I'm all for it, as long as it will stay underground, and will stay faithful to OG style. But it shouldn't become too popular, imagine EDM kids picking this stuff, after them David Guetta:)
@@albionpatterns3986 If some underground stuff becomes too popular, music industry hijacks it and mutates it to generic mcdonaldized garbage for the masses. This happens regularly. So called Big Rave Revival, wont end up what you like to think. Just like with Synthwave, you would get flood of mediocre releases, most being based on 3 artists who brought back the genre, with very shallow knowledge of the scene from 30 years ago. Also the way of making music has drastically shifted, you no longer rely on crude hardware gear, limitless plugins with crispy clean sound produce different outcome.
this is like pure early 90's rave music, you've literally nailed everything, if i heard it randomly, i would think it was a real 90's track, i mean not made in 2020's
Personally i'd know instantly that it's a modern track in an oldskool style. The breakbeats give it away, they don't sound authentically oldskool. The nuances may be missed by a lot of casual listeners, but anyone who knows their early nineties hardcore will easily be able to tell the difference. Ninety percent nailed it and a good track regardless 👍
@@hardcoreyouknowthescore1457 do you know why you would think this isn't a real 90's track? i'll tell you the answer - it does sound quality. when you hear most of the 90's hardcore/rave/early jungle tracks (whatever you call them) they all sound kinda muddy, the breaks are a bit hollow... i can't really describe this specific type of sound but pretty much every hardcore mix sounds like it was recorded on a cheap digital recorder from an old tape ha-ha. you can find mickeybeam mixes on youtube and check yourself that plenty of them are a bit of a trashy quality which definitely adds this sort of oldschool 90's vibe i guess talking about THE NUANCES i just want to say that this is an attempt, sure it misses a lot of the things, but in general the track does give these oldskool emotions when grass was greener, the sun was brighter etc. when you listen to it :))
@@kempinenPC exactly. That's one of the big ways you can tell. A lot of the modern hardcore productions sound too 'clean' and don't have that lo-fi, gritty sound of the genuine oldskool tracks
Check out Origin8a & Propa - two London producers with their own tunes and a label called Hardcore Energy. Some terrific track - many better than the original 90s ones TBF.
Back in the day when i started producing and DJing i picked up a TR606 for £30 and a 909 for £50. Bought a Jen SX1000 for £70 and my Roland Juno 6 for £100. The joys of the late 80's and early 90's, used to play live and DJ at warehouse parties and amazed i never lost the gear to the police when they raided!!! Ah, the memories of the original warehouse rave scene....
@@Estuera Yes still have the gear and still use it to this day. Im glad i got the kit back in the late 80's when people all wanted a D-50 or an M1 and good old analog was seen as old hat and no one wanted it. Missed out on a Promars that i saw when i bought my Jen, it was on sale for £60!! Now that was a bargain.
@@iKiWY was a different time then. No one wanted analog it was old and people were struck on the new digital machines..... Lol, how times change. So glad I got them when I did.
@@Estuera I dunno when 'back in the day' was, but Im not having it that a 909 only cost £50 by the time the House scene had hit the UK in 1988-90. In 1990, a 909 was already around the £400 mark. I know coz I bought one and sold it in 1992 for £1000. Even spoke to Pete Waterman (PWL) on the phone, coz he was after one.. but the millionaire tightwad wouldnt pay the going rate. Also in 1990-91, I bought 808 for £250, 303 for £120, 202 for £120, SC ProOne for £100, Juno6 for £100.
This is exactly how we did it back in the days! You kept the oldschool hardware sampler workflow while using modern technology. Kudos!!! Track's awesome!!
I grew up without being allowed to listen to pop music but having access to a computer and listening to computer music, so I was instantly in love with the techno, trance and rave scene in the 90s - not because of drugs, parties or anything, I've been to one rave in my entire life and that was a local sorry excuse for one. But for the music. I still choose 90s music for my playlists, in particular when exercising or doing something which require me to get my energy up. I dabbed mostly into the higher bmp variants than this though. So I hope some of the forthcoming is going to be hardtrace, hardhouse, the more uptempo happy hardcore etc. But in any case, this was a wonderful trip back memory lane.
I was heavily into happy hardcore (and later on gabber) when I was13-15 years old. I was too young to go to the big raves so for me it also was all about the music. When I got older and actually properly started producing music it was in other genres but those teenage years will always be a part of me. I completely get your story :) There is a good chance that later on I'll do a video about one of the genres that were born out of rave, like happy hardcore, gabber or jungle (maybe all of them :D at some point)
I turned 18 in 1990 so I was there at the start of it all. There was a rave scene brewing in Pittsburgh, PA and it didn't start to pick up steam until a couple years later. It was a fascinating time and place to be a part of. I'm 50 now and my musical tastes have changed and evolved somewhat. People my age grew up on classic rock but I was always looking for something different to listen to. Now I'm into Vaporwave/Mallsoft/Synthwave...all the -waves. But I still sometimes go back to the classic rave sound including Jungle/Drum&Bass.
I'm in my fifties and I remember the happy hardcore thing coming in and being disappointed that it lacked the melodies of earlier house and techno, so I invented grunge and Britpop and consigned hardcore and gabba to the dustbin of history, just as God intended. The early rave tracks were new and interesting, but I think it went back underground after the Prodigy crossover because most of it was rubbish. It pains me that there is a bit of a '90s dance music revival now. Being a little bit older, I preferred the eighties.
I was a DJ of rave In the 80s90s and I have to say you got it spot one like you where making the music back then you got a gift my friend super stuff bringing back all the memories 🤪👍🙏🙉
Craving for getting back to the 90s is all over the world. I feel it too, I have M1 and some other cool instruments, etc. Too bad, the World will never be such a sincere place it had been in 90s.
tbh theres dozens of incredible tracks and new genres being made every year, both nostalgic and classic and new and forward-thinking so objectively right now is the best time for music in general. any kid with a laptop can make something really unique and incredible and things are more accessible so theres a ton of room for innovation and amazing music if you actually take the time to crate dig and find some gems.
Someone that was a teen in the '90s telling me that the '90s was the best decade is the most shocking thing I've heard since someone that was a teen in the '80s told me that the '80s was the best. The "golden age" for pretty much anything is equivalent to "whenever you were a feenager."
My friend used to send me cassette recordings of London Pirate Radio stations. We made a college radio show out of them and introduced Rave music from Touchdown & other pioneers to Canada- we then got into Dutch Drum & Bass with the first D & B show in the country in 1992 Now teaching my son to mix and it's bringing me back to the good Ole days.
This is awesome. Your doing what I'm trying to do and make new old rave tracks. I just love the sound. Still rushes me 25+ years later! You can have so much fun chopping an amen break up. You can't beat a rush amen, piano, stabs and floating pads!
Nice! I used to have a lot of this equipment back in the late 90s. Sold it over the years, but recently had a nostalgic panic attack and bought all of it back.
Very nice explanation of the individual parts of an early happy hardcore style tune. It is extremely easy to make this style of music with modern equipment, and a LOT harder to make it using early trakkers on Amiga's or Atari's and using real hardware synths & sampler's. The editing time using an old Akai was just ridiculous, and very inaccurate, which meant samples were not chopped exactly correctly (obviously easy to chop them perfectly using a modern screen and 'see' the start / end points). The fact samples were not perfect meant they did not play exactly on the beat and in time with each other, and THAT was a massive part of the sound, because everything had a random swing to it, none of the drum samples were exactly on the beat, and thus none of the other parts were exactly 'in time' with the drum breaks. This was what gave it the human element, instead of a robotic perfect sound, and that is why original 'rave' music will always sound different to modern hardcore breaks, and can never really be re-created exactly (thankfully), meaning original rave music will always have it's place.
Near the end : "Nostalgia if at 100% now".. No dude it has been there since 1:20 with the stab.. The track is sick.😊 Early rave with elstak vibes, chipminks and *dat piano*.
Absolutely amazing!! I've been creating happy hardcore for a little while, but I never knew how they truly did it back in the 90s. This was both super enlightening, and your final track was an absolute BANGER. Instant sub.
Sounds spot on! You even managed to use a sample :"drum beats go like this" (and at what sounds like the exact same pitch shift!) from one of my favourite oldskool rave tracks: Urban Shakedown - Ruff Justice, a track made with really dirty samples using a commodore Amiga!
Wow! Nice job, it brings back memories! "The drum beats go like this" sample was used in track 'Compton' by Daze It's another perfect example of '90s rave era
Wow! This is the only guy on youtube who recreates the exact sound of 90s dance music. 10 out of 10 points. Yes, the past video about 90s trance music is also a bomb.
Giving me BIG Ramos, Supreme, and Sunset Regime vibes!!! I thought the intro was Got To Believe, classic sound! Can’t wait to give this a go, love the sound for the underground!
The commonly used computer was actually an Atari ST. Hard Sequencer only ever made music on an Amiga. Here in the UK there was a label called slammin vinyl who only ever made breakbeat hardcore on the Amiga as well. Has such a distinctive sound. Present day there's a producer called Pete Cannon who makes new "old skool" using an Amiga and other period bits of kit. He's awesome.
I used to make exactly this kind of music and still have all the original gear! You are an inspiration to everyone. These videos are soooo good. Well done! I will go back in the studio and fire it all up. You really get everything absolutely spot on 👍
Your entire "like you're in the 90's" is so on par. Great job! While I'm commenting I may as well mention a few of my favorites from this rave hardcore genre: Sonz of a loop da loop era - Peace and Lovism, Sensitive Dependance on Initial Conditions - Drum Thunder, Lewi Cifer - 99 Red Balloons/ Heat, D'cruze - Want You Now, F Project w/Fourth Dimension (white 025) - Give a Little Love, The House Crew - We Are Hardcore, ACEN - Trip to the Moon/ Close Your Eyes....
Nothing brings a natural rush like 90s rave piano sound
Or indeed an unnatural one
Now it's definitely the time to bring the early 90s zeitgeist back.
for sure 😁
I'm all for it, as long as it will stay underground, and will stay faithful to OG style. But it shouldn't become too popular, imagine EDM kids picking this stuff, after them David Guetta:)
@@B1SCOOP Yes it would terrible if alot of people enjoy it, How dare they.
yes, 80s is so last year
@@albionpatterns3986 If some underground stuff becomes too popular, music industry hijacks it and mutates it to generic mcdonaldized garbage for the masses. This happens regularly.
So called Big Rave Revival, wont end up what you like to think. Just like with Synthwave, you would get flood of mediocre releases, most being based on 3 artists who brought back the genre, with very shallow knowledge of the scene from 30 years ago. Also the way of making music has drastically shifted, you no longer rely on crude hardware gear, limitless plugins with crispy clean sound produce different outcome.
this is like pure early 90's rave music, you've literally nailed everything, if i heard it randomly, i would think it was a real 90's track, i mean not made in 2020's
Big compliment 😊 Thanks !
Personally i'd know instantly that it's a modern track in an oldskool style. The breakbeats give it away, they don't sound authentically oldskool. The nuances may be missed by a lot of casual listeners, but anyone who knows their early nineties hardcore will easily be able to tell the difference. Ninety percent nailed it and a good track regardless 👍
I 100% agree, this very much my time for Hardcore, hes nailed that Jimmy J & Crul T, Kniteforce records sound 94-95.
@@hardcoreyouknowthescore1457 do you know why you would think this isn't a real 90's track? i'll tell you the answer - it does sound quality. when you hear most of the 90's hardcore/rave/early jungle tracks (whatever you call them) they all sound kinda muddy, the breaks are a bit hollow... i can't really describe this specific type of sound but pretty much every hardcore mix sounds like it was recorded on a cheap digital recorder from an old tape ha-ha. you can find mickeybeam mixes on youtube and check yourself that plenty of them are a bit of a trashy quality which definitely adds this sort of oldschool 90's vibe i guess
talking about THE NUANCES i just want to say that this is an attempt, sure it misses a lot of the things, but in general the track does give these oldskool emotions when grass was greener, the sun was brighter etc. when you listen to it :))
@@kempinenPC exactly. That's one of the big ways you can tell. A lot of the modern hardcore productions sound too 'clean' and don't have that lo-fi, gritty sound of the genuine oldskool tracks
This is golden. We are overdue for a rave revival. All things 90's are coming back around again.
It's been here for years, check Kniteforce records as a good starting point
Golemm is a rave artist I found recently that I really really like
@@JAM-rp6fi Listen to "Rozz Dyliams - Vulvatic" Shit is crazy good rave album, and it was made in 2016!
I’m pretty stinky but I love making oldskool house
Check out Origin8a & Propa - two London producers with their own tunes and a label called Hardcore Energy. Some terrific track - many better than the original 90s ones TBF.
this really gives me The Prodigy vibes
Back in the day when i started producing and DJing i picked up a TR606 for £30 and a 909 for £50. Bought a Jen SX1000 for £70 and my Roland Juno 6 for £100. The joys of the late 80's and early 90's, used to play live and DJ at warehouse parties and amazed i never lost the gear to the police when they raided!!! Ah, the memories of the original warehouse rave scene....
So do you still have the gear ? I am officially jealous :D When I started buying my first equipment in 98 these kind of deals were already long gone.
@@Estuera Yes still have the gear and still use it to this day. Im glad i got the kit back in the late 80's when people all wanted a D-50 or an M1 and good old analog was seen as old hat and no one wanted it. Missed out on a Promars that i saw when i bought my Jen, it was on sale for £60!! Now that was a bargain.
50 pounds for a 909?? I cant even comprehend that such prices ever existed for things like this
@@iKiWY was a different time then. No one wanted analog it was old and people were struck on the new digital machines..... Lol, how times change. So glad I got them when I did.
@@Estuera I dunno when 'back in the day' was, but Im not having it that a 909 only cost £50 by the time the House scene had hit the UK in 1988-90.
In 1990, a 909 was already around the £400 mark. I know coz I bought one and sold it in 1992 for £1000. Even spoke to Pete Waterman (PWL) on the phone, coz he was after one.. but the millionaire tightwad wouldnt pay the going rate.
Also in 1990-91, I bought 808 for £250, 303 for £120, 202 for £120, SC ProOne for £100, Juno6 for £100.
This is exactly how we did it back in the days! You kept the oldschool hardware sampler workflow while using modern technology. Kudos!!! Track's awesome!!
Thanks 😊 I wasn't sure if I could get the real oldschool sound with modern tools but its all about following the authentic sampling workflow.
Hardcore will never die! ✊
I grew up without being allowed to listen to pop music but having access to a computer and listening to computer music, so I was instantly in love with the techno, trance and rave scene in the 90s - not because of drugs, parties or anything, I've been to one rave in my entire life and that was a local sorry excuse for one. But for the music. I still choose 90s music for my playlists, in particular when exercising or doing something which require me to get my energy up. I dabbed mostly into the higher bmp variants than this though. So I hope some of the forthcoming is going to be hardtrace, hardhouse, the more uptempo happy hardcore etc. But in any case, this was a wonderful trip back memory lane.
I was heavily into happy hardcore (and later on gabber) when I was13-15 years old. I was too young to go to the big raves so for me it also was all about the music. When I got older and actually properly started producing music it was in other genres but those teenage years will always be a part of me. I completely get your story :)
There is a good chance that later on I'll do a video about one of the genres that were born out of rave, like happy hardcore, gabber or jungle (maybe all of them :D at some point)
I turned 18 in 1990 so I was there at the start of it all. There was a rave scene brewing in Pittsburgh, PA and it didn't start to pick up steam until a couple years later. It was a fascinating time and place to be a part of. I'm 50 now and my musical tastes have changed and evolved somewhat. People my age grew up on classic rock but I was always looking for something different to listen to. Now I'm into Vaporwave/Mallsoft/Synthwave...all the -waves. But I still sometimes go back to the classic rave sound including Jungle/Drum&Bass.
I'm in my fifties and I remember the happy hardcore thing coming in and being disappointed that it lacked the melodies of earlier house and techno, so I invented grunge and Britpop and consigned hardcore and gabba to the dustbin of history, just as God intended. The early rave tracks were new and interesting, but I think it went back underground after the Prodigy crossover because most of it was rubbish. It pains me that there is a bit of a '90s dance music revival now. Being a little bit older, I preferred the eighties.
Till this day, anytime I hear "Rave music" it means to me 90's oldskool UK rave lol. Nice tune, it would be a banger in 1991/2
This track would also work today. If there’d be parties :)
@The Truth Hurts 🤓
We need everyone off the stage. You are jumping the record.
I was a DJ of rave In the 80s90s and I have to say you got it spot one like you where making the music back then you got a gift my friend super stuff bringing back all the memories 🤪👍🙏🙉
Wind it up, everybody is in the place!
My jaw started reflexively grinding while listening to the final song
Craving for getting back to the 90s is all over the world. I feel it too, I have M1 and some other cool instruments, etc. Too bad, the World will never be such a sincere place it had been in 90s.
We need a time machine for sure
Masterboy - We Love The 90s (Rob & Chris Remix) might be interesting to you, relatively new track with the old sound
The party with the M1 Piano is just AMAZING
The Vocal fits perfect 😍
Amen Break is like Guile's theme: goes with everything.
7:27 Amen to that.
I was a teen in the 90s and the 90s was the best decade hands down for electronic dance music. It will never be matched
tbh theres dozens of incredible tracks and new genres being made every year, both nostalgic and classic and new and forward-thinking so objectively right now is the best time for music in general. any kid with a laptop can make something really unique and incredible and things are more accessible so theres a ton of room for innovation and amazing music if you actually take the time to crate dig and find some gems.
Someone that was a teen in the '90s telling me that the '90s was the best decade is the most shocking thing I've heard since someone that was a teen in the '80s told me that the '80s was the best.
The "golden age" for pretty much anything is equivalent to "whenever you were a feenager."
@@AutPen38 Ya don't say no shit sherlock I would never have thought about that. Easily shocked aren't you. Of course is subjective. You're very smart.
My friend used to send me cassette recordings of London Pirate Radio stations. We made a college radio show out of them and introduced Rave music from Touchdown & other pioneers to Canada- we then got into Dutch Drum & Bass with the first D & B show in the country in 1992
Now teaching my son to mix and it's bringing me back to the good Ole days.
That looks like a lot of fun
You could make an entire album in this style and I would buy it…not even joking. Excellent work!
legend. as a metalhead myself i really love this 90ts stuff.
This is awesome. Your doing what I'm trying to do and make new old rave tracks. I just love the sound. Still rushes me 25+ years later! You can have so much fun chopping an amen break up. You can't beat a rush amen, piano, stabs and floating pads!
Snap... this guy is really good!
You make it look so easy. You brought the fun back into music production! Got inspired by your video... might fire up my DAW... Thanks
Great to hear :) Having fun and loving the process of creation is it all about !
wish i could have gone to those early 90's parties.
another great style tutorial! really fun style.
I love the jungle dnb sounds in it, i miss those days :(
The Prodigy
Scooter
Dune
Blümchen
Interactive
Faithless
RMB
Charly Lownoise & Mental Theo
Komakino
Paul Elstak
and many more :-D
Takes me back to my teenage years 😁
@@Estuera Yeah :-D
I'm still a Scooter fan. Of old Scooter of course
I miss Elvis.
Who is Jimmy?
The guy behind Ultrasonic is still putting out music. He's even been Live streaming 90's rave music concerts during Covid.
This gave me an early "the Prodigy" vibe
Damn I miss those days. You must’ve been a 2 Bad Mice fan. Excellent job!
Nice! I used to have a lot of this equipment back in the late 90s. Sold it over the years, but recently had a nostalgic panic attack and bought all of it back.
Very nice explanation of the individual parts of an early happy hardcore style tune.
It is extremely easy to make this style of music with modern equipment, and a LOT harder to make it using early trakkers on Amiga's or Atari's and using real hardware synths & sampler's.
The editing time using an old Akai was just ridiculous, and very inaccurate, which meant samples were not chopped exactly correctly (obviously easy to chop them perfectly using a modern screen and 'see' the start / end points).
The fact samples were not perfect meant they did not play exactly on the beat and in time with each other, and THAT was a massive part of the sound, because everything had a random swing to it, none of the drum samples were exactly on the beat, and thus none of the other parts were exactly 'in time' with the drum breaks.
This was what gave it the human element, instead of a robotic perfect sound, and that is why original 'rave' music will always sound different to modern hardcore breaks, and can never really be re-created exactly (thankfully), meaning original rave music will always have it's place.
ahh the classic Hayman break
This is some proper old school Happy Hardcore, holy shit.
Love the channel and esp. this 90's series! Keep it up
I love your NASA-shirt.
Massive nostalgia hit! Thanks. I do hope UA-cam's 'algorithm' decides to show your vids to more people -- they deserve to be more widely seen.
Thanks 😊
It's working. I just received this one and the classic house one yesterday! Great stuff!
Yeah you could drop that today and the place would erupt. 10/10
Near the end : "Nostalgia if at 100% now"..
No dude it has been there since 1:20 with the stab..
The track is sick.😊 Early rave with elstak vibes, chipminks and *dat piano*.
I never realized that so much 80s hardware was used on 90s Rave .
its like 90s in a can. ill take 10 of those.
seriously.. that vocal over the piano and pad thingie.. good times.
I'm glad I'm not the only one who has that exact NASA sweater
Absolutely amazing!! I've been creating happy hardcore for a little while, but I never knew how they truly did it back in the 90s. This was both super enlightening, and your final track was an absolute BANGER. Instant sub.
Sounds spot on! You even managed to use a sample :"drum beats go like this" (and at what sounds like the exact same pitch shift!) from one of my favourite oldskool rave tracks: Urban Shakedown - Ruff Justice, a track made with really dirty samples using a commodore Amiga!
Ha ha ha! That's sooo awesome! Nailed it!🤪
dude the final result is just amazing. love the track! wish it was on spotify.
thanks for the tutorial!
I love that guy who is karate chopping the air, that comes in at key moments! Nice!
Massive..remember our golden years ❤
Wow! Nice job, it brings back memories! "The drum beats go like this" sample was used in track 'Compton' by Daze It's another perfect example of '90s rave era
Wow! This is the only guy on youtube who recreates the exact sound of 90s dance music. 10 out of 10 points. Yes, the past video about 90s trance music is also a bomb.
Thanks Viktor ! :)
Best series. Keep it up. Want more 90s house and 90s techno
NIIIICE ugh i miss this stuff
Best times!!!! I was there too!!!! 47 here love from Sydney Australia!!!!! 🕺🏻💃✌🏻
the 90s were the best years of rave music so much cheese n everyone loved each other
Yes ecstasy does that! 😂
Man i miss the 90s
Love these videos! Keep them coming, awesome! :)
Thanks :)
And those were the days indeed !
i love how you used all the happy hardcore vocal samples thats been used to death. but we all love them :) great track
Simply sensational my friend, really Oldchool 90's rave, is another story, congratulations on the sensational content, big hug from Brazil.
Excellent effort! Bassface and in-chair bouncing engaged. Love the female vox and piano, bliss!
Giving me BIG Ramos, Supreme, and Sunset Regime vibes!!! I thought the intro was Got To Believe, classic sound! Can’t wait to give this a go, love the sound for the underground!
Very early happy hardcore 1994 breakbeat sound. Love it.
Results sound authentic. Nice!
My god man that is blistering hot!! 🔥 🔥
Your videos are amazing!!! Remembering the good old days of raves!!! Greetings from Brazil!!!! 🇧🇷
This was 100% early 90's Rave. Great work.
Bruuuh! Fuckin luv this m8!🔥🔥🔥🔥 you totally nailed it!! 👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽
Most of those tracks were made on Amiga with 8 bit sampling!
Yep. That's why I turned down the bit rate of the cubase sampler track. Otherwise it would sound too clean.
@@Estuera 🙏
The commonly used computer was actually an Atari ST. Hard Sequencer only ever made music on an Amiga. Here in the UK there was a label called slammin vinyl who only ever made breakbeat hardcore on the Amiga as well. Has such a distinctive sound. Present day there's a producer called Pete Cannon who makes new "old skool" using an Amiga and other period bits of kit. He's awesome.
We have to get back dat music and this parties🎉😮❤
This has all sorts of elements! Sonz of a Loop Da Loop Era, DJ Seduction, SL2, and some others. Nice video!
Thanks !
I used to make exactly this kind of music and still have all the original gear! You are an inspiration to everyone. These videos are soooo good. Well done! I will go back in the studio and fire it all up. You really get everything absolutely spot on 👍
Which gear did you use?
Fantastic
so sick. big love from Canada.
Very glad this has come up on my feed! Great video and tutorial thank you 👍
i love the 90's rave culture amazing loved how you created this rave track.😀😉
Thank you, simply amazing ! 🙂
Thanks for interesting tutorial with historical background :)
Great to see that you're back to music!
True stuff!
Prodigy, hell yeah
Good music taste, good memes taste, good humour, good tutorial, oh and good music too. I'm blessed to found this man to teach me
Yesss deze video was ik dus aan het zoeken!!!!
The Prodigy vibes
Your entire "like you're in the 90's" is so on par. Great job! While I'm commenting I may as well mention a few of my favorites from this rave hardcore genre: Sonz of a loop da loop era - Peace and Lovism, Sensitive Dependance on Initial Conditions - Drum Thunder, Lewi Cifer - 99 Red Balloons/ Heat, D'cruze - Want You Now, F Project w/Fourth Dimension (white 025) - Give a Little Love, The House Crew - We Are Hardcore, ACEN - Trip to the Moon/ Close Your Eyes....
Thank you for using the Amen. Indestructible
That was absolutely amazing! I just love this music. Reminds me of awesome times and I consider myself lucky to have lived through them 🙂
Awesome!!!
Late to the channel but watched a few vids and each one is 🔥. Legit sounds like something u would find on a rave tape from 1991/2. Keep it up!!
Amiga500+sampler hardware + ProTracker 🤘
These are the vibes I live for, to see on the dancefloor.
Amazing work! Thank you for sharing!
The 90s were really golden
theres a lot of speculation about this kinda stuff making a comeback and i can see it. you should def do more videos very great job
love the 90s Rave
loved the OG Prodigy, the one with "Experience" and "Music For The Jilted Generation"
This is awesome!
Looooooving this!
Could dance to this any day
Brillllliant !!!!
It’s missing the 909 crashes but other than that tune 🙌
Fall in love with this freaking vibe!!!
1:45 Sounds like an old Sega Genesis game. Love it!
Banging track!
That is awesome, I could definitely hear this being dropped back in the day
Absolute Fire!