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RAH

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Everything posted by RAH

  1. it is really beyond me how headphones, 'break from the cold' in which case this link might be useful> http://shop.sennheiserusa.com/retail2002/S...ect_catlg=Parts and if there aren't parts then that means they were too economy for them to consider making replacements, the way i see it could you had bough one pair of decent cans for the price you paid for those three... i messed up too have a PX100's laying around from an impulse buy but i wouln't recommend those...
  2. nice one man, all the best this summer in the old continent.
  3. do you unplug them and go to the mirror with the head phones on and pretend you're DJ tiesto now and again? it's ok we won't tell i would too bastard those are great fuckin cans enjoy
  4. Artist: Cujorius One Album: Creating a Second Sun Label: Zenon Records Web: http://www.cujorius.dk/ CAT: zencd005 Tracks: 01. Bloodstains in my smoke [140 BPM's] 02. Epo Orc [140] 03. Silva Soul [140] 04. 95.5 Radio Joint [138] 05. The Pay per View Sound [140] 06. My Voices Don’t Like You [140] 07. Dear Daddy Drugs [138] 08. Bruise Vein [138] 09. Bass Bitch [138] 10. Pita Pan [140] What's This about? After much dismay last year with a counted number of minimal releases, 2006 has turned the tide announcing a new wave of intelligent rhythms for the adventurous progressive dance floors. Bjorn Jacobsen -one half of Tenka- has opened this year with his debut fitting the Zenon philosophy of deep tech-trance, and funky ‘pro-aggressive’ minimal with Cujo’s signature all over. All and All Creating a Second Sun is nice revival for long time fans of the genre. You don’t buy Traktor Schallabor, or Zenon music for their pick ups and the glissandi arpeggiated leads. We are talking about good rhythms and grooves that cross between ethereal themes and ominous driving kicks, showing the 10 or-so years of experience. No track sounds alike and no beat is remotely similar. The elements used and the structure would have nevertheless, been aided by a little more diversity. If you like your chunky progressive more than house this might be a looker. So, if you are hunting for pitchy stretchy ride of anthemic qualities, you peaked your head on the wrong rabbit hole. If on the other hand its decent DJ tool you’re after, give those samples a listen. for track-by track review and the samples, please surf to > http://www.sonic-energy.net/core/content/view/163/2/
  5. well i got the HD-25 from Senheiser so im obviously going to recomend that best thing you can do, is id the features that are important to you and hunt down decent reviews for the products. best place for that > http://www6.head-fi.org
  6. nice call on the font i recently discovered it for certain logo i was working and besides the fact it's really messy in itself you can do some coolo things with it... as for the album, i dunno.. never heard someone said it sounded like magnetrixx copy but worse? can anyone confirm or deny too lazy to hunt down samples
  7. the only one that's destroying psychedelic trance is you and your haughty "music needs to pass through my ears first to be called psy trance". Make the distiction dude, goa and psy trance... and if you can i suggest you build a machine and go back to 1993
  8. people have been pretty hushed about the actual cause of death so far, here in isra trance,in the deja vu website... reger where did you read that exactly? do you have link for that? falling of a window and comitting suicide... well they are not too far off from each other...
  9. oh ops... i thought this was the review section...
  10. i still don't understand how the original poster in thread can move along reviewing CD's from 2 or 4 minute samples at 64kbps... that barely says anything about a release. sure you get a rough feel on how it is going to sound, but what is that really telling about the overall product? almost nothing personally. You tend to do that regularly as well, don't have a problem with it or anything, but it seems like you can't even follow musical progression of a track to really have a solid understanding of how it's going to sound. So, i don't see how you can form an oppinion based on that. Plenty of times i have been mistaken about cd's i liked and i odered based on samples that i hated once i got the full product. This does not imply you can't have an opinion... but i just find it a little incomplete...
  11. hmm... i think psy trance is something you have to feel in your blood at your own pace, in the dance floor, or grass-floor, whatever... When you explain it someone the rush is usually there, and you NEED to hear this and then the other and you are pumped about them liking it, it kind of gets fizzed... my ex liked psy chillout , but thats mostly cause i was crazy about it and chillout was the middle ground. When we rolled it was the music of choice though, took her to a few venues and she even went to some herself, so at least i can claim she don't listen to euro trance no more... probably hip hop or, the streets when they are on monthly mdma session besides that, that greatest asset has been a close friend that started to DJ around the time i was getting into it. He also started producing as time passed and taking it more seriusly -went to school for it. i turned into an 'appreciator' but it was always nice to share new great cd's with a close buddy or a close group, like it was the case, that's equally crazy about this music. keeps the addiction healthy besides that i think basilisk has a large base of coneverted users... the evangelist...
  12. well i issually find it works best slip them acid as they sleep and then lock them in a room with a really loud boom box playing pie trance... that's initiation... they did it too me and i will do it to you too if i get the chance...
  13. DiMensional Travellers of the Galaxy and beyond - close your eyes and open wide for "Serial Killah". Prepare for eleven solid rocking rounds of brainspanking neurotherapy with your favorite sparring partner, la.Nebuleuse. Take a deep breath, submerge yourself in waves of daytime drifters and dive headfirst into a labyrinth of nighttime twisters - all freakadeliciously fractalized, fogged up with melodic mist and adapted to enhanced intercerebral celebration. You are most spirally invited to plug in, buckle up & blast off! After applying the finishing touch to his debut album, la.Nebuleuse returns to Earth to launch Mighty Lion Satellite 2: an audio refinery, built to liquify sound from raw psychotropic ore, powered by anti-template temptation, running 24/7 non-stop for three months to deliver its first payload, Nebz' second album, "Serial Killah" - a true trancefloor thriller. Disclaimer: backing up your Central Nervous System Database prior to exposure, is a mandatory requirement. Galactic Federation Media is not to be held responsible in any way, if a New World Chaos might emerge. http://www.wirikuta.at/web66/product_detai...owDetail=100748 Killah release folks, go buy it NOW totally killa!
  14. yes everyone in this place is under 18... except moni and dp that act as legal guardians...
  15. hey why don't we diss skazi some more when was the last time you actually heard some skazi? we are all part of the herd mentality...
  16. http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/06..._hit_songs.html Popularity contest Researchers created an artificial "music market" of 14,341 participants drawn from a teen-interest Web site. Upon entering the study's Internet market, the participants were randomly, and unknowingly, assigned to either an "independent" group or a "social influence" group. Participants could then browse through a collection of unknown songs by unknown bands. In the independent condition, participants chose which songs to listen to based solely on the names of the bands and their songs. While listening to the song, they were asked to rate it from one star ("I hate it") to five stars ("I love it"). They were also given the option of downloading the song for keeps. "This condition measured the quality of the songs and allowed us to see what outcome would result in the absence of social influence," said study co-author Matthew Salganik, a sociologist at Columbia University. In the social influence group, participants were provided with the same song list, but could also see how many times each song had been downloaded. Researchers found that popular songs were popular and unpopular songs were unpopular, regardless of their quality established by the other group. They also found that as a particular songs' popularity increased, participants selected it more often. The upshot for markerters: social influence affects decision-making in a market. This research is detailed in the Feb. 10 issue of the journal Science. - I guess you can make your conclusions about the music industry on the psy trance side with that study...
  17. that you can't cut down the price of the middle man if they are also the ones that distribute the Cd around and make the actual CD as labels traditionally do. if you want to bypass a label, you could still group together with other people that want to release music, pool your resources together and release a cd without traditional label affiliation. what most people do though is simply create a new label and thats why there are so many new ones, i pressume. It's simply another way to brand your product. You could simply, like it has been stated here, bypass the actual cd creation and go for online distribution selling wav's or mp3's but when you're getting gigs it just sounds much better to say you have already released two albums or one or whatver. It gives your work some confirmation. nevermind you sold two copies, including your girlfriend and your grandma. Plus it gives your work some validation, actually owning it in your hand as palpable product. people in this scene do not give the same respect to a cd that was distributed exlcusively online, free or if it has been charged.
  18. well it's just that it's a little difficult to cut the middle man if they are also making the cd's...
  19. notice there are some cases where the distributor is the actual label, like wirikuta
  20. it means prices should go down according reality of each country... spending 15 euros on a CD might not be much in the UK or whatever, but it's a bit of money where i live in latin america... and so is the same case in underveloped countries... price adjustments call for a serious re-structuring of the distribuiting houses though. And just like the attempt to keep DVD's regionalized failed miserably, if someone opens a an internet shop in say... ruanda with locally adjusted prices over the net, it could be a problem, when someone in the Sweeden is buying in this shop two or even 3 cd's for the price it would cost to buy one in is country. because ther is no way to monitor local goods priced in such schema would remain in the country. Psychedelic trance does not even have distribuiton arrangements all around the world (i mean ALL around the world) to impose these ideals. it would be the 'fair' thing to do, but since when does the world run according to fairness?
  21. maybe you could cutomise the inside printin the CD to say... "RAH's property, back off!" OR... "Born to be scratched"
  22. looks pretty solid to me and the art work is pretty nice too... wow
  23. so i got around hearing this and it works nicely for a live setup. You mashed your work well with the other tracks here and it works (even if i didn't know many of them) which was a nice surprice the pace is great and the little turns into different kinds of dark is really interesting... even the toxic track :-D i'm not sure which one was playing min 31 but it's one hell of a beat... overall very enjoyable
  24. hehe... yeah it came out as wierd mixture in the end huh... the Lan track does rock, it's hard to image that from that break i would have ended up ZMA material by the end o0 glad someone found it enjoyable
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