The Drum & Bass scene has already revisited the old school rave techno
sounds back in the early 2000's.
I guess depending in the circles you hang out it also helps determine
which retro styles are to be in vogue.

I kept feeling the early 90's Manchester biz would make a come back,
but I haven't seen its arrival yet.
Perhaps it's next right after the Disco/Punk/80s/Electro Rock outfits
have had their moment.

bb(R)

On Wed, Jul 2, 2008 at 10:17 AM, kent williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> This is an interesting topic. Interesting enought that I feel
> compelled to pull some completely ungrounded theorizing out of my
> tuchis.
>
> I think what drives these cycles at it's root is that people are like
> ducks -- they form their deepest emotional attachment to the music
> they hear when they're young.  This applies to people who actually
> make music every bit as much as it does to punters.  So when it comes
> their turn to provide the soundtrack for the zeitgeist, they turn
> naturally to the music of their youth.  They update it with influences
> of everything that has happened in the meantime, changes in music
> technology, etc. And this trolling through the wonder years is also
> reactionary -- they use elements of what they liked about music past
> to counter what they dislike about music present.
>
> So if House music is the current vogue, it's soul and gospel roots are
> an antidote to the blandness of minimal techno, combined with
> nostalgia for the raw sounds of early House music.  This will be
> replaced in due time with something else again.  And not so much
> amongst us out in flyover country, but in New York, London, Berlin,
> Paris, Barcelona, there's the element of fashion involved.  Once
> something becomes too popular amongs the hoi  polloi, the in crowd
> needs to find something different.
>
> Here's hoping that there's no big resurgence of Happy Hardcore, which
> by the generational clock, is due for a revival....
>



-- 
benny blanco(R)
blancodisco.com

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