One day, maybe 129 years from now, an academic will study the thinking behind these recordings, marvel at their genius, their boldness, their deceptive simplicity and the fact that this music came out of essentially nowhere to take over the whole world. People will say, "how did he do it"? Others will try and fail to duplicate the sublime mood of these tracks. Others will revere the name of 'Robert Armani' the way that Robert Johnson came to be revered for his guitar playing.
I think you will find shout extended mix is the origin of this. Has a similar base line and very stiped down feel. It was a few years erlier than this 😮 depeche mode shout
909 forever! What a machine! This is just 909 progamming at it.s best. The barebone techno. Armani understood this Roland machine and produced great drumtracks with it. Just drumtracks which a really great to dance to. Techno people!
Absolute genius. Along with Ambulance this was a total anthem at my club. Hate that hideous cheesy Hardfloor remix and can't believe how anyone could possibly prefer that to this masterpiece.
@@stephenjames3428Great question. I don't have an answer to that. BUT, I want to say possibly an old Ensoniq Mirage keyboard sampler. Maybe a stock sample. But you know, recently I was listening to another song, that has some church sounding bells, and I could have sworn it was circus bell sounding. I don't think it's a dx7 or dx100 though. Doesn't sound FM, to me.
I remember someone saying that electronic dance music s like modern art, you make a statement using the least amount of elements possible and then start taking stuff away whilst keeping the statement intact. This is a pretty good example of that. Deceptive simplicity indeed!
u werent there :) sucker!!! this isnt the good mix of it anyway.. so i get wheres hes comin from but if u pitch this up + bury it with other stuff it was made for mixing this one
One day, maybe 129 years from now, an academic will study the thinking behind these recordings, marvel at their genius, their boldness, their deceptive simplicity and the fact that this music came out of essentially nowhere to take over the whole world. People will say, "how did he do it"? Others will try and fail to duplicate the sublime mood of these tracks. Others will revere the name of 'Robert Armani' the way that Robert Johnson came to be revered for his guitar playing.
no music style comes "out of nowhere". you can always trace back influences and transitional musical works.
@@troubl3gum True that. But like most of his paragraph, it's hyperbole.
@@troubl3gum no he is right, music as a miystery start from "nowhere," which is God
I think you will find shout extended mix is the origin of this. Has a similar base line and very stiped down feel. It was a few years erlier than this 😮 depeche mode shout
Man a lot of folks forget.These tracks were mixed in dj sets. You're hearing the entire track from beginning to end. This was never the case.
909 forever! What a machine! This is just 909 progamming at it.s best. The barebone techno. Armani understood this Roland machine and produced great drumtracks with it. Just drumtracks which a really great to dance to. Techno people!
Epic 90,s aus Polonia
it's really hard to get to this form of simplicity in electronic music. Robert Armani was one of the best minimalists ever
Did you manage yet? X
The year was 1990, Stefaan from MusicMan played this on the radio for weeks. I fell in love with techno forever.
Absolute genius. Along with Ambulance this was a total anthem at my club. Hate that hideous cheesy Hardfloor remix and can't believe how anyone could possibly prefer that to this masterpiece.
The bells are moving, but the drum tracks and high hats and snare patterns moving in and out of the mix, are what's really moving it.
Where are the bell sounds from?
@@stephenjames3428Great question. I don't have an answer to that. BUT, I want to say possibly an old Ensoniq Mirage keyboard sampler. Maybe a stock sample.
But you know, recently I was listening to another song, that has some church sounding bells, and I could have sworn it was circus bell sounding.
I don't think it's a dx7 or dx100 though. Doesn't sound FM, to me.
@@stephenjames3428Maybe a Korg EX-800!
Yr right...The Hardfloor mix is my fave, and yr right again...tis a really cheeky bassline! X
I remember someone saying that electronic dance music s like modern art, you make a statement using the least amount of elements possible and then start taking stuff away whilst keeping the statement intact. This is a pretty good example of that. Deceptive simplicity indeed!
Cameras ready prepare the flash
EPIC !!!
Love it!
Sorry but at 50 yrs old an listening 2 tunes I've no longer got on vinyl (dont ask why people! Have 2 agree the Hardfloor mix is the one for me. X
Thë Omën Madrid 1994👟👟🔝😎
Une tuerie sur une soirée mousse.....
timeless, thanks for the upload, anyone have a decent rip of this though?? thanks
ty !
need slp 1210 mk2 to mix that !
sideral played this tune a lot
great
Charming... =D
🔥🔥🔥🔥
well said Akin
Talking about mastering a 909...
☝☝
Yes, i have a decent vinyl rip remastered by me in 24Bit 48khz .wav
Great minimalistic tune, but I miss the cheeky bassline of Hardfloor's mix.
Jack Ivan Off 😂
too slow?
so boring the original version. the hardfloor remix is the thing!
So it's 909 and JX-3P and quite boring.
so, it's a song of 1990 - 95.
You are an idiot noob,this is a classic,go listen to edm douche bag.
this song is worth more than you
u werent there :) sucker!!! this isnt the good mix of it anyway.. so i get wheres hes comin from but if u pitch this up + bury it with other stuff it was made for mixing this one
lol
like it