brit-Hop!")...the first dance track that I learned to love without denying that it belongs to the genre was a version of "Boy/Girl Song" by Aphex Twin, closely followed by "Groove Is In The Heart".
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:18 (twenty-three years ago)
― Siegbran (eofor), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:27 (twenty-three years ago)
― blueski, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:29 (twenty-three years ago)
m.
― msp, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 15:52 (twenty-three years ago)
― Curt (cgould), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 17:39 (twenty-three years ago)
― Rockist Scientist, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 17:54 (twenty-three years ago)
― Rockist Scientist, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 17:58 (twenty-three years ago)
― Rockist Scientist, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 17:59 (twenty-three years ago)
― Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 18:08 (twenty-three years ago)
Goth?
― Siegbran (eofor), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 18:17 (twenty-three years ago)
― Rockist Scientist, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 18:19 (twenty-three years ago)
― DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 18:33 (twenty-three years ago)
― Arthur (Arthur), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 18:44 (twenty-three years ago)
― Rockist Scientist, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 19:07 (twenty-three years ago)
"Being a child int he 80s" sums it up - everything we heard growing up was "synthetically"-produced pop designed for clubs, like the Madonna and Scritti me and the other cubs boogied to in 86 (everybody thought we were crazy!). When acid house kicked in, the tartrazine kids weren't going to say no - Bomb the Bass did it for me with "Beat Dis".
― Leo Lonergan (Leo), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 19:18 (twenty-three years ago)
― hstencil, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 19:25 (twenty-three years ago)
--<[ FRONT 242 ]>--Description: The official website for the fathers of Electronic Body Music.Category: Arts > Music > ... > Industrial > Bands and Artists > Front 242www.front242.com/ - 3k - Cached - Similar pages
― DJ Martian (djmartian), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 19:28 (twenty-three years ago)
― Siegbran (eofor), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 20:41 (twenty-three years ago)
i've always thought that if you didnt like that stuff if you were a kid when it was goin on then you'd been effectively brainwashed by your rock-lovin luddite parents, HA
Well yes, but y'see, I LIKED my parents, and everyone my age pretty much sucked- they were all about soccer and beating each other, and none of them had any appreciation whatsoever for Greek mythology or Che Guevara (I was an odd kid)
― Daniel_Rf, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 20:49 (twenty-three years ago)
Either "Stayin' Alive" or Star Wars was my first 45.
As for house music (birth of modern dance music?), clubbing in D.C. in '88. My first 12-inch: "It Takes Two"
― Pete Scholtes, Wednesday, 16 October 2002 22:47 (twenty-three years ago)
― electric sound of jim (electricsound), Wednesday, 16 October 2002 22:53 (twenty-three years ago)
― Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Thursday, 17 October 2002 00:19 (twenty-three years ago)
― Ess Kay (esskay), Thursday, 17 October 2002 00:48 (twenty-three years ago)
― Charlie (Charlie), Thursday, 17 October 2002 01:02 (twenty-three years ago)
― Keith McD (Keith McD), Thursday, 17 October 2002 03:53 (twenty-three years ago)
― nick.K (nick.K), Thursday, 17 October 2002 06:14 (twenty-three years ago)
― boxcubed (boxcubed), Thursday, 17 October 2002 06:34 (twenty-three years ago)
― Bill A, Monday, 26 March 2007 09:17 (nineteen years ago)
I don't know. How did this happen? Does finally getting into "dance music" starting in around 2011 prove I am a hipster? ILM, the internet, becoming a driver? Granted, I am only focused on a narrow range of it right now (some of it very pop) and it's not like I suddenly like much of what I've disliked all these years, but something has changed. Also, whatever I did like about it over the years is suddenly coming into the foreground, and it's like all those Psychic TV concerts I went to between 1988-1991 are flooding back. Coumplicated.
― _Rudipherous_, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 16:12 (twelve years ago)
Rollerskating to "Let It Whip" and breakdancing to Shannon and Newcleus in elementary school were foundational for me as far as getting into dance music.
Then I got into punk rock and stopped being down for a bit and just listened to Minor Threat and the Meatmen and Butthole Surfers, but I heard that there was something called "acid house" and when parents went to London I asked them to bring me things that had to do with this because it sounded kinda cool; they brought me back a t-shirt that said "ACID HOUSE" on it and a Royal House "Can You Party?" LP and I was into that record because of the weirder beat tracks like "The Chase" and "This is Royal House".
Thanks mom and stepdad!
― the tune was space, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 16:34 (twelve years ago)
first casette was sade - diamond life. my favorite casio drum pattern preset was disco, followed by samba. i spent 15 years getting into other stuff and now i'm pretty much back at that template.
― JEFF 22 (Matt P), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 17:12 (twelve years ago)
20 years idk. there's too much music.
― JEFF 22 (Matt P), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 17:13 (twelve years ago)
forget if i answered upthread but it was the beats. basically the beats.
― Evil Juice Box Man (LocalGarda), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 17:22 (twelve years ago)
selecting music for parties as a freshman in college led to an interest in danceable music, and listening to 'remain in light' on acid around the same time catalyzed my attraction to what at the time seemed strange and foreign, e.g. minimal, dub-techno, etc.
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Wednesday, 9 October 2013 17:45 (twelve years ago)
Shannon and Newcleus in elementary school
am 40 so yeah basically this.
― andrew m., Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:07 (twelve years ago)
and Saturday Night Fever sdtk
― andrew m., Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:08 (twelve years ago)
herbie's "rocket", "axel f", john carpenter, wendy carlos, etc absorbed as a young child translated into a lifelong love of synthesized sound
when i first heard house music as a 6th grader i was like YES
― the late great, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:09 (twelve years ago)
can't neglect to mention how eurythmic's "sweet dreams..." affected me
― andrew m., Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:13 (twelve years ago)
deeee-lite 'grove is in the heart'. loved that song and video when they'd play it on MTV. must've been young as hell. that, and stuff like young mc bust a move. late 80s/early 90s MTV stuff I guess.
― Spectrum, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:19 (twelve years ago)
Ha, I see I already had replied to this as though I had gotten into dance music before. True, I liked disco immediately and came back around to liking it after my brief but intense college radio snob phase. So in that sense I've never really stopped liking some dance music, and I did like some electro and Latin freestyle back in college, without knowing what they were. But as far as the core electric dance stuff that really kicked off in the 80s, rave, house/techno and onward, it's a different story. I have never liked so much house before. PTV were sort of in their own category, for me, and the closer they got to doing straight up house, the less I generally was into it. I tried, but nah, not really. Although I still enjoyed the live shows so it was all banged into my head to a certain extent and I couldn't have totally hated it. So as I've said before, initially I was pretty curious about acid house and techno, but it never clicked. I hadn't even heard of house music at all until I saw the Psychic TV EP with "Turn on Tune in the Acid House" on it. And even then I didn't immediately realize "acid house" was a genre. It was just funny words on an EP. Not sure how I could have been so oblivious to even the existence of house by 1987 or 88 when I first saw that EP, but I guess it wasn't getting played too much on Philadelphia radio, or at least the Philadelphia radio I listened to. (Again, I was pretty college-radio centric for a while.)
― _Rudipherous_, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:33 (twelve years ago)
(I'm sure I said some of that earlier in this thread too.)
I think it's possible to feel a little nostalgic for music you didn't like (or at least were very ambivalent about) the first time around, when it gets revived.
― _Rudipherous_, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:39 (twelve years ago)
Went to my first 'rave' at 12 years old in the LA underground scene around 95. The first dance tune I heard was a couple years back, it was either James Brown is Dead or Deep Inside. Howevz the first dance tune that I heard at parties and bbq's was Deee Lite and I loved that from the first time I heard it.
― oscar, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:41 (twelve years ago)
Aphex Twin -> idm -> MTV AMP / big beat / trance -> going to raves (starting with Boston '97 redlight parties) -> going to nightclubs
then when Vocalcity came out I started listening to house and techno and i've been trapped in stasis since then, help
― eris bueller (lukas), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:42 (twelve years ago)
i'm pretty sure having my own copy - that i stole from dad - of sly & the family stone's greatest hits circa 1972/1973 did it for me. and despite being a rock fan for the most part, i also loved just about everything there was to be loved about disco in the 70's. and the pop r&b of the day. and it's a cliche for sure, but "I Feel Love" changed my life when it came out. i played my 45 of it at least a thousand times. everything since has been me wanting to feel what i felt sitting on my bed listening to that single. and my punk/post-punk/new wave days in the early 80's only turned me off of classic rock for a while. never dance music. and half of the new wave i listened to was dance music too. the 80's were majik. and horrible. but majik too. especially if you had your ears open. i loved when worlds collided back then too. joy division was probably my favorite band and when new order came out with "confusion" i thought i had died and gone to heaven. two of my favorite things kissing in public!
― scott seward, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:46 (twelve years ago)
"I Feel Love" changed my life when it came out.
Me too! Huge, spacy, prog rock production on massive disco speakers.
"Flashlight" by Parliament was the funk flip side of the coin that same summer.
― Low down bad refrigerator (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:51 (twelve years ago)
damn, so jelly of those who were alive and cognizant when 'i feel love' came out
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:54 (twelve years ago)
It's one of the upsides to being hella old!
― Low down bad refrigerator (Dan Peterson), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 18:56 (twelve years ago)
acid and ecstasy
― Moodles, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 19:05 (twelve years ago)
Taping songs off the radio in the 90s and my favourite ones always being the vocal, pop, girly anthems. Dance music was always something I was interested in but I didn't really think I was particularly more a fan of it than other music, until my parents bought me this compilation, and I adored it, especially the second disc. I would like to pretend it was something a bit more sophisticated but trance, Ibiza Uncovered documentaries and Kevin & Perry were all ubiquitous when I was in my teens.
― boxedjoy, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 21:18 (twelve years ago)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MHvMRyRSKGU
― I wish to incorporate disco into my small business (chap), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 21:31 (twelve years ago)
Only born in 88, so can't claim any authenticity laden backstory but:
As a 10 year old devotee of the Mortal Kombat soundtrack and the Chemical Bros, I first heard Jeff Mills and Plastikman when an astute older cousin visited. That had no immediate effect until I turned 16, as it was followed by a long latency period during which I was suspicious of "electronica" and even more so of dance music. In the meantime I went from top 40 rock and hip-hop to boring so-cal punk to Indie rock to, finally, Warp Records et al. A year after, at 16, an acid-techno/rave friend urged me to go beyond ambient/idm/electronic indie schmaltz/etc. Despite open-mindedness, I'm ashamed to say there was an unnecessarily long traversal from the allegedly "respectable" end of ascetic "intelligent" dance music to conventional - let alone totally unabashed - dance music (what can I say, when you're young and stupid [not to mention white, middle-class, and straight] the ambivalences and anxieties between identity and what you "should" listening to can be very powerful, regrettably). That friend also pointed me to "Ishkur's electronic music guide" which was vital for me at the time, and a necessary foil to Allmusic hegemony. And of course ILM, which I found in 2005, when there was a much stronger dance presence (ILM first pointed me to Tessio!). Also, Phillip Sherburne's pitchfork column and blog were really vital. Artist wise, Akufen was very important, as were Michael Mayer (i.e. Immer and Fabric 13), Matthew Dear (Dog Days!), Farben, Luomo, and villalobos. So to answer the question in one word: MICROHOUSE. I don't care what you say, I will defend microhouse to the death because that made it all possible for me.
― Fiddler on a hot tin roof (ed.b), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 22:42 (twelve years ago)
Maybe more specifically was compulsively listening to Little Fluffy Clouds in the summer of 04, at 16 y/o: quasi-paradoxically (or at least hypocritically) loving it before I knew and accepted that I love dance music.
― Fiddler on a hot tin roof (ed.b), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 22:48 (twelve years ago)
Baby Ford and drugs.
― Damo Suzuki's Parrot, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 22:53 (twelve years ago)
i forgot to mention sex
― eris bueller (lukas), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:03 (twelve years ago)
i like listening to and playing and dancing to dance music. i've been imagining a troupe, like pina bausch inspired but really untrained and casual, and we do our thing every wednesday morning or w/e. who's in. you have to bring a poster to decorate the room.
― JEFF 22 (Matt P), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:04 (twelve years ago)
oh and be sexually active. sorry virgins!
― JEFF 22 (Matt P), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:07 (twelve years ago)
in ed.b's boat here, swapped my copy of Burned Mind by Wolf Eyes for Immer and Total 4 with some dude on another message board (i was 15) and that was that. well, that plus Erlend Oye's DJ Kicks.
― the Shearer of simulated snowsex etc. (Dwight Yorke), Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:19 (twelve years ago)
aphex twin, ymo. once i discovered drexciya, i was (and am) hooked for life.
― clouds, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:23 (twelve years ago)
oh yeah, drexciya was a good one. i remember stumbling on to 'journey home' when napster was around and got me into detroit techno
― Spectrum, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:25 (twelve years ago)
nice! it was "the quest" for me.
― clouds, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:27 (twelve years ago)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:MTV_Amp.png
― brimstead, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:45 (twelve years ago)
farthttp://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/0/07/MTV_Amp.png
― brimstead, Wednesday, 9 October 2013 23:46 (twelve years ago)
ILM, which I found in 2005, when there was a much stronger dance presence (ILM first pointed me to Tessio!)
i had this exact same experience--ILM, luomo, 2005
― karl...arlk...rlka...lkar..., Thursday, 10 October 2013 00:20 (twelve years ago)
"I don't care what you say, I will defend microhouse to the death because that made it all possible for me."
dude, i don't know who you are but i really like your post and i thank ILM in my head all the time for turning me on to Kompakt because that became one of the ruling forces in my life for a long time in the 2000's in a big way. and it totally gave me hope for the future. or it felt like the future was now when i first heard that stuff and completely reinvigorated me as far as electronic music goes.
― scott seward, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:10 (twelve years ago)
daft punk. 97 = moved in a big city for the first time = access to college radio so musically i was all over the place but daft punk, and chemical bros too i guess, made me realize i had preferences in dance music. acid/house/techno over trance/jungle/drum n bass hehe. don't particularly have awesome memories about the stuff that i ran into live back then, whatever, and being poor and ill informed i was stucked , really got into it when i installed soulseek shortly after napster died: it seems electronic music (especially idm) was the most shared genre in there so that helped.
― Sébastien, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:11 (twelve years ago)
screamadelica pointed me towards both dance music and the rolling stones. then digeridoo and selected ambient works changed my life.
― fit and working again, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:19 (twelve years ago)
I think it was Orbital 2 or Underworld - dubnobasswithmyhedman
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:25 (twelve years ago)
another really formative song for me was "lookout weekend" by debbie deb, that was a much bigger thing than shannon where i grew up
and new order too, of course
― the late great, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:27 (twelve years ago)
the klf
― the late great, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:28 (twelve years ago)
I addressed this upthread a bit, but I really had this break at about the end of May 1999 where I went into hospital with a collapsed lung and a copy of Remedy and when I came out I basically only bought dance music for the rest of that year.
― Tim F, Thursday, 10 October 2013 01:36 (twelve years ago)
What's keeping me into dance music. (One of the things anyway.) For which I mostly have the previous poster on this thread to thank. I can't stop listening to the most recent mix on his site. I listened to it over and over getting ready for work, and it's the first thing I put on once I got home.
― _Rudipherous_, Thursday, 10 October 2013 03:00 (twelve years ago)
Awww, this thread's making me feel all warm inside :)
― Fiddler on a hot tin roof (ed.b), Thursday, 10 October 2013 05:13 (twelve years ago)
So many people I know got into dance music through
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=odQgfUUegQI
and
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3_5IJRXoKQE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zIXqmt0zw3Y
That stuff pretty much tore a bunch of my friends away from me. I was all like "Nooooooo, you can't listen to techno! Come back to earth and listen to punk and grunge with me!"
A few years later, one of those friends would smoke me down and we'd listen to trance and stuff. I wasn't too down with it, but he gave me a tape that said "Tribal" on it. I was all like liberal guilt "I guess it can't be bad if it's tribal." Then around the same time, I got Deee-Lite's "Dancefloor Oddities & Sampladelic Relics".
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51fQKYhEuBL.jpg
I felt a little weird buying that tape, but it was the real breakthrough. It allowed me to hear a bunch of different styles of dance music.
Around the same time I bought Strictly the Best 17, which was a direct result of listening to tons of Sublime and wanting to learn more about dancehall.
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/I/51bE7Fk1PSL.jpg
― how's life, Friday, 25 October 2013 13:28 (twelve years ago)
lol. don't know why I posted those giant album covers.
― how's life, Friday, 25 October 2013 13:29 (twelve years ago)
That Deee-Lite remix disc was also one of the first dance CDs I was exposed to shortly before I started going to raves.
― Moodles, Friday, 25 October 2013 13:41 (twelve years ago)
Hard to underestimate how stuff like the weird science fiction/ 80s soundtracks & Doctor Who themes, really laid the foundations for a love of electronic sound when I was under 10.
to me the future was cool and it sounded like a synthesiser arpeggio.
― my opinionation (Hamildan), Friday, 25 October 2013 15:51 (twelve years ago)