In a message dated 03/16/2000 9:28:13 AM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Okay, now who's messing around with names?... ;)
.John.
damn 2 mailing lists now with threads about name spelling..well this isn't as
bad as the other...derek may from canada and derrick may from
In a message dated 3/16/00 8:41:11 PM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
damn 2 mailing lists now with threads about name spelling..well this isn't
as
bad as the other...derek may from canada and derrick may from detroit heh go
figure
How about Ritchie Hawtin ?
a.
Or Dave Clarke
You mean d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.dave clark :)
B - Out
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On 16 Mar 00, at 14:32, bart wolff wrote:
Or Dave Clarke
You mean d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.d.dave clark :)
I'm Dave Clark. Spell his damn name with an 'e' like it's meant to
be spelled.
Once n for all, i'm not english, and I don't own bush.
:-)
Dave
I'm Dave Clark. Spell his damn name with
an 'e' like it's meant to be spelled.
Once n for all, i'm not english, and I don't own bush.
Okay, now who's messing around with names?... ;)
.John.
(who never wants to be known as The Bushman or Bushy-tale ever again...)
(and no George W. jokes
Fuck art, let's dance.
Fuck dance, let's art.
Take your pick, or have both (my preference).
It's fascinating that this discussion is taking place just as Jeff Mills'
gig here in Perth has been confirmed for April to take place in the State
Art Gallery!
So yeah Bill, we'll have both, literally
at the
same time. Out of the ashes we will rise, we will rise again.
Original Message Follows
From: Shane from PLURkids [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) Ben Sims kicks ass???
Date: Wed, 08 Mar 2000 10:23:17 PST
When Carl Craig performed Paperclip People live for me
Before I get going, I'd like to ask for any recommendations on the best
tribal techno records/producers out there right now, things that are deep,
dark, and danceable...
Oliver Ho, Christian Smith, G-Flame, Joel Mull (his b-sides), Marco Carola,
Chris McCormack, The new Hardgroove double-pack,
I like the
supercompressed European house/techno thing that's happening right now.
hell yes.
In a message dated 3/8/00 6:06:00 PM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
Detroit is completely finished making good techno aside from Jaguar.
Would you care to explain?? Techno in detroit seems as alive as ever and by
no means finished..
Hello.
On 8 Mar 00, at 21:04, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
now. Detroit is completely finished making good techno aside from
Jaguar.
???
What's with this blanket statement?
Do you really believe this?
Aren't you from Detroit, anyway?
I immensely respect your work and the work of artists
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 3/8/00 6:06:00 PM Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
Detroit is completely finished making good techno aside from Jaguar.
Would you care to explain?? Techno in detroit seems as alive as ever and by
no means finished..
It very
I have to agree. If you put enough pretty colors on a monster flyer. you
could throw a giant 10,000 head techno only party (as long as you have one
room full of ferngully 303 preset hell and kick drums over pop synth riff
remixes), while trying to do a techno based format for big people clubs has
In a message dated 3/9/00 8:35:16 AM Pacific Standard Time, DJT1000 writes:
Sean, THANK YOU. Nice to to see somebody's got good common sense.
Minimaltek, read this; I'm noticing points have to made with you several
times before they sink in.
Maybe I just disagree with you. Saying Detroit is
In a message dated 3/9/00 2:40:02 PM Eastern Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Saying Detroit is finished with techno makes
no sense to me. SORRY I asked you to elaborate...it seems like a pretty big
generalization and I think Jaguar is a great release for Rolando with many
more to
And another thing - once you're famous, does that mean you don't have to
create danceable music anymore?
It means you don't have to create danceable music if you don't want
to.
Witness Richie Hawtin - the Concept series and Consumed,
specifically. After years and years of being successful
I would say we should push the boundaries as far as the boundaries
will go
Maybe Jeff
Mills used to be good but I feel he's surpassed by the
likes of Claude Young. Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far
Clearly his hiphop past is reflected in his mixing. I saw him do stuff I've
never seen a dj do before.
You've obviously never heard of/seen Terrence Parker or Jeff Mills then!
talk21 your FREE portable and private address on the net at
http://www.talk21.com
. I once interviewed Jeff Mills (1996), but I didn't know it was him.
After all I have never heard of him... ;)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, March 08, 2000 2:14 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: Re: (313) Ben Sims
In a message dated 3/8/00 8:16:23 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Clearly his hiphop past is reflected in his mixing. I saw him do stuff I've
never seen a dj do before.
You've obviously never heard of/seen Terrence Parker or Jeff Mills then!
Or Dave Clarke or Claude Young.
a.
(who doesn't
--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
In a message dated 3/8/00 8:16:23 AM,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Clearly his hiphop past is reflected in his
mixing. I saw him do stuff I've
never seen a dj do before.
You've obviously never heard of/seen Terrence Parker
or Jeff Mills then!
Or
Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far must we
keep 'pushing the boundaries'?
'Til they fall down?
Where do you get off telling Jeff Mills what he should be doing?
Bill / dj marathon
--
AppNet MidWest
Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far must we
keep 'pushing the boundaries'?
Dance music isn't important unless its pushing boundaries.
J.
'Til they fall down?
Where do you get off telling
Or Dave Clarke or Claude Young.
a.
(who doesn't have a hip-hop past)
But can work out the doubles like a motherf•cker!!
__
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
--- Joseph Ross Lynn IV [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he
should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far must
we
keep 'pushing the boundaries'?
Dance music isn't important unless its pushing
boundaries.
This is about art. Not stardom.
Jeff Mills is an artist.
his vision is his vision, and the reason he is so well known and respected is
because his vision resonates so strongly with so many of us. I think he is
trying to be true to himself, not get his face on MTV.
Art is about a new
) Ben Sims kicks ass???
This is about art. Not stardom.
Jeff Mills is an artist.
his vision is his vision, and the reason he is so well known and respected
is
because his vision resonates so strongly with so many of us. I think he is
trying to be true to himself, not get his face on MTV.
Art
In a message dated 3/8/00 10:35:19 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Or Dave Clarke or Claude Young.
a.
(who doesn't have a hip-hop past)
But can work out the doubles like a motherf•cker!!
Awww, shucks, anybody can do that. It's so easy I don't even do it anymore.
=)
a.
Jeff Mills gets a lot of respect for his production
though I don't think it's all that great. Maybe Jeff
Mills used to be good but I feel he's surpassed by the
likes of Claude Young. Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes
As I've said twice already, I'm not having a go at
Jeff's production or any forward thinking producers.
Any TRUE forward thinking producers that is. I'm sure
everyone realises how techno has previously taken flak
because it's apparently easy to produce and that any
joe can have a go.
I'm not
On Wed, 8 Mar 2000 07:44:23 -0800 (PST), Nick Walsh
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I think a lot of this experimental stuff
is a load of parp. Few 'experimental' tunes actually
push the boundaries forward. However, a lot of big
names are getting respect for stuff that I could throw
together... (I'm
Joseph Ross Lynn IV wrote:
Dance music isn't important unless its pushing boundaries.
Dance music isn't important unless it makes people dance.
Otto
Maybe Jeff
Mills used to be good but I feel he's surpassed by the
likes of Claude Young. Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far must we
keep 'pushing the boundaries'?
Are you on crack?
Maybe Jeff
Mills used to be good but I feel he's surpassed by the
likes of Claude Young. Jeff's too busy messing about
making so called experimental tunes when he should be
knocking dancefloor tunes together. How far must we
keep 'pushing the boundaries'?
Are you on crack?
...i posted a nice
Joseph Ross Lynn IV wrote:
This is about art. Not stardom.
Jeff Mills is an artist.
his vision is his vision, and the reason he is so well known and
respected is
because his vision resonates so strongly with so many of us. I think
he is
trying to be true to himself, not get his face on MTV.
I
I saw Ben Sims play this Friday at the Silo in Belgium. Keep your eye on
this guy. He is really brilliant behind the decks. Clearly his hiphop past
is reflected in his mixing. I saw him do stuff I've never seen a dj do
before. Really cool. Although I'm coming down a bit from this hard looped
one
to watch and whilst I agree with John about the 'tracky' techno
comedown, Sims certainly knows what buttons to push on the dancefloor with
his productions.
Nick
Original Message Follows
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: (313) Ben Sims kicks ass!
Date: Mon
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