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Electronica/dance/techno/et cetera.

Yello 1983: You Gotta Say Yes To Another Excess


Jam & Spoon 1995: hardtrance remix


ASYS 2024: Acid remix of the remix


Can't wait for the 2034 remix of the remix of the remix :D
 
Yello 1983: You Gotta Say Yes To Another Excess


Jam & Spoon 1995: hardtrance remix


ASYS 2024: Acid remix of the remix


Can't wait for the 2034 remix of the remix of the remix :D
Looking forward to 2034 then!

In the same spirit, the first track I posted in this thread,


is the first track of an album of consecutive remixes, all made by 16 different artists. The first track was passed to the second artist for remixing. The result from the second artist was then passed to the next one for remixing, and so on the whole album through.

Here is the last track from the album, which should be the 15th remix of the initial Sarilou song if my counting is right...

Friend - Mannerism

 

 
An awesome start of one of the greatest albums of all time.
That was indeed the first album I ever got - as a teenager I asked my parents to give it to me for Christmas 1995, and they did - I knew because I stole it from their "secret cupboard" and listened on dad's big stereo whenever they were away before actual Christmas. Great memories, and in hindsight a formative experience. This album has shaped my musical perception forever.

Looking back, and listening today, it's still exceptional. So much range, vibe, and style, even compared to Experience and Fat of the Land. And excellently produced.

Just as I did back then, three decades ago, you can walk into any hifi store today with salesmen whose very job is nothing but to impress you, make them play Break & Enter, and watch their socks getting blown off.
 
That was indeed the first album I ever got - as a teenager I asked my parents to give it to me for Christmas 1995, and they did - I knew because I stole it from their "secret cupboard" and listened on dad's big stereo whenever they were away before actual Christmas. Great memories, and in hindsight a formative experience. This album has shaped my musical perception forever.

Looking back, and listening today, it's still exceptional. So much range, vibe, and style, even compared to Experience and Fat of the Land. And excellently produced.

Just as I did back then, three decades ago, you can walk into any hifi store today with salesmen whose very job is nothing but to impress you, make them play Break & Enter, and watch their socks getting blown off.
Same here, Music for the Jilted Generation really did shape my musical taste forever. I listened to Michael Jackson as a kid, but in 1994 my brother got some Absolute Dance compilation where No Good (Start the Dance) was one of the tracks, and I was hooked from the start so of course I had to get the full album which I've looped endlessly since then, such a masterpiece!

I do think though that Jilted and Experience is not too far away from eachother in style, I really do love both of them, but from Fat of the Land and afterwards they became something slightly different. Definitely not bad, but not the same group that I fell in love with. I think I just wanted those sampled fast drums and less of the rock vibe. Ah well :)

 
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