Techno Juice

Saturday, April 9, 2011
"We were trying to do a Phil Spector thing with as few instruments as possible," John Cale, the classically trained pianist and viola player of the Velvet Underground, once said of this record. It was no idle boast. Much of what we take for granted in rock would not exist without this New York band or its seminal debut, The Velvet Underground and Nico: the androgynous sexuality of glitter; punk's raw noir; the blackened-riff howl of grunge and noise rock. It is a record of fearless breadth and lyric depth. Singer-songwriter Lou Reed documented carnal desire and drug addiction with a pop wisdom he learned as a song-factory composer for Pickwick Records. Cale introduced the power of pulse and drone (from his work in early minimalism); guitarist Sterling Morrison and drummer Maureen Tucker played with tribal force; Nico, a German vocalist briefly added to the band by manager Andy Warhol, brought an icy femininity to the heated ennui in Reed's songs. Rejected as nihilistic by the love crowd in '67, the Banana Album (so named for its Warhol-designed cover), is the most prophetic rock album ever made.

Miles Davis - Kind of Blue CD (album) cover
This painterly masterpiece is one of the most important, influential and popular albums in jazz. At the time it was made, Kind of Blue was also a revolution all its own. Turning his back on standard chord progressions, trumpeter Miles Davis used modal scales as a starting point for composition and improvisation — breaking new ground with warmth, subtlety and understatement in the thick of hard bop. Davis and his peerless band — bassist Paul Chambers, drummer Jimmy Cobb, pianist Bill Evans and the titanic sax team of John Coltrane and Cannonball Adderley — soloed in uncluttered settings, typified by "melodic rather than harmonic variation," as Davis put it. Two numbers, "All Blues" and "Freddie Freeloader" (the latter featured Wynton Kelly at the ivories in place of Evans), were in twelve-bar form, but Davis' approach allowed his players a cool, new, collected freedom. Evans wrote in his original liner notes, "Miles conceived these settings only hours before the recording dates and arrived with sketches which indicated to the group what was to be played. Therefore, you will hear something close to pure spontaneity in these performances." Or as the late critic Robert Palmer wrote, "Kind of Blue is, in a sense, all melody — and atmosphere." The bass line in "So What" is now among the most familiar obbligatos in jazz, and there is no finer evocation of the late-night wonder of jazz than the muted horns in "All Blues."


Many believe Rock & Roll was born on July 5th, 1954, at Sun Studios in Memphis. Elvis Presley, guitarist Scotty Moore and bassist Bill Black were horsing around with "That's All Right," a tune by bluesman Arthur Crudup, when producer Sam Phillips stopped them and asked, "What are you doing?" "We don't know," they said. Phillips told them to "back up and do it again." The A side of Presley's first single (backed with a version of Bill Monroe's "Blue Moon of Kentucky"), "That's All Right" was issued by Sun, on July 19th. It may or may not be the first rock & roll record. But the man who would be King was officially on wax. Bridging black and white, country and blues, his sound was playful and revolutionary. As Presley biographer Peter Guralnick observed, "This is the most improbable story of all: In a tiny Memphis studio, in 1954 and 1955, Sam Phillips and Elvis Presley created rock & roll." Presley released four more singles on Sun — including definitive reinventions of Wynonie Harris' "Good Rockin' Tonight" and Junior Parker's "Mystery Train" — before moving on to immortality at RCA. It took more than twenty years for Presley's Sun output to be properly collected on this '76 LP — which has since been superseded by Sunrise, a double-CD chronicle of the King's beginnings at Sun, released in 1999.

"In 1969 or 1970, I began to re-evaluate my whole concept of what I wanted my music to say," Gaye once said about the creation of What's Going On. "I was very much affected by letters my brother was sending me from Vietnam, as well as the social situation here at home. I realized that I had to put my own fantasies behind me if I wanted to write songs that would reach the souls of people. I wanted them to take a look at what was happening in the world." The last thing Motown wanted its fans to think about, however, was "what was happening in the world." So with Gaye determined to shatter the label's hugely successful pop formula and address issues such as the Vietnam War, civil rights and the environment, Motown founder Berry Gordy was not pleased, to say the least. He claimed that "What's Going On" was the worst song he had ever heard.

As for "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)," Gordy asserted that he didn't even know what the word ecology meant. For his part, Gaye said he would never record for Motown again unless "What's Going On" was put out as a single. After initially being rejected by Motown's quality-control committee, it was; when it became a Top Five hit, the album — and a burst of socially conscious music from Motown — followed soon after.

Producing the album amid a haze of marijuana smoke, Gaye made one intuitively brilliant decision after another — from letting the tapes roll as his friends mingled and chatted to recording the rehearsal exercises of saxophonist Eli Fountain. When Fountain complained that he had just been goofing around, Gaye replied, "Well, you goof exquisitely. Thank you." And that's how the plaintive saxophone line that announces What's Going On came to be.

Recorded in 1979 in London, which was then wrenched by surging unemployment and drug addiction, and released in America in January 1980, the dawn of an uncertain decade, London Calling is nineteen songs of apocalypse fueled by an unbending faith in rock & roll to beat back the darkness. Produced with no-surrender energy by legendary Sixties studio madman Guy Stevens, the Clash's third album sounds like a free-form radio broadcast from the end of the world, skidding from bleak punk ("London Calling") to rampaging ska ("Wrong 'Em Boyo") and disco resignation ("Lost in the Supermarket"). The album was made in dire straits, too. The band was heavily in debt; singer-guitarists Joe Strummer and Mick Jones, the Clash's Lennon and McCartney, wrote together in Jones' grandmother's flat, where he was living for lack of dough. But the Clash also cranked up the hope. The album ends with "Train in Vain," a rousing song of fidelity (originally unlisted on the back cover) that became the sound of triumph: the Clash's first Top Thirty single in the U.S.

Thursday, April 7, 2011

Artist: VA
Title: Dash Berlin - Top 15 January 2011
Label: Armada Music
Style: Trance / Progressive
Release Date: 14.01.2010
Quality: 320 kbps / 44.1kHz/ Joint-Stereo
Tracks: 16
Size: 252 Mb

1/16. Filo & Peri feat. Audrey Gallagher – This Night (Dash Berlin Remix) (06:50)
2/16. Hoyaa – The Other World (Original Mix) (07:33)
3/16. Susana & Josh Gabriel – Frozen (Nic Chagall Remix) (08:19)
4/16. Andre’ Visior & Kay Stone – Sunrise (Ronski Speed Remix) (08:42)
5/16. Signum feat. Kate Louise Smith – Liberate (Original Mix) (07:01)
6/16. Oliver Smith – Chordplay (Original Mix Edit) (04:56)
7/16. Fabio XB feat. Yves De Lacroix – Close To The Stars (Jerome Isma-Ae Remix) (07:26)
8/16. Ruben de Ronde – Forever In Our Hearts (Danny Chen Remix) (07:30)
9/16. TyDi feat. Tania Zygar – Half Light (Max Graham Remix) (07:10)
10/16. Airdraw – Jubilee (Original Mix) (07:25)
11/16. The Thrillseekers – Synaesthesia (The Thrillseekers Live Xtreme Mix) (07:07)
12/16. Sneijder – Away From Here (Arty Remix) (07:2
13/16. Mike Foyle & DNS Project – Cayo Norte (Lemon & Einar K Remix) (06:24)
14/16. Hydro Aquatic – Snowflake (Original Mix) (07:31)
15/16. Shogun feat. Susie – Come With Me (Original Mix) (07:30)
16/16. Mike Foyle vs. Signalrunners – Love Theme Dusk (Signalrunners Sunrise Mix [Classic Bonus Track]) (08:01)

Artist: VA
Title: Armada Top 15 - February 2011
Label: Armada Music
Genre: Trance
Store Date: 25.02.2011
Lenght: 1:57:52
Archive size: 274 mb


01. Dash Berlin - Disarm Yourself (Club Mix) [feat. Emma Hewitt]
02. W&W - Impact (Original Mix)
03. Cerf, Mitiska & Jaren - Another World (Original Vocal Mix)
04. Dabruck & Klein - Heartbeat (Album Mix) [feat. Stella Attar]
05. Beat Service - Not Out (Original Proglifting Mix) [feat. Emma Lock]
06. Marcus Maison & Will Dragen - Road to Euphoria (Original Mix)
07. John O'Callaghan, Timmy & Tommy - Talk to Me (Original Mix)
08. Tenishia - Man In Denial (Original Mix) [feat. Aneym]
09. Aly & Fila - Paradise (Club Mix) [feat. Tiff Lacey]
10. Whiteroom - Someday (Orjan Nilsen Remix) [feat. Amy Cooper]
11. Ram - Ramazing (Original Mix)
12. Mr. Pit - Stamina (Club Mix)
13. Lange, Fabio XB & Yves De Lacroix - Electrify (Lange Mix)
14. Bjorn Akesson - Painting Pyramids (Original Mix)
15. David Forbes & Alan Nimmo - Galapagos (Original Mix)


Artist: VA
Album: A State Of Trance Radio Top 15 February 2011
Year: 2011
Label: Armada Music (Holland)
Genre: Trance

Tracklist
01. Mat Zo - "Synapse Dynamics" (Arty Remix Edit)
02. Andrew Rayel - "Aether" (original Mix)
03. Mike Foyle Presents Statica - "Head Rush" (Original Mix)
04. Dave202 - "Coming Home" (club Mix)
05. Robert Nickson & Thomas Datt - "Godless" (Protoculture Remix)
06. Rapha - "Dark Temptation" (Original Mix)
07. Adam Kancerski - "It Takes Time" (feat Aneym - Original Mix)
08. Abstract Vision & Elite Electronic - "Echoes" (Protoculture Remix)
09. Virtual Vault - "Offshore" (Original Mix)
10. Shogun - "Run To My Rescue" (feat Emma Lock - Signum vs Al-Exander Remix)
11. Ad Brown - "Memorial (You Were Loved)" (feat Kerry Leva - Maor Levi Club Mix)
12. DNS Project - "Second Chapter" (Original Mix)
13. Will Holland - "Start Again" (feat Jeza - Original Intro Mix)
14. Kyau & Albert - "Barbizon" (Original Mix)
15. David Newsum - "Narco" (Original Mix)
16. St. John vs Locust - "Mind Circles" (Original Mix - Classic Bonus Track)

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