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Apr 25, 2015
Blaming my weirdness on music that happened in the 90s
Last night, with my head deep in the bowels of YouTube, I realised how much of an island I was.
YouTube is probably one of the most common ways to listen to music. That compression must really bring out the bass. Ahem.
I decided to playlist my evening with a whole bunch of 90s YouTube techno, from The Advent to Psychick Warriors Ov Gaia. I even remembered the Genaside II project which the Prodigy would apparently sample for Firestarter (although on a quick listen, I can’t hear it myself).
And then I realised that I was the only one listening to this stuff. Among my friends, that is. The ones I hang-out with month-in, month-out. I feel like I’m the only post-rave kid in town.
Everyone else is either eighties post-industrial electronic music with its awkward lip-synching chart crossovers or they’re from that post-Kid A world where computers became so ubiquitous for so many types of bands, dance music was no longer a political and musical protest against the norm.
There’s a longer article in this. I may write it for Electronic Sound.
I guess I’m just blaming my weirdness on knowing that there was a third part to Orbital’s Lush 3-1 and Lush 3-2, or that Fish & Chips wasn’t just a seaside indulgence but was one of the 90s’ most blistering acid workouts.
People need to know this stuff. It should be on the citizenship test.
What do you know about 90s dance music that makes you feel like a little island of knowledge? Leave a comment or tweet me.
You should write that article, I want to read it :)
ReplyDeleteThanks, anonymous! I may well do.
ReplyDelete