I love every doc/mini documentary about these years. I was 18 in 1988, and the rave years, 87 to 90 were absolutely immense. Driving around the M25 going to raves under bridges, in fields, forests, old warehouses,. I am so unbelievably happy I experienced this.
Dont you find yourself smiling every time you think about it ,i'm 55 im waiting for a hip replacement i keep thinking just one more night like we used to have then i can go to my grave happy.
Correction, Acid House didn't come via the DJ's who played in European holiday clubbing destinations. Those DJ's like Danny Rampling and Oakenfold helped build the scene but played mainly Balearic House. Acid House came via the Record Shops, Sound Systems and Pirate Radio. DJ's like Jazzy M, Kid Batchelor, Colin Faver, Colin Dale, to name a few were playing Garage, Deep House, Techno and Acid stuff before Shoom
80s and 90s was a time when everyone came together for one single purpose, to smile, dance and have a good time😀 2020 is the summer of separation, frustration, anger and hatred. 2021, we all need to come together again as one, drop all the differences we have and just go nuts and party instead of going nuts and smashing the place up.
Sad truth is it’s never going to be the same A LOT has changed. But we could learn lessons from them decades and like you said come together and have a good fucking time
@@robertnestamarley8061 I think what should be done next summer, is someone or a syndicate of people to put sound systems on the back of 40ft lorries, with lasers and a smoke machine, park them up in a few fields where you have people sitting having a few drinks with their mates, but overall, you have a couple of hundred people in the fields, take the cover of the side of the lorry and just turn the volume up. People will automatically become interested and dance. But more importantly, DON'T PLAY THE SAME MUSIC THAT'S PLAYED ON THE RADIO. Keep it fresh and original. If you see the police turn up, quickly mix in a CD that's a pre mixed Three hour mix and jump of the lorry, that way, they wouldn't know who started it. If it's successful, then spread word of mouth about up and coming events, also inform them of a Chanel or link to go to. I've found that if you have subscribers to your channel, created a code that changes each time but only your subscribers know and create a video telling people when the next event is and then delete the video. The aim will be to get members to get the notification before it's deleted, minimising the risk that information will get the attention of the police. It's an idea I think might need developing a little more, but I can see it being done, even if it only lasts a couple of years. I've started looking for music created by underdogs that deserve recognition and not only that, I've started producing tracks myself.
@@de-b1221 Working on building my first sistim right now. Hoping to have it ready by next summer because this is exactly my plan. If you play it, they will come. I was inspired watching videos of the Berlin Wall. Noticing how it was practically a giant party. People dancing on the wall and kissing each other. I want to see this happen again
You never think about it when youre living it, but now remembering, i just feel so lucky that i could live that era, it was about house music, dancing and feel the vibe, it seems like the most beautiful dream now.
Loved the times I'm 46 now n still get rushes whenever a classic played.i didn't go out dancing and taking drugs to be anti establishment tho just to have a fukin good time meet great people.
Club Havana in Middlesbrough from mid 88 to 92 was a special place. The place was packed out every week, the 'E's were fantastic and the sweating crowd was at one! The 'Second Summer of Love' in 89 was an experience that any future dance scene has never been able to better or replicate!! I feel so blessed to have lived it all! I would go back in time to those days at the drop of an heartbeat, if I could get hold of a Time Machine.
@@SamEst1986 It was in late 88 that I started going to Havana. I got to know MC Lee and became friends with DJ Huey. When Huey packed in DJing, I bought loads of his records.
@ROBERT DEAN I went to all what you mention and have great memories. I have been attending the Havana reunions too. Remember the Banana themed nights at Havana? Also going to Back2Basics after Havana at times. Arena was special as fuck, I loved that place. Sitting downstairs for the warm up, with different themes in the room every week, then upstairs for the perfect night of banging tunes!!
Amazing times 🤩 will never be repeated the last of the analogue generation otherwise known as the zippys 🤪 raved from 89-98 favourite era was bass bleeps and breaks 90-91 🕊 Grew up as a Hardcore Hackney youth and experienced it all 😎 lost but not forgotten 👊
Thanks for the mention In the credits dude . Great stuff. Love it. Love that you also mention tower block radio and the snow man . I would also like to mention Douglas Ironside who saved the footage from hac on that mental night of the hit man and her ... Such a bad portrait of such an amazing place to be at that time .. I wouldn change a single thing .. and oh my God, thank you so dearly for staying open till 6 am for getting chicken rice pea and dumplings.. Salmon Taxis
NORMAL ALL LYIES HERE IS THE TRUE STORY THEY ARE NOW MORE THAN 10000 VIDEOS WE MADE DE MOVIE THE SOUND OF BELGIUM TOOO LATE ONLY 4 YEARS AGO HERE THEV PROOF THIS IS THE SOUND OF BELGIUM STOP LIYING OK ua-cam.com/video/ZG6oMIVTw9M/v-deo.html HERE ENGLISH DJS TALK THE TRUTH ABOUT US OK
@@davelewis8270 It depended where you were really. If you lived in Milton Keynes it was swings and roundabouts. Up North (as in Real North, Rivers Tyne and Tees area) the countryside became a living Organic Entity, constantly opposed by Authorities and/or the odd angry farmer and yes, Margaret -Fucking- Thatcher
In the east midlands, E was not that easy to get hold of in 1987-88 and we used to party for days on speed and acid tabs. I didn't even have proper mdma until 1989, but when I did ....... wow...
@@gwood701 Yes, maybe so, but were they pure E ? I doubt it, because from 97 onwards there was a massive drop off in quality, and E's started to contain a lot of other shit which wasn't E.
Same in London, E was also very expensive, we were young and didn't have that much money, I used to buy LCD from a policeman in Golders Green, we used to take it with speed!
Geek Alert:- Happy Mondays "Wrote For Luck" video at 7.36 mins was NOT filmed at the Haci but at Legends club. What a club, also along with The Boardwalk. ✌️
My clubbing journey started in 1996 so the start of high school was the rave generation. But all of my music collection was the acid house and fantazia etc. I was lucky as in 96 there were still no phones, nobody judged, everyone was there for the same reason, music and love. Cream, MOS, Bagleys, Gatecrasher all great nights.
Don't allow yourself to become part of this fucked up victim culture. They're a sick bunch set on creating division with divisive identity politics. Good luck, stay free :)
@Upsidedown Toilet Blaming "Left Wing Identity Politics" for the current political state of this nation, when we have rags such as The Sun, The Daily Mail, and The Express drip feeding hatred and bile into the public psyche literally every single day, seems to be missing the mark a little. Granted, identity politics has its issues, but if you're wondering why this country is being radicalised further and further towards the right, surely the more obvious answer would be the constant stream of incredibly divisive rhetoric that we have been increasingly subjected to over the past couple of decades by some of our most powerful media outlets?
Thanks for the video. I love watching stuff like this. I always save these videos so I can share them. I was born in '76 but had older brothers and was therefore influenced by them musically. Before I was 10 I was listening to Electro (Early Hip Hop) and practising Graffiti. My closest brother went to Ibiza in the 80's and wouldn't stop talking about it. I wasn't influenced much by Acid House, the only time it was heard in South East England was on the radio (and occasionally MTV in the late 80's). Luckily in 1990 a few 'well off' guys hired the local 'theatre' and started holding over 21 'Raves'. I was 14 but managed to get in. I remember clearly that the music was a mixture of house, acid, chart and a few other genres, Jumping Jack Frost playing Snap - The Power is still a firm memory. Into 1991 and the Rave scene really kicked off, especially from the summer onwards. Suddenly there were 2 raves a month within 20 miles of each other, and World Dance (at Lydd Airport) also joined the rostrum. Tape packs were being shared from places like The Eclipse (later to change to The Edge) further up the country, DJ's like Carl Cox, Slipmatt, Stu Allen, and others sounds being heard nationwide. Walkmans (or cheaper alternatives) were glued to us. I used to sit in class at school with the earphoe wire running up my arm under my shirt, my hand on my ear, so it looked like i was resting my head on one hand, but secretly i was having a rave in my head, reliving every moment from that tape as if I was there. the scene progressed, then split (Jungle v Hardcore), many Djs not sure which way to go. Some sitting on the fence, so their sets were a mixture. Then it really seemed to split and Junge was properly born. Since then it has natural progressed into D&B. I learnt to DJ in 1994 and by 1999 I was a regular on Kool FM, Londons premiere Jungle/DnB Pirate Radio Station. Since then ive seen DnB adapt, change, metamorphosise and become what it is today, a genre that the younger generation are turning to in the thousands. We currently have 3 or 4 tunes in the Pop Charts and young people are fillig up arenas again...but this time theres no hassle from the council, police or media. My point being that Acid House was so influential that it branched out and its descendants (especially DnB) are thriving!! Theres not the same vibe as in the 80/90s but its still an escape from reality that younger people seem to need.
Brother, thank you so much for these stories. It's the small details that make the hair on my skin prickle, people remembering the ways people used to copy tapes, how we'd all copy EVERYTHING from each other, the tried-and-tested "Headphone wire up the sleeve" trick for while you're in school, ahhhhh
Kids dancing was always a threat, whether it's a 90's rave or a 50's rock & roll. Because bitter old farts forgot what fun is, no one is allowed to have fun.
Ban phones from modern raves. Not only will this eliminate embarrassing gurn pics finding their way onto Faceback, secondly, people will enjoy their time more without the multiple distractions a phone causes.
This is so true. Could not see Swedish house or Eric Prydz at Creamfielsbecause everyone’s holding a phone, not really enjoying it because not in the moment and living through a phone.
It's not really a fault of phones per se, rather we live in a time where you don't go somewhere to enjoy the experience but to post pics/vids on social media that you were there. You don't share experiences with people around you anymore, you share hashtags on the internet instead.
So true not just with raves but i was at a concert a few years back and a woman standing next to me spent the whole gig videoing it on her phone. The point is she watched the entire gig through a phone screen instead of through her eyes. She may as well have just stayed home and watched it on TV. Same with raves people are missing the magic of the moment just to post stuff on social media later. Its crazy.
Great point. We were not connected to the entire world, only to ourselves and those around us. I think I will try to spend more time without a phone, restore some balance.
I became a Breaker in the 80s in North London at the age of 11 courtesy of the Movie's Beatstreet , Breakdance AKA Ozone and Turbo ! Then came the show Soultrain on channel 4 which had the best Soul dance music that blew my mind so after that I was starting to hear Streetsounds Electro on the pirate radio stations in London playing Captain Rock , Itchiban Scratch etc ! So then came along the 87- 88-89 house music on the pirate radio stations in London playing all the classics of what we now still play to this day plus the fashion you wore was usually C17, CHIPIE , CIAO, NAF NAF , TON SUR TON ETC . So for me I would say the 80s had it all as it really set it all up for the 90s to be what the 90s became ?
The life and times of an original bedroom Raver Part 1: (A crap and most likely boring account of an amazing life) As a relatively young fan of all of this being a child of the 80's (I was born in 1978) I developed a serious love for contemporary pop music at a ludicrously young age, falling in love with the sort of 80's guff that should already have anyone reading this rightly questioning my authenticity - Ah ha, Toto, Pet Shop Boys just to give a general flavour, the fact that I was only 5 as I fell in love with such sounds offers no defence as I find the music just as amazing today. For my 6th B'day I received my first 'Now' compilation (Vol. 4) starting a tradition that would continue throughout the 80's for every B'day and Christmas (I have had an extremely lucky and blessed life, kicked off by the most amazing childhood). By 1987 / 88 however I found myself becoming particularly drawn to certain tracks on the Now comps, such as Big Fun, S - Express Theme to name just 2, while also discovering Pacific State, a track which I still would cite as the greatest ever in one of those 'forced to pick with gun to head situations'. The original media hysteria while memorable, still did not compute in so far as its connection to the music I was now listening to. But as I entered secondary school at the end of the decade I found myself finally being introduced to the ins and outs of the Rave scene by my cousin, who being 4 years older than me was already an active participant. Being labelled the pathetic weirdo at school by the bullies during the first couple of years, I had nothing to lose by identifying myself as a raver, unpopular as it was among my peers but by my 3rd Year in 1991 I was obsessed, plastering my bedroom walls with flyers while dividing my money between the live tape packs and videos now being released and my second, compatible obsession, my Amiga 500 (the best computer I ever owned). Although I was too young to have gone out during the scenes inception, I soon discovered the profound joy of complementing the music with drugs, weed of course being the first example at the age of 15 along with the odd acid here and there, but with 1994 and my 16th B'day on the horizon (allowing me access to our student union and the obligatory fake NUS card) it would not be long before I had the chance to put my feet alongside my mouth (or, probably more accurately, my foot in my mouth). To be continued once I have watched Part 2... big love to the Quest / Pimp Wolverhampton dancers, Dreamscape, Helter Skelter, Clockwork Orange, Atomic Jam, Passion & Godskitchen people. Live, love, life , dance \o/
Watched all you episodes mate, well done. Not sure how old you are but spot on through the scenes (which I was there) Defo a job in documentaries if not doing already. Top draw.
purely true . london even with the iron lady ?people were certainly optimistic, friendly, and without the prejudices.and not with the ignorance expressed in music today.
It was FUCKING BIBLICAL.... Just woooooshhh. At the time it felt as if it came from nowhere, thick & fast.....Just listen to the end tune on here......Full of LOVE...... Sadly i believe jungle took it to the dark & violent side, from what i witnessed. .. But, i loved every minute of the vibes. I still do...
Good video, mate, well done. Although you have jumped quite a bit from the end of acid right to jungle. IMO the timeline should be something like this (in a nutshell): 1. Balearic beat '87-'88 (Amnesia, The Project, Shoom, Future, Hedonism etc) mixture of pop, euro-disco, house, Detroit techno, latin, anything that people could dance to that was uplifting 2. Acid House '88 (Spectrum, Trip, RiP, Hacienda etc) Still balearic tunes and Chicago house but with more 303-driven acid, plus new sample-heavy British house productions. 3. House (M25 rave/acid house parties era) '89 (Sunrise, Energy, Biology, Genesis etc) - loads of balearic stuff still played at these but predominantly Chicago house, Belgian New Beat, Detroit techno and acid etc. 4. Back into the clubs up north - House & techno '90 , beats get a bit faster with more european techno coming in, plus more breaks being played at clubs like Rage. Blackburn rave scene. 5. Rave '91 (Breakbeat, Hardcore) Beats really getting quite a bit faster with a mixture of House, Techno, New Beat, European techno and more and more breaks. BPMs hitting about 140. By the end of the year hardcore is firmly established as a new sound of rave. 6. Jungle Techno '92 This is roughly when jungle started to become something new, but it was called jungle techno initially before becoming simply 'jungle' in or around late '93 7. Jungle '94
Noted & thank you for your comment. Everyone is entitled their opinions and suggestions, therefore we welcome it. However BearingUK are not following a spcicfic order or following the timeline as you will see in the next episode. This is due to time and time frame deadlines. However episode 6 will taking the viewer back before Jungle and after Acid House at the beginning of the 90s, focusing on music such as Happy Hardcore, Big Beat etc and the events such as Fantazia and Helter Skelter and the pioneers of the scene. This also means delving into Acid House & Jungle 94. Remember this channel is small, and therefore the will gain the new followers (building it up) and this will give the opportunity to show the impact of what the early 90s rave scene has done to influence the current music we have today. Peace and Love mate.
Back then it didn't matter where you were from. It was where you were at that counted. Age, race, gender, religion..... all of it.... it didn't matter. Non of it. Happiest of times
Any other non-Brits endlessly captivated by this moment in history?
Yes
@@VrakDock , Yep, Im nae British, well not in the UK sense, Im scottish, but born from the Island of Brtain
of course! part of music history this
I'm American and this music is like crack to me. When time travel is possible, this moment in history will be my first stop.
It’s my special interest since 2013😂😅
I love every doc/mini documentary about these years. I was 18 in 1988, and the rave years, 87 to 90 were absolutely immense. Driving around the M25 going to raves under bridges, in fields, forests, old warehouses,. I am so unbelievably happy I experienced this.
32 years later and this music still moves me....great days.
I'm 52 now but id still drop one, wicked times.
i'm fifty now and i can't fing buy one
"hey kids..."
wicked times
Cheeky ‘alf.
@@feski1 we'd do this on random weeknights good old days
Dont you find yourself smiling every time you think about it ,i'm 55 im waiting for a hip replacement i keep thinking just one more night like we used to have then i can go to my grave happy.
Sadly the last time I had a good one was 2004
Correction, Acid House didn't come via the DJ's who played in European holiday clubbing destinations. Those DJ's like Danny Rampling and Oakenfold helped build the scene but played mainly Balearic House. Acid House came via the Record Shops, Sound Systems and Pirate Radio. DJ's like Jazzy M, Kid Batchelor, Colin Faver, Colin Dale, to name a few were playing Garage, Deep House, Techno and Acid stuff before Shoom
jazzy m is the uk godfather
Jack your body was number one before Shoom started. House music was mainstream in the UK from 1985.
Rampling played whatever Alfredo played and that included loads Chicago House including Acid, he just didn't play exclusively Acid.
The hac was playing house in 86 .. fact
This is my generation right here, I miss those days much simpler times!😁💜✌️
80s and 90s was a time when everyone came together for one single purpose, to smile, dance and have a good time😀
2020 is the summer of separation, frustration, anger and hatred.
2021, we all need to come together again as one, drop all the differences we have and just go nuts and party instead of going nuts and smashing the place up.
Yeah we really need to go back to those times again!
Sad truth is it’s never going to be the same A LOT has changed. But we could learn lessons from them decades and like you said come together and have a good fucking time
@@robertnestamarley8061 I think what should be done next summer, is someone or a syndicate of people to put sound systems on the back of 40ft lorries, with lasers and a smoke machine, park them up in a few fields where you have people sitting having a few drinks with their mates, but overall, you have a couple of hundred people in the fields, take the cover of the side of the lorry and just turn the volume up. People will automatically become interested and dance. But more importantly, DON'T PLAY THE SAME MUSIC THAT'S PLAYED ON THE RADIO. Keep it fresh and original.
If you see the police turn up, quickly mix in a CD that's a pre mixed Three hour mix and jump of the lorry, that way, they wouldn't know who started it.
If it's successful, then spread word of mouth about up and coming events, also inform them of a Chanel or link to go to.
I've found that if you have subscribers to your channel, created a code that changes each time but only your subscribers know and create a video telling people when the next event is and then delete the video.
The aim will be to get members to get the notification before it's deleted, minimising the risk that information will get the attention of the police.
It's an idea I think might need developing a little more, but I can see it being done, even if it only lasts a couple of years.
I've started looking for music created by underdogs that deserve recognition and not only that, I've started producing tracks myself.
@@de-b1221 Working on building my first sistim right now. Hoping to have it ready by next summer because this is exactly my plan. If you play it, they will come.
I was inspired watching videos of the Berlin Wall. Noticing how it was practically a giant party. People dancing on the wall and kissing each other.
I want to see this happen again
In your dreams
You never think about it when youre living it, but now remembering, i just feel so lucky that i could live that era, it was about house music, dancing and feel the vibe, it seems like the most beautiful dream now.
Love how this guy uploaded this video 3 years ago but still looks back at the comments to like them :)
Loved the times I'm 46 now n still get rushes whenever a classic played.i didn't go out dancing and taking drugs to be anti establishment tho just to have a fukin good time meet great people.
Nuff respect 👊👊
46 in a few days too. The Good uns still get me going.
@@dene39 Uns?
@@NathanChisholm041 uns =ones
Dean Riley , I hope the Covid19 nonsense will start up a new music movement. I too enjoyed acid House age 16 in 88
Club Havana in Middlesbrough from mid 88 to 92 was a special place. The place was packed out every week, the 'E's were fantastic and the sweating crowd was at one! The 'Second Summer of Love' in 89 was an experience that any future dance scene has never been able to better or replicate!! I feel so blessed to have lived it all! I would go back in time to those days at the drop of an heartbeat, if I could get hold of a Time Machine.
Back in the days of Hooligan X or was that later at Havana?
@@SamEst1986 It was in late 88 that I started going to Havana. I got to know MC Lee and became friends with DJ Huey. When Huey packed in DJing, I bought loads of his records.
@ROBERT DEAN I went to all what you mention and have great memories. I have been attending the Havana reunions too.
Remember the Banana themed nights at Havana? Also going to Back2Basics after Havana at times.
Arena was special as fuck, I loved that place. Sitting downstairs for the warm up, with different themes in the room every week, then upstairs for the perfect night of banging tunes!!
Every town in England had a special place 88-92 Braintree barn was rockin 🙂
Amazing times 🤩 will never be repeated the last of the analogue generation otherwise known as the zippys 🤪 raved from 89-98 favourite era was bass bleeps and breaks 90-91 🕊 Grew up as a Hardcore Hackney youth and experienced it all 😎 lost but not forgotten 👊
We did have a really good time ❤️☮️😁
im f**king jelous!!!!!
Yeah. It was fucking brilliant!
What the hell are u talkin bout
We really fucking did 🙂
I wish I could’ve been part of these wonderful moments in time...Fantastic video!
Thanks for the mention In the credits dude . Great stuff. Love it. Love that you also mention tower block radio and the snow man . I would also like to mention Douglas Ironside who saved the footage from hac on that mental night of the hit man and her ... Such a bad portrait of such an amazing place to be at that time .. I wouldn change a single thing .. and oh my God, thank you so dearly for staying open till 6 am for getting chicken rice pea and dumplings.. Salmon Taxis
How have these videos not got more views, there so good watched them all a few times now
I appreciate this comment so much! It means alot. Only with time, this channel will grow...
"underground"
That's why I love the underground coz it's underground an that's why I love the underground coz it's the underground...
NORMAL ALL LYIES HERE IS THE TRUE STORY THEY ARE NOW MORE THAN 10000 VIDEOS WE MADE DE MOVIE THE SOUND OF BELGIUM TOOO LATE ONLY 4 YEARS AGO HERE THEV PROOF THIS IS THE SOUND OF BELGIUM STOP LIYING OK ua-cam.com/video/ZG6oMIVTw9M/v-deo.html HERE ENGLISH DJS TALK THE TRUTH ABOUT US OK
@@BearingUK I’m so glad to come back and see your videos getting the views they deserve
many thanks for the mention (9:21)
It's a pleasure. Please keep pushing on with more events & stay blessed.
As a 17 year old in 88 and seeing that Acciieeed on the telly I was going ' that looks interesting ' so my inquistivness got the better of me .
4:07 - if you know, you know. The original love doves. Its amazing something so small could have such an impact on a whole generation.
🙂
Dove were the bomb , does what it says on the tin.
Incredible video, it is crazy to see how our music has evolved over the years.
49 years old now and i still look back on these days as some of my best times.
This was wicked , SO MANY GOODTIMES ! One of the best times of my life 88-89
JACKOBRIEN54 , my favourite year was 1990
Looks like a damn good time. Good music as well.
Makes me wish I was born in 1969 instead of 1989 to witness a fun careless time when people properly bonded.
The raves were good but margeret Thatcher was in charge so swings and roundabouts really
@@davelewis8270 It depended where you were really. If you lived in Milton Keynes it was swings and roundabouts.
Up North (as in Real North, Rivers Tyne and Tees area) the countryside became a living Organic Entity, constantly opposed by Authorities and/or the odd angry farmer and yes, Margaret -Fucking- Thatcher
Fantastic documentaries on this channel. Deserve much, much more views.
Love these doc's highlighting the history of OUR subculture
I was 20 in 1988. Perfect timing Mum :)
In the east midlands, E was not that easy to get hold of in 1987-88 and we used to party for days on speed and acid tabs. I didn't even have proper mdma until 1989, but when I did ....... wow...
Same. But '90 for me.
Triangle Mitsubishis 2000-2002 were strong as fukkkk mdma 👌
@@gwood701 Yes, maybe so, but were they pure E ?
I doubt it, because from 97 onwards there was a massive drop off in quality, and E's started to contain a lot of other shit which wasn't E.
White doves ,brown biscuits ,California white lightnings ,oh yes
Same in London, E was also very expensive, we were young and didn't have that much money, I used to buy LCD from a policeman in Golders Green, we used to take it with speed!
Geek Alert:- Happy Mondays "Wrote For Luck" video at 7.36 mins was NOT filmed at the Haci but at Legends club. What a club, also along with The Boardwalk. ✌️
Hugs to the World. 1st Raved in London in 1990, My last Jan 2020 in another part of the world.
Surely not your last, only your most recent? Always more raves
Rave as it was known blew everything away. That early scene has never been equaled.
Very concise yet covers a lot. You need to do this for a living g.
Tablet McAsus, is that you?!
My clubbing journey started in 1996 so the start of high school was the rave generation. But all of my music collection was the acid house and fantazia etc. I was lucky as in 96 there were still no phones, nobody judged, everyone was there for the same reason, music and love.
Cream, MOS, Bagleys, Gatecrasher all great nights.
How has my generation gone from this to Brexit and Boris Johnson...
Don't allow yourself to become part of this fucked up victim culture. They're a sick bunch set on creating division with divisive identity politics. Good luck, stay free :)
@Upsidedown Toilet Fitting handle you have there with all the shit coming out.
I feel bad for the kids and fentanyl. We were soooo lucky.
explains: "i'm a janitor, i'm a janitor, ooh my genitals"
boom boom boom boom
@Upsidedown Toilet Blaming "Left Wing Identity Politics" for the current political state of this nation, when we have rags such as The Sun, The Daily Mail, and The Express drip feeding hatred and bile into the public psyche literally every single day, seems to be missing the mark a little. Granted, identity politics has its issues, but if you're wondering why this country is being radicalised further and further towards the right, surely the more obvious answer would be the constant stream of incredibly divisive rhetoric that we have been increasingly subjected to over the past couple of decades by some of our most powerful media outlets?
Thanks for the video. I love watching stuff like this. I always save these videos so I can share them.
I was born in '76 but had older brothers and was therefore influenced by them musically. Before I was 10 I was listening to Electro (Early Hip Hop) and practising Graffiti. My closest brother went to Ibiza in the 80's and wouldn't stop talking about it. I wasn't influenced much by Acid House, the only time it was heard in South East England was on the radio (and occasionally MTV in the late 80's). Luckily in 1990 a few 'well off' guys hired the local 'theatre' and started holding over 21 'Raves'. I was 14 but managed to get in. I remember clearly that the music was a mixture of house, acid, chart and a few other genres, Jumping Jack Frost playing Snap - The Power is still a firm memory.
Into 1991 and the Rave scene really kicked off, especially from the summer onwards. Suddenly there were 2 raves a month within 20 miles of each other, and World Dance (at Lydd Airport) also joined the rostrum. Tape packs were being shared from places like The Eclipse (later to change to The Edge) further up the country, DJ's like Carl Cox, Slipmatt, Stu Allen, and others sounds being heard nationwide. Walkmans (or cheaper alternatives) were glued to us. I used to sit in class at school with the earphoe wire running up my arm under my shirt, my hand on my ear, so it looked like i was resting my head on one hand, but secretly i was having a rave in my head, reliving every moment from that tape as if I was there.
the scene progressed, then split (Jungle v Hardcore), many Djs not sure which way to go. Some sitting on the fence, so their sets were a mixture. Then it really seemed to split and Junge was properly born. Since then it has natural progressed into D&B. I learnt to DJ in 1994 and by 1999 I was a regular on Kool FM, Londons premiere Jungle/DnB Pirate Radio Station. Since then ive seen DnB adapt, change, metamorphosise and become what it is today, a genre that the younger generation are turning to in the thousands. We currently have 3 or 4 tunes in the Pop Charts and young people are fillig up arenas again...but this time theres no hassle from the council, police or media.
My point being that Acid House was so influential that it branched out and its descendants (especially DnB) are thriving!! Theres not the same vibe as in the 80/90s but its still an escape from reality that younger people seem to need.
Brother, thank you so much for these stories. It's the small details that make the hair on my skin prickle, people remembering the ways people used to copy tapes, how we'd all copy EVERYTHING from each other, the tried-and-tested "Headphone wire up the sleeve" trick for while you're in school, ahhhhh
BC kids dancing in a field to loud music is such a threat
ZAP club was my haunt...RIP.
Kids dancing was always a threat, whether it's a 90's rave or a 50's rock & roll. Because bitter old farts forgot what fun is, no one is allowed to have fun.
man... i listen to the music on the film.bring back so much memories.
it really was the most amazing few years...
Tony Wilson... legend..
I see the Prestatyn 4 Footage being used here! was amazing weekend ! 😀🥰🤪
*there was no phones, just music* is what I miss the most :-(
48 still having it x
The world is due for another summer of love. Now because of the internet it could be a world wide phenomenon.
2020 may be the new catalyst that sparks new energy and pushes freedom and equality for today’s generations
Ban phones from modern raves. Not only will this eliminate embarrassing gurn pics finding their way onto Faceback, secondly, people will enjoy their time more without the multiple distractions a phone causes.
This is so true. Could not see Swedish house or Eric Prydz at Creamfielsbecause everyone’s holding a phone, not really enjoying it because not in the moment and living through a phone.
True no personal phones should be used one professional filmer by all means well hidden away
It's not really a fault of phones per se, rather we live in a time where you don't go somewhere to enjoy the experience but to post pics/vids on social media that you were there. You don't share experiences with people around you anymore, you share hashtags on the internet instead.
So true not just with raves but i was at a concert a few years back and a woman standing next to me spent the whole gig videoing it on her phone. The point is she watched the entire gig through a phone screen instead of through her eyes. She may as well have just stayed home and watched it on TV. Same with raves people are missing the magic of the moment just to post stuff on social media later. Its crazy.
Clubs in Berlin just put stickers over the cameras on your phone and kick you out if you take them off and start filming... helps the vibe a LOT.
Comment section says it all: one love❤️❤️❤️
Why am I only now seeing this video!?! AWESOME
Because you have just seen it
@@MegaCozzy lol true that
Brings back some great memories was at allot off those parties. Thanks for posting only just seen it :)
I'm from Canada I remember dancing all night 4-5 times a week. The absolute best times!
Love for Aciiiiiiiiid House.
Great documentary
I'm 47, and absolutely loved those days. My drug of choice was lsd though, i used to love it!
It's still good ;)
Es
Crazy seeing Mr c (Richard) from the shamen talking about someone climbing the dranepipes to get in a club
Magnificient times. Epic emotions.
No phones..... I forget how much that changes everything
Great point. We were not connected to the entire world, only to ourselves and those around us. I think I will try to spend more time without a phone, restore some balance.
I became a Breaker in the 80s in North London at the age of 11 courtesy of the Movie's Beatstreet , Breakdance AKA Ozone and Turbo ! Then came the show Soultrain on channel 4 which had the best Soul dance music that blew my mind so after that I was starting to hear Streetsounds Electro on the pirate radio stations in London playing Captain Rock , Itchiban Scratch etc ! So then came along the 87- 88-89 house music on the pirate radio stations in London playing all the classics of what we now still play to this day plus the fashion you wore was usually C17, CHIPIE , CIAO, NAF NAF , TON SUR TON ETC . So for me I would say the 80s had it all as it really set it all up for the 90s to be what the 90s became ?
soul train was already on tv a decade earlier
Oh what a good educational video about our lifestyle and music
This was absolutely safe! Thanks
Good ol radio 1 carry on playing it 👍
Real interesting man. Looking forward to the next one!
the DJ / sound tech @ 4:54... brilliant
Amazing job guys
Anyone have a track ID for 3:52?
Blake Baxter - Get Layed (props to @ROY4Lproductions below for the ID)
why so little views?! great quaity documentary well done guys!
The TB303 had its knobs turned
I've created a Spotify playlist with all tracks from this series in order:
open.spotify.com/playlist/4HKiyP1pjbVj5Z9PuKZw0S?si=OGG7o95KQPueTXnrAUpWGQ
Thank you very much Alex.
Thank you!!! 🎉
The real reason was love and possible dimensions. We will be rememberd, 🌱💨🐢🌞 dove's delights
The life and times of an original bedroom Raver Part 1: (A crap and most likely boring account of an amazing life)
As a relatively young fan of all of this being a child of the 80's (I was born in 1978) I developed a serious love for contemporary pop music at a ludicrously young age, falling in love with the sort of 80's guff that should already have anyone reading this rightly questioning my authenticity - Ah ha, Toto, Pet Shop Boys just to give a general flavour, the fact that I was only 5 as I fell in love with such sounds offers no defence as I find the music just as amazing today. For my 6th B'day I received my first 'Now' compilation (Vol. 4) starting a tradition that would continue throughout the 80's for every B'day and Christmas (I have had an extremely lucky and blessed life, kicked off by the most amazing childhood).
By 1987 / 88 however I found myself becoming particularly drawn to certain tracks on the Now comps, such as Big Fun, S - Express Theme to name just 2, while also discovering Pacific State, a track which I still would cite as the greatest ever in one of those 'forced to pick with gun to head situations'. The original media hysteria while memorable, still did not compute in so far as its connection to the music I was now listening to. But as I entered secondary school at the end of the decade I found myself finally being introduced to the ins and outs of the Rave scene by my cousin, who being 4 years older than me was already an active participant. Being labelled the pathetic weirdo at school by the bullies during the first couple of years, I had nothing to lose by identifying myself as a raver, unpopular as it was among my peers but by my 3rd Year in 1991 I was obsessed, plastering my bedroom walls with flyers while dividing my money between the live tape packs and videos now being released and my second, compatible obsession, my Amiga 500 (the best computer I ever owned).
Although I was too young to have gone out during the scenes inception, I soon discovered the profound joy of complementing the music with drugs, weed of course being the first example at the age of 15 along with the odd acid here and there, but with 1994 and my 16th B'day on the horizon (allowing me access to our student union and the obligatory fake NUS card) it would not be long before I had the chance to put my feet alongside my mouth (or, probably more accurately, my foot in my mouth).
To be continued once I have watched Part 2... big love to the Quest / Pimp Wolverhampton dancers, Dreamscape, Helter Skelter, Clockwork Orange, Atomic Jam, Passion & Godskitchen people. Live, love, life , dance \o/
Never had any grief to be honest. Good times :-)
Thanks for the video, but what is the track around 4:00?
Blake Baxter - Get Layed from 1987
cool video thankzzz for creaatin it чувак!!!
Went mental when he said this is jungle can't wait to watch the next one
Chicago is a place jackin house came from,also funk from 70s..I love this music, mum n dad would cut shapes lol I followed
Whats the song at 3:40 I've been trying to find out what it is for ages please could somebody tell me??
Voodoo ray....a guy called gerald
Hi Guys, what is the Song called starting at 3:52?
Blake Baxter - Get Layed
@@dhhhhh9556 legend
Tony Wilson = LEGEND RESPECT
Watched all you episodes mate, well done. Not sure how old you are but spot on through the scenes (which I was there) Defo a job in documentaries if not doing already. Top draw.
I remember the sick Es we used to get! Green Mitsubishis..
Happy days man...the drugs were bang on as well 😳😳
Happy days....1989 best days of my life..Good people. Good drugs..Nice ladies.💯✌️ 🌟
@David Erlstoke lady's were easy to get so they were. Good old days.
The best times 💕💕💕
purely true . london even with the iron lady ?people were certainly optimistic, friendly, and without the prejudices.and not with the ignorance expressed in music today.
3:53 to 4:49 what music is it? Please :)
Blake Baxter get laid
Ecstasy, first started at the Stark club in Dallas, Texas 1985 and then spread to the East and West Coast of America then took hold of the UK
It was FUCKING BIBLICAL.... Just woooooshhh. At the time it felt as if it came from nowhere, thick & fast.....Just listen to the end tune on here......Full of LOVE......
Sadly i believe jungle took it to the dark & violent side, from what i witnessed. ..
But, i loved every minute of the vibes. I still do...
Can anyone ID the track @3:53 please
1❤
Blake Baxter - Get Layed (props to @ROY4Lproductions below for the ID)
You have no idea how happy you just made me. Beautiful ✌️@TehAwesomer
I'm glad I was there
I forget how good the timing of it was ,just what they need now
You can hear how acid house progressed into deep house, and rave
It looks like great fun and all, but can any of you remember what those venues smelled like?
Vicks, Cigarette smoke, Poppers & Sweat.
The sweat would drip from the walls at some venue’s.
It was the last thing you were thinking about really.
Ah, it was great to be young 😊
Shame it had to stop..... and i couldnt just stay on the dancefloor at 3am in 1988 forever
3:55- what tune is this?
blake baxter - get layed
Sweeeet as mate
Subscribed, love this series. What other ways can we help the channel out?
Just be by our side through thick and thin
Track id 4:00 ? Plzz niiiceee groove
Blake Baxter - Get Layed
amazing vids bruv
umm didn't acid house start in Chicago, with phuture ,armanado ,and many more ,then later go to London
Does anyone know the sound at 2:54? It sounds like some kind of siren but I can’t find it anywhere
Interesting, the sample was taken from Royal House - Can You Party,
however in terms of the siren itself, I am not sure.
BearingUK Thanks anyway, I subbed
Maurice - This Is Acid (A New Dance Craze)
Good video, mate, well done. Although you have jumped quite a bit from the end of acid right to jungle.
IMO the timeline should be something like this (in a nutshell):
1. Balearic beat '87-'88 (Amnesia, The Project, Shoom, Future, Hedonism etc) mixture of pop, euro-disco, house, Detroit techno, latin, anything that people could dance to that was uplifting
2. Acid House '88 (Spectrum, Trip, RiP, Hacienda etc) Still balearic tunes and Chicago house but with more 303-driven acid, plus new sample-heavy British house productions.
3. House (M25 rave/acid house parties era) '89 (Sunrise, Energy, Biology, Genesis etc) - loads of balearic stuff still played at these but predominantly Chicago house, Belgian New Beat, Detroit techno and acid etc.
4. Back into the clubs up north - House & techno '90 , beats get a bit faster with more european techno coming in, plus more breaks being played at clubs like Rage. Blackburn rave scene.
5. Rave '91 (Breakbeat, Hardcore) Beats really getting quite a bit faster with a mixture of House, Techno, New Beat, European techno and more and more breaks. BPMs hitting about 140. By the end of the year hardcore is firmly established as a new sound of rave.
6. Jungle Techno '92 This is roughly when jungle started to become something new, but it was called jungle techno initially before becoming simply 'jungle' in or around late '93
7. Jungle '94
Noted & thank you for your comment. Everyone is entitled their opinions and suggestions, therefore we welcome it. However BearingUK are not following a spcicfic order or following the timeline as you will see in the next episode. This is due to time and time frame deadlines.
However episode 6 will taking the viewer back before Jungle and after Acid House at the beginning of the 90s, focusing on music such as Happy Hardcore, Big Beat etc and the events such as Fantazia and Helter Skelter and the pioneers of the scene.
This also means delving into Acid House & Jungle 94.
Remember this channel is small, and therefore the will gain the new followers (building it up) and this will give the opportunity to show the impact of what the early 90s rave scene has done to influence the current music we have today.
Peace and Love mate.
@@BearingUK this reply made me subscribe. I understand what you are doing here now. I love it.
You forgot Darksise/Darkcore
@@Ravingman I'd slot that right after Jungle Techno. Ratty's heyday.
Black American gifted the world with so much music and cultural innovations.
Back then it didn't matter where you were from. It was where you were at that counted.
Age, race, gender, religion..... all of it.... it didn't matter. Non of it.
Happiest of times
3:00 what is this song