0

Trance or Techno song from 90’s or early 2000?


The chorus or the song repeats “Do you know what i mean”
My cuz tells me its her fav song but has it on a mix and don’t know the name.

Thanks

Answer by sarrafzedehkhoee
Type the lyrics here:

http://www.lyrster.com/search.php?cx=002250418523919472861%3Afz2izh3×740&cof=FORID%3A10&q=&sa=Find+my+song#19

01

what’s the best trance track in your opinion since 2000?


for me it’s still
Chicane – Saltwater (Original Mix)

Answer by timeneversleeps_77
Any trance track is the best. As long is its on mute.

2

Club Mix 2000


Album Description
2 CD set features Bob Marley, Alice Deejay, ATB, DJ Jean, Basement Jaxx, Moby, Wamdue Project, Eiffel 65, Triple X and Fragma to name but a few. 43 of the biggest club tracks. 2000 release. Double slimline jewel case in a paper slipcase. … More >>

Club Mix 2000

2

what’s the best trance track in your opinion since 2000?


for me it’s still
Chicane – Saltwater (Original Mix)

5

Generation Trance 2000, Vol. 3


Generation Trance 2000, Vol. 3

0

Cyberfest 2000: Sounds of the Digital Revolution


Cyberfest 2000: Sounds of the Digital Revolution

Eurodance: Eurovision Dance Contest, Electronic Dance Music, House Music, Hi-NRG, Italo Disco, Techno, List of Eurodance Artists, Euro Disco, Europop, Euro-Trance, Eurobeat.
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Eurodance is a genre of electronic dance music originated in the early 1990s… More >>
Ghast Antenna T-Shirt, Medium, Lt.Blue
High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles! Eurodance is a genre of electronic dance music originated in the early 1990s… More >>

0

Club Hits 2000


Club Hits 2000

0

Clavilux 2000 Turns Any Keyboard Performance Into an Infographic


Clavilux 2000 Turns Any Keyboard Performance Into an Infographic
Using a keyboard and data visualization software, the device translates the notes into a real-time graph. The Clavilux 2000, a gizmo invented by Jonas Heuer , turns any piece of music played ona keyboard into a dynamic piece of information art. It’s a pretty simple set-up: The midi-signals from the synthesizer are run through vvvv , an free tool for creating live visualizations. The outputs are …

Read more on Fast Company Magazine

2

MTV Ibiza 2000: The Party


Album Description
Second of MTV UK’s Ibiza compilations. 37 dance anthems including, ‘Silence’ (Airscape Mix)-Delirium feat. Sarah McLachlan, ‘Two Tribes’ (Rob Searle Club Mix)-Frankie Goes To Hollywood, ‘Ssssst…(Listen)’ (Pants & Corset Remix)-Jonah, ‘Iguana’ (Megavoices Mix)-Mauro Picotto, ‘Nightfly’ (Pants & Corset Remix)-Blank & Jones, ‘You See The Trouble With Me’ (We’ll Be In Trouble Original Radio Edit)-Black Legend, ‘I Feel For You’ (Spiller Vocal Mix)-Bob Sinclar, ‘Bad Habit… More >>

MTV Ibiza 2000: The Party

6

What are some old 2000 main stream techno/trance/euro songs?


Examples such as
PPK – Ressurection
Kate Ryan – Scream For More
Noemi – In My Dreams
Ian Van Dahl – Castles in the Sky
Used to hear these all the time back in 2000 XD just trying to find more songs back then

5

Psychotrance 2000


Psychotrance 2000

0

Trance In America: 2000


Trance

More than 10 years after the inception of rave culture, the mainstream media has rediscovered it, as it tends to do every few years. There are three news films about the scene, “Groove,” “Human Traffic” and the documentary love letter “Better Living Through Circuitry.” A vacant-eyed raver, half her face overlaid with rainbow colors, stares from the cover of Time’s June 5 issue. And in the past few months there has been an earnest discussion about dance culture on NPR and a hysterical report about ecstasy on “60 Minutes II.” The cover of last month’s Spin promised to explain “How the DJ Scene Got Massive”; its subhead coyly addressed the drug issue like this: “Ecstasy: The New Beer?”

All this means that the time is ripe for the music biz to take another crack at turning dance music into the next big thing in America — a project started again in earnest about three years ago when the music found a new name, “electronica,” and groups like Prodigy and the Chemical Brothers landed videos on MTV. In England, of course, electronic music long ago achieved market domination, and the latest wave of British invasion markets two double-disc sets from the two most famous dance brands in England. London Records offers “Essential Selection Volume One,” part of a series inspired by Pete Tong’s kingmaking Radio 1 show. And Ultra brings the first American release from the record label of British superclub Ministry of Sound, a two-CD mix by DJs Jimmy Van M and Taylor called “Trance Nation America.”

Trance, an anthemic, melodic, slightly New Age-y strain of electronica, is the currently the world’s most popular dance music, but relatively few American trance artists are well known domestically. It’s unsurprising, if ironic, that a British franchise is trying to introduce the burgeoning American trance scene to America — after all, ever since the early days of acid house, British kids have been making heroes of DJs from the States who remained obscure at home. Thus “Trance Nation America” makes sense. What makes no sense is the first American installment of “Essential Selection Vol. One.”

“Essential Selection” comprises two discs, one mixed by Fatboy Slim and one mixed by Paul Oakenfold, two DJs with aesthetics so different that it’s hard to imagine them having any fans in common. Imagine if a label packaged a CD by Madonna with one by Limp Bizkit — the only conceivable audience for such an enterprise would be curious foreigners entirely new to American pop. Similarly, the market for “Essential Selection” seems to be those who’ve caught glimpses of those rave parties on TV and want to know what all the fuss is about.

Perhaps someone could justify marketing these discs together by calling them the opposite poles of rave culture. Fatboy Slim is undoubtedly the yang. His disc is a big-beat frat party: bombastic, muscular, fun and dumb. It’s packed with songs by names that you’ve probably heard before, even if you’ve never waved a glow stick — house DJ Armand Van Helden, the Chemical Brothers, Art of Noise, Underworld and Mr. Slim himself. The opening track, Walter Wanderley’s lounge kitsch “Summer Samba,” sets the insouciant tone, though the disc quickly goes harder with Van Helden’s dirty, driving house track “Necessary Evil.” Many of the cuts on this disc hew close to the formula that has made Fatboy Slim a star — a combination of squishy hip-hop bass and loose-limbed, funk-tinged rhythms looped beneath goofy vocal samples repeated ad infinitum.

Superstar trance DJ Oakenfold, meanwhile, sets off on a smooth, spacey journey through faraway solar systems, enchanted forests and psychedelic daisy fields. Inspired by new-wave acts like New Order far more than by hip-hop, his music is glossy and epic, all Elysian strings, crisp galactic pulses and melodramatic crescendos. Unlike with the companion disc, none of the artists here will be familiar to non-initiates, though many should be. Jaya’s sinuous, echo-laden “Precession” opens the mix and signals Oakenfold’s commitment to dance music with passion and pathos, an aesthetic that reaches its apotheosis in the over-the-top celestial loveliness of Skip Raider’s “Another Day.”

Though “Essential Selection” was devised by Pete Tong, a credible and respected DJ and musician, the weird juxtaposition of Fatboy and Oakenfold makes it seem like the work of a clueless marketing geek. Conversely, the marketer who devised “Trance Nation America” was very slick indeed. Like “Essential Selection,” “Trance Nation America” contains two discs mixed by two different DJs — one by Los Angeles’ Taylor, the other by New York’s Jimmy Van M. But the sound is entirely consistent: Ministry of Sound has obviously clearly defined its demographic and assiduously courts it on its site, in its magazine and through its merchandising.

Unfortunately, the lifestyle Ministry of Sound is peddling is all about surface and affectless cool. The two discs are supposed to be a tour through American trance, a subgenre that, at is best, its ripe with ear-candy melodies and the grandiose pop emotions too often missing from dance music. But unlike Oakenfold, Taylor and Jimmy Van M studiously avoid symphonic grandeur and sentimentality.

While some consider Oakenfold’s baroque flourishes cheesy, they recall the concentrated bliss that marked the early rave scene. In the States, at least, rave’s celebration of crystalline electronic beauty and unfettered joy seemed, at least in part, a reaction of against the disconsolate sludge-rock of grunge. Yet at this point the warm, wild exuberance often gives way to a very stylized pose, which is what one hears on “Trance Nation America,” with its long stretches of angular, passionless percussion, lukewarm builds and disdain for melody.

Sure, these tracks might work differently if you were sweating on a dance floor and buzzing with chemicals, but heard on their own, they certainly don’t suggest the “expanded consciousness through repetitive beats” ecstasy that was once rave’s raison d’?e. As a famous purveyor of some of the world’s most accessible electronic music, Oakenfold’s street cred may be nil, but of these four discs, his mix alone offers the thrilling starburst beauty and intensity that once made raves a refuge for those disenchanted with the jaded, blas?ainstream. Oakenfold’s music leaves one dazed with pleasure. Otherwise, the only trance this music invokes is the pall of zombification.

To learn and discover more about trance music, please visit Trance Nation.

Trance Nation is one of the most successful mix CD series and weekly radio shows on the planet. Since 1994 more than 1.000.000 million Trance Nation CDs have been sold worldwide! Trance Nation is one of the most popular and highest respected brands of the international dance scene. And Trance Nation is much more than only a CD compilation series: Trance Nation events regularly take place all over the world and the Trance Nation Radio Show is one of the highest rated podcasts on the Apple iTunes store and attracts listeners in more than 120 countries worldwide. Trance Nation has grown out of the scene and Trance Nation is still serving the worldwide electronic music scene.

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