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The Chillout Room
Deep House 1989-1992
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<blockquote data-quote="Art Awreet" data-source="post: 798252" data-attributes="member: 6890"><p>Sometimes I think it is hard (at least for me) to define oldskool tunes. For example are Maurice "This is Acid", Royal House "Can u Party" and Black Riots "A day in the Life", acid house tracks or early US Hardcore/House/Rave tracks?</p><p></p><p>Also even hardcore from 91/92 is not so clear cut, with it being split into ravey/hardcore house, belgian techno, jungle techno and pure jungle (all breakbeat) plus others like trance. Even then it can be hard to define</p><p></p><p>As a northerner who went south in 92', the word "Rave" was geographically defined as "Rave" in the north meant italo house/northern piano/progressive house plus some harder belgian/UK tracks in between, whereas "Rave" in the south meant jungle. Clubs in the south played House at least from 92', but were NEVER referred to as raves despite playing similar music to Northern "Raves". The midlands "Raves" seems to have been somewhere in between, with more emphasis on jungle techno and belgian techno and less piano. The further to London you got for "Raves" the more breakbeaty it became with less 4x4 beat</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Art Awreet, post: 798252, member: 6890"] Sometimes I think it is hard (at least for me) to define oldskool tunes. For example are Maurice "This is Acid", Royal House "Can u Party" and Black Riots "A day in the Life", acid house tracks or early US Hardcore/House/Rave tracks? Also even hardcore from 91/92 is not so clear cut, with it being split into ravey/hardcore house, belgian techno, jungle techno and pure jungle (all breakbeat) plus others like trance. Even then it can be hard to define As a northerner who went south in 92', the word "Rave" was geographically defined as "Rave" in the north meant italo house/northern piano/progressive house plus some harder belgian/UK tracks in between, whereas "Rave" in the south meant jungle. Clubs in the south played House at least from 92', but were NEVER referred to as raves despite playing similar music to Northern "Raves". The midlands "Raves" seems to have been somewhere in between, with more emphasis on jungle techno and belgian techno and less piano. The further to London you got for "Raves" the more breakbeaty it became with less 4x4 beat [/QUOTE]
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The Chillout Room
Deep House 1989-1992
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