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Everything posted by Cupe
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and wearing my ADJF shirt
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Can it really be 25 years since acid house was born?
Cupe replied to Cupe's topic in DJ Headquarters
I know son ololool -
Suck it cunts I'm the best
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Women impressed by men who condemn their taste in music
Cupe replied to Cupe's topic in DJ Headquarters
The Daily Mash is a perfectly acceptable source of accurate information -
Can it really be 25 years since acid house was born?
Cupe replied to Cupe's topic in DJ Headquarters
Source: independent.co.uk -
My thoughts was it's gonna be like a convention with stalls and shit like that and you'll be the guy making the buttons work to have sound come out of the product
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One time for the Stoners! Chromeo and Mad Decent President Diplo hit Club Nokia in Los Angeles late last month for a private gig to promote U.S. Burger Chain Jack in The Box’s new Late Night Munchies Menu in a saavy marketing move by AEG Global Partnerships. The entire marketing campaign from the fast food chain is cunningly targeted to the night owl / the lonely stoner. Diplo had this insightful gem to offer when speaking to media publication, the Hollywood Reporter - Deep…. (Fried…Chickeeeeen) Ah! This ploy is working on us already!! Diplo’s presence has been felt over the last 12 months with the Mad Decent Block Party re-cap video detailing the power at wielding a successful non-EDM lineup, his hilarious Reddit AMA, news that he’ll produce and feature in a full-length film and releasing a double-disc compilation from his Jeffrees imprint. Source: stoneyroads.com
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How is that not more of a generalised crowd than you can get? I'm not saying play sweet fucking home alabama, I'm saying play a large variety of music that can also showcase the product. Think from a business perspective rather than a DJ/punter angle.
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Highly addictive and potentially disruptive to your social life, personal relationships and financial security, the parallels between records, methamphetamine and watching Breaking Bad are uncanny. News then that the soundtracking of the misadventures of Walter White is to be released on vinyl should send a clammy shiver of recognition down the spines of sofa-bound record junkies around the world. As Modern Vinyl report, an Instagram photo posted by All Welcome Records and Travis Peacock of Hot Topic has surfaced, revealing the high-grade picture disc in all its moreish glory. Exclusive to Hot Topic, there isn’t so much as a sniff of a tracklisting for the 2xLP yet, although we can safely assume it will be the best soundtrack we’ve ever heard, except maybe The Wire’s.
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Deadmau5 has released more grainy footage of his PPI Control Surface - something he grabbed in complimentary fashion from the tech giant Microsoft. With little being detailed on why he keeps showing us the device, we did some investigating and suspect it could be used to tie in with his new ambitious live performance goal. In a recent interview with the Rolling Stone, Zimmerman opened up about his passion to explore storytelling; In the lead up to his inevitably awesome tour of Australia on the Future Music Festival trail, the Mau5trap owner spoke about how the show will roll out like a story; One element of the show we are aware of after a recent Las Vegas performance is the new new Mau5bots that run both sides of him during his performance that looks to be a long standing part of the live show. Will we be seeing the PPI Control Surface in action during his time in Australia? We think so. Source: stoneyroads.com
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WOMEN have confirmed that nothing gets them hotter than men vigorously criticising the music they listen to. Researchers at the Institute for Studies found that women experience strong sexual impulses towards men who glance through their iTunes playlist while mouthing the words ‘shit, shit, shit’. When condemnation of their favourite artists is then followed up with recommendations of obscure beard rock albums, most women are unable to stop themselves initiating sexual intercourse. Highly attractive woman Carolyn Ryan said: “When a guy asks me what’s on my iPod then tells me that I’ve been fooled into thinking I like Emeli Sandé by marketing, then he has my full attention, upstairs and downstairs. “If he then proceeds to rank Radiohead albums from worst to best then it’s pretty much on, and we’re doing it while he’s explaining that Amnesiac is perennially underrated.” Model Helen Archer agreed: “When I see men who nod their head attentively to the music but never, ever get on the dancefloor because music’s far too serious a passion for them, I immediately crave their genetic material.” 94% of women surveyed admitted that they couldn’t respect a man who didn’t launch into a rant about musical authenticity whenever he heard The Saturdays. Dissenting voice Joanna Kramer said: “Obviously I know Katy Perry is shit. But it is much, much better for having a dance to on a Friday night than the collected catalogue of Rush.” Source: thedailymash.co.uk
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What became of the ravers? Once they were dancing in the warehouses and fields, now they're the mums and dads, the entrepreneurial company directors, the van drivers, the Radio 2 listeners, the politicians and that middle-aged lady in the park, walking her dog. More than the aging teddy boy, the tattooed skinhead or the pony-tailed hippie, the former acid house devotee is hard to spot. "A hippie might have taken it on as a lifestyle choice but there's no one walking around in 'Smiley' T-shirts and dungarees at the age of 50," says the filmmaker Gordon Mason. "But when you ask them about that time, they all have that glint in their eye." It is 25 years this summer that a series of cultural forces collided to shift the tectonic plates of British music. The first tremors came from the Balearics and the projects of Chicago, compounded by the emergence of a euphoric drug known as 'E'. The aftershocks are still being felt today. In the United States, the Electronic Dance Music (EDM) movement is only now coursing through mainstream youth culture as it did in Britain a generation ago. And in fashionable east London clubs such as Dalston Superstore and Bar A Bar, a new crowd of ravers are enjoying a summer of love with nights like Paris' Acid Ball. "I've always thought this was an evolving scene – and it's still evolving," says Dave Swindells, who chronicled British club culture in words and photographs as the Nightlife Editor of Time Out between 1986 and 2008. With Mason and the graphic designer Dave Little – the artist behind such Acid House institutions as the club Spectrum and the Boy's Own fanzine – Swindells is staging 'A Little Summer of Love' celebration in west London this evening to recognise the emergence of a movement that changed their lives. Mason has devoted several years to creating a lasting document of the acid house story by filming interviews with no less than 75 of the original protagonists – the promoters and DJs, the musicians and the security guards, the dancefloor stalwarts and even the police officers who trailed them from the city to the motorway service stations and on into the countryside as the parties grew larger and moved outdoors. This exhaustive account has cost him around £100,000 and taken him around the world. For the sources of acid house are diverse. Without question a pivotal moment was the decision in 1987 by the young DJ Paul Oakenfold to spend his 24th birthday on the island of Ibiza where his friends, Trevor Fung and Ian St Paul, had rented a bar. He took fellow soul boys Danny Rampling, Nicky Holloway and Johnny Walker with him. What they experienced in the club Amnesia that holiday – an ecstasy-enhanced exploration of the sounds of resident DJ Alfredo – was to change the course of global club culture. Other forces were at play as the British music scene began an extraordinary transformation. Earlier in 1987, a group of Chicago proponents of the electronic-based sound called 'house' toured the United Kingdom for the first time. They attracted little attention in London, but Marshall Jefferson, Frankie Knuckles and Adonis were treated like heroes in cities such as Manchester and Nottingham, where the repetitive beats of house were readily accepted by an audience raised on Northern Soul. In the months to come, pioneering northern DJs such as Mike Pickering and Graeme Park would become house evangelists. Both fledgling scenes were inspired by the club scene of New York and particularly Paradise Garage, where Oakenfold and Pickering were among British visitors hypnotised by the cavernous dark room and the music played by the likes of Larry Levan. The Garage became an inspiration for Manchester's Hacienda and, several years later, London's Ministry of Sound. But the first club in the capital to reflect the new scene was The Project, Oakenfold and St Paul's attempt to gather together the English bar workers who had spent the summer in Ibiza and to recreate the Balearic atmosphere they'd discovered. This fledgling acid house scene took its name from the Chicago tune "Acid Tracks" by Phuture. Other clubs emerged: Hedonism – on a west London industrial estate – was the first acid all-nighter. RIP was a sweat-box above a 12th-century prison alongside the Thames. As word spread, the Project grew into the f larger Future club while Shoom, in a south London fitness centre, quickly became an institution. Oakenfold and St Paul moved into bigger premises at Richard Branson's club Heaven, showing their chutzpah by packing the place on a Monday. Their night was called Spectrum and the flyers, bearing an all-seeing eye and the words 'Heaven on Earth' have become part of acid house iconography. Little's design was inspired by Sixties influences such as Grateful Dead albums and Tom Wolfe's Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. 'You Have Passed the Acid Test' was the message on the back of the flyer. "I believed what I was witnessing in '87 was an almost exact replica of the Sixties 'happenings' in San Francisco," says Little. "I don't think many ravers saw the link, though." The 'Smiley' logo T-shirts and dungarees that were an unofficial uniform for many Ibiza bar workers in the summer of 1987 were adopted by some ravers in London, but would become an embarrassing cliché. As acid went overground, The Sun picked up on the scene and ran a story, 'Fiver for a drug trip to Heaven in Branson club', which drove Spectrum out of its home and, ironically, provided the mass publicity which helped create the rave nation. Some acid house pioneers still travel the world as DJs. Spectrum's ever-present Anton the Pirate went off to set up a yoga retreat. Hobbs, a set designer at early raves, now does the same for major feature films. Anthony and Christopher Donnelly, promoters of the legendary Joy party in the Lancashire hills, went on to found the Gio-Goi clothing label. Among that crowd at Joy was Noel Gallagher, who lived on the same Manchester street as the Hacienda and was a regular in those heady days that changed British clubs forever. "It was the last social musical revolution there has been," he said. "I think it was our answer to punk." 'A Little Summer of Love' is at Westbourne Studios, London W10, tonight Rave: movers and shakers DJ Trevor Fung on Ibiza, summer 1987 "One summer you just turned up and everything was completely different, everyone was dancing on tables, anywhere they could dance really – it was just amazing. What's going on, why is everyone so happy?" Promoter Nicky Holloway on Ibiza "Before ecstasy you would go to a club and everybody would be standing round the edge; it was almost like the school disco, waiting for somebody to go out and start dancing and they'd have to have a good few beers in them before they would start dancing. All of a sudden, when the ecstasy thing came along and they would neck their pills in the queue, they would be gagging to get in there and they'd go straight on the dance floor." Club promoter Paul Oakenfold on Paradise Garage, New York, 1987 "The inspiration came from looking up at Larry Levan and thinking, why haven't we got this in the UK? All of a sudden we figured out that they were on drugs." House music DJ Noel Watson on Delirium (London), 1987 "We started to play house music which at first cleared the floor – we took a lot of abuse from people who came to the club. We were trying to steer away from the violent element." Partygoer Sacha on Future (London) "It was something fresh, it was something new. Nothing had tapped into my inner self like the combination of the music, the people and that drug. And I found that refreshing and I was instantly interested." Partygoer Charlie Colston-Hayter on Shoom (London) "It was completely different to everything we had known, it was different music, different people, it was smiling faces, I just walked in and felt I want to live this – and we did." DJ Mike Pickering on the Hacienda (Manchester) "You didn't need smoke machines in the Hacienda pre-1988 because of weed – everyone was smoking. It changed, from the top of the Hacienda, like a Mexican wave coming down, over about four or five weeks. It was quite weird, you could see it. It just changed the whole thing." DJ Anton The Pirate on Spectrum (London) "The laser would cut in with the record and you would literally see 2,500 hands in the air all facing the same direction, all doing the same thing. That would never have happened before – no one even bothered looking at the DJ. You had a laser show, a crowd chanting and screaming – that was never seen before. The energy in the room was electric." Partygoer Scully on Joy, a rave in the Lancashire countryside "I was dancing away on a wall, having a good old time, and I remember what clothes I had on and who I was with. As I was growing up I was well aware of the mod scene, the punk scene, rock'n'roll, teddy boys and as I was getting to about 15 or 16 years old, I was thinking: 'Where's our scene? When is it time for us to shine?'. And that was it. I was 16 years old and it just hit you right between the eyes. That was it, this is our time, this is our period, this is us." Partygoer Hobbs on outdoor raves "You would have that morning chill and then when the sun came over the horizon and you first have the warmth of that, you emotionally felt the place notch up. It was like 'We made it through the night'." Noel Gallagher on dancing all night "I don't think I ever batted an eyelid about standing in a field all night for 18 hours dancing, it seemed the most normal thing in the world. You didn't want to go home, you had nothing to go home to. Thinking about it now gives me goosebumps." Chief Superintendent Ken Tappenden, Kent Police, Pay Party Unit, on rave culture "We were logging something like 300 or 400 parties per month at the height of that summer, 1989... There was movement of traffic, movement of people and we were losing a little bit of control." Source: independent.co.uk
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Sourcing someone from an area doesn't mean they want them to perform to the same demographic. They want to show off their speakers with tunes that will draw a general crowd in. Playing little known tracks by unknown producers won't help their overall cause. If you're playing EDM play bangers, if you're playing classics, play bbq anthems (but with bass, not some shitty cold chisel).
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MIX MASTER MIKE @ Upstairs Beresford - Wed Nov 20th
Cupe replied to bonez99er's topic in DJ Headquarters
he is an OG baus -
When I said top 40 I didn't mean top 40 EDM. I said top 40 of all charts, including things like rock and pub classics and shit like that. Stuff that the general demographic will recognise and enjoy as they wander past.
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Anything that has reached the top 20 of any any chart in the last 20 years
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will depend on my classes
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I haven't updated shit
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Yea I'm in a fair amount of debt already but this is on the list
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We will need a main hub, just depends what we can organise. Me and mitch will look into it soon
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If you want to play in clubs you'll need to learn CDJ's. You can always just produce on software only, until you're ready to purchase equipment, or feel you know the programs enough to brand out into hardware. And you can get plenty of the big DAW's for free on trials, so that means you can have a go with all of them without spending a cent (providing you already have a pc/mac). If ideally you want to play in clubs, get CDJ's. If you want to produce, you can start doing it without spending anything, then work out whether you want to continue down that path later. ps. welcome to ADJF
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Nice one man, it only gets bigger and better from here!