I got into “EDM” in the mid 90s . Minus a few artist & DJs I didn’t think it was as big in USA as other countries till the 2010s . It’s interesting to see Dance music follow the similar path that Rock & Hip Hop took from , home grown/underground/street culture ; to massive corporate sponsored festivals and superstar DJs 🤔
@17:40 so incredibly at its truest! I’m from Southern California and I started raving in 1996 at 14 years old. Most of the raves I went to was either LA County or San Bernardino county where there is a lot of space and plenty of room to dance under the stars in the desert or in the forest. I know Los Angeles was held 2nd in the club scene opposed to New York, but if you were as young as I was at the time I could only get into all ages raves particularly at the Orange show San Bernardino. We called these raves “OnE Offs” they were not clubs, and xtc wasn’t really It, It was really acid moving around and I’ll never forget this experience!!
I got there in 2002 and there was a commercial free radio station dedicated to EDM and the clubs sold more water and Red Bull than any alcohol. My office manager and friend was the X dealer. I had so many "sympathetic" or flashback rolls driving to work in the weekday mornings after a long weekend of triple stacks and ketamine. Ahh..those were the days....🤗
Same in Detroit🔥 promoters would break in to the packard plant totally illegal and 10,000 people would show up for local electric DJ’s! We called them info line raves! After a few years promoters would rent out big warehouses. The chop shop, the state theater, the slaughter house and so on! I would meet people from Virginia, New York…..people would come from all over the USA for one night of partying! Shit was raw you could get a hot dog and 2 nitrogen balloons for ten bucks at one of three stands! Then DJ’s started flying in from all over to perform as time went bye!😊
Some people still do something similar today.. it's just not as exclusive I think...which means it's more inclusive.. but sometimes you wanna keep the dweebs and straight shooters out 😂😂😂
I went to my first rave in the uk in 91, it was an amazing time to be young. Im pretty old now 😂 i can't imagine carl cox playing Bridlington again 😂( the first time i saw him live) each to their own, it's changed beyond all recognition for me. Not my thing anymore, bul like i say, im a fossil now 😂
My parents offered to send me to a music school. I interviewed at AIM, Atlanta Institute of Music, the owner/president said my kinda music isn’t real music. He offered a flash in the pan argument. I went on producing drum and bass self taught. That was over 25 years ago.
EDM is the pr corporate and advertising marketing of mainstream pop electronic music to make money from a genre that has been around for fifty years and not just since the 1990's - 2000s . it's all about money and fame and not the music anymore. most modern superstar DJs just press play and pose because thay made the mix already in ableton instead of working the room or crowd live. I beleive when the legends start disapear the scene will fade away too for another scene to replace it.
What about NYC? club USA, palladium, limelight, twilo, soundfactory, exit. Big chunk of the history of house, trance and techno resided here. If your gonna tell the story, don't leave out one of the most important chapters.
Just watched this series and I'm a little disappointed with it. Title says from underground raves to sold out festivals yet its only about the modern day superstars. What ever happened to the guys that built that such as Rat pack, Grooverider, Micky finn, Slipmat etc yes Carl Cox is on it to name but a few. These superstar DJ guys would be nothing without them building "rave". Yes, Rave was a product of E but E was successful because of rave however the modern day EDM guys have no idea of those days where the big festivals came from (fantazia and the rest). From what I've seen on here and tv etc the new edm scene is for the gorgeous people, not the people
Very irritating that she actually thinks this all just started in the US and her little "history" starts in 2014. I rolled my eyes right along with Chicane (who I hero worship! 🥰🦄)
The music came from Detroit and Chicago! I was in Detroit in the 90’s are scene. The info line rave seen was more that anything! 10,000 people at the packard plant. Promoters would break in and throw these massive parties. It was so big cops didn’t even try to shut it down. Like I said 10,000 people at an illegal party with local Detroit DJ’s.
you can trace EDMs origins as far back as the mid 70s n 80s to DJs like Farnkie knuckles. house music originated in chicago. do your homework my guy. Black people created it.
@@oscarmarroquin4374 I think he means what you are saying that this video is wrong in thinking America has just realized House and Techno when it all came from us in the USA. They are obsessed with the American mainstream which is the heartland of America and way behind
Mainstream America sucks. It always has and they are always so behind and who cares. Too much attention is given to the American mainstream. Pay attention to the Large cities in America where music scenes are invented and spread all over the world I.E. Disco, Hip Hop, Punk, New Wave, Free-Style, HI-NRG, House, Techno, and Grunge all started in American large cities
The amount of screaming into a microphone during a set is a weird trend. You never heard a DJ back in the day. They let their mix speak for them and the crowd could get lost in the music. Now every drop is disrupted with the same few orders. Buzzkill
You also used to have people go and know the lyrics to the music. Now it seems like people just go to be seen on camera and make tik toks. Times sure have changed 😞
I’m Appalled, That Big City Beats World Club Dome Didn’t Get The Recognition, they So Deserved for Broadcasting EDM from Space, through a Joint Collaboration with NASA and The European Space Station.
To me, mainstream EDM seems a very, very far cry from the post-Disco Mid 80s House and Techno from Chicago/Detroit and the Acid House and UK Rave scene. Musically a lot of it feels like lowest common denominator Dance influenced Pop music aimed at a predominantly white, good looking, affluent bikini girl and musclebound douche-bro crowd. To me Dance music should be a bit more sweaty, more working-class, a bit uglier, a bit less hetero and a lot more inclusive. It all comes across a bit like the Nü Metal/Fast food version of Dance music to me.
As an American EDM to me is trendy ass mashups and high energy vocal garbage. Americans still don’t know what real techno and real house is unless you live in Miami, LA or New York, or Chicago.
It is so funny to hear a lot of these statements if you were part of the scene back in late 80‘s and early 90‘s. Like rather save money and go once a month than once a week to a club/rave. Yeah, once a week, from Thursday to Sunday 😂
Even though I'm from Alabama we actually had a radio DJ that played Messiah, Lords of Acid, The Shamen, LA Style etc.... getting fined for playing I Sit on Acid... he was playing Rave, Techno way back may seem ODD, but I love the old style (just my preference).
This dude hating on Vegas is a loser. I've lived in Vegas since 2000, been to about 60 countries, and Vegas is one of the best spots on the planet, especially for EDM music. I'm so happy living here. Sounds like this guy knows nothing but The Strip. That's his fault. We have that, but also Area 15, Downtown Las Vegas Events Center, EDC, and many other awesome places for EDM music. This whole documentary is mid. Can't wait to watch "What We Started" like some others have recommended
Can we get a updated part 2? So much has changed from when this was filmed
like what?
Not from her. She doesn't know what she's talking about.
I got into “EDM” in the mid 90s . Minus a few artist & DJs I didn’t think it was as big in USA as other countries till the 2010s . It’s interesting to see Dance music follow the similar path that Rock & Hip Hop took from , home grown/underground/street culture ; to massive corporate sponsored festivals and superstar DJs 🤔
@17:40 so incredibly at its truest! I’m from Southern California and I started raving in 1996 at 14 years old. Most of the raves I went to was either LA County or San Bernardino county where there is a lot of space and plenty of room to dance under the stars in the desert or in the forest. I know Los Angeles was held 2nd in the club scene opposed to New York, but if you were as young as I was at the time I could only get into all ages raves particularly at the Orange show San Bernardino. We called these raves “OnE Offs” they were not clubs, and xtc wasn’t really It, It was really acid moving around and I’ll never forget this experience!!
Germany has entered the chat 😂
I’ve been looking for a good electronic music documentary for so long and I’ve found it
this aint it ... watch pump up the volume
I remember the 1st rave I went to. Ecstacy and house music. Wit a little trance to wind down at the end of the night.
what a throwback loved when I found bbc radio the early 2000 sets are some of the greatest ever. great times
1993 - Denver, Colorado. You’d get a phone number, and you couldn’t find out where the party was until around midnight.
I got there in 2002 and there was a commercial free radio station dedicated to EDM and the clubs sold more water and Red Bull than any alcohol. My office manager and friend was the X dealer. I had so many "sympathetic" or flashback rolls driving to work in the weekday mornings after a long weekend of triple stacks and ketamine. Ahh..those were the days....🤗
Same in Detroit🔥 promoters would break in to the packard plant totally illegal and 10,000 people would show up for local electric DJ’s! We called them info line raves! After a few years promoters would rent out big warehouses. The chop shop, the state theater, the slaughter house and so on! I would meet people from Virginia, New York…..people would come from all over the USA for one night of partying! Shit was raw you could get a hot dog and 2 nitrogen balloons for ten bucks at one of three stands! Then DJ’s started flying in from all over to perform as time went bye!😊
NYC was doing that in the 80s
That was the norm in the UK from 88 onwards
Some people still do something similar today.. it's just not as exclusive I think...which means it's more inclusive.. but sometimes you wanna keep the dweebs and straight shooters out 😂😂😂
I went to my first rave in the uk in 91, it was an amazing time to be young. Im pretty old now 😂 i can't imagine carl cox playing Bridlington again 😂( the first time i saw him live) each to their own, it's changed beyond all recognition for me. Not my thing anymore, bul like i say, im a fossil now 😂
That Slim on the beach party was insane.100% organically happened. Not a huge light rig.Just pure vibes.
Was a great party
13:21 "Playing actual records" followed by clip of him using timecode vinyl lol
My parents offered to send me to a music school. I interviewed at AIM, Atlanta Institute of Music, the owner/president said my kinda music isn’t real music. He offered a flash in the pan argument. I went on producing drum and bass self taught. That was over 25 years ago.
Everyone's come to watch someone play records. That sums it up.
I've been waiting for this.
This is a good documentary
I cant stop laughing at that bandage on his forehead lmao
Id rather go to a underground party any time.
As a old 90's raver from Orlando, Sasha was the first real SuperStar DJ. Confused how he's left out of this... Otherwise, good documentary.
Let’s not forget Frankie Bones when getting huge, right before each set he’d always reassert “I’m not a super star Dj”😊
Why not include LA? La is definitely one of the hotspots if not the number one spot
EDC is practically LA accepted in Vegas on mass
anybody please I need the song at 18:00 sooo good🙏❤️
Disclosure - What's In Your Head
@@samshepherd26 it took 8 months but thanks mate the track is amazing
@@2revltd314 no worries mate
EDM is the pr corporate and advertising marketing of mainstream pop electronic music to make money from a genre that has been around for fifty years and not just since the 1990's - 2000s . it's all about money and fame and not the music anymore. most modern superstar DJs just press play and pose because thay made the mix already in ableton instead of working the room or crowd live. I beleive when the legends start disapear the scene will fade away too for another scene to replace it.
Dancing and music are here to stay. It's the genres that change
What about NYC? club USA, palladium, limelight, twilo, soundfactory, exit. Big chunk of the history of house, trance and techno resided here. If your gonna tell the story, don't leave out one of the most important chapters.
EDM sounds better than DISCO/HOUSE as a name. I love it all ♥♥♥ Damn Tiesto you make a lot of money but you dont pay your way...sad
This makes me miss Sankey’s even more 😭
Paul Oakenfold invented business techno
Just watched this series and I'm a little disappointed with it. Title says from underground raves to sold out festivals yet its only about the modern day superstars. What ever happened to the guys that built that such as Rat pack, Grooverider, Micky finn, Slipmat etc yes Carl Cox is on it to name but a few. These superstar DJ guys would be nothing without them building "rave". Yes, Rave was a product of E but E was successful because of rave however the modern day EDM guys have no idea of those days where the big festivals came from (fantazia and the rest). From what I've seen on here and tv etc the new edm scene is for the gorgeous people, not the people
Very irritating that she actually thinks this all just started in the US and her little "history" starts in 2014. I rolled my eyes right along with Chicane (who I hero worship! 🥰🦄)
The music came from Detroit and Chicago! I was in Detroit in the 90’s are scene. The info line rave seen was more that anything! 10,000 people at the packard plant. Promoters would break in and throw these massive parties. It was so big cops didn’t even try to shut it down. Like I said 10,000 people at an illegal party with local Detroit DJ’s.
Watch (what we started). It’s the real history of edm. I agree kinda irritating!
you can trace EDMs origins as far back as the mid 70s n 80s to DJs like Farnkie knuckles. house music originated in chicago. do your homework my guy. Black people created it.
@@oscarmarroquin4374 Absolutely. Black history erasure AGAIN.
@@oscarmarroquin4374 I think he means what you are saying that this video is wrong in thinking America has just realized House and Techno when it all came from us in the USA. They are obsessed with the American mainstream which is the heartland of America and way behind
RIP AVICII
Mainstream America sucks. It always has and they are always so behind and who cares. Too much attention is given to the American mainstream. Pay attention to the Large cities in America where music scenes are invented and spread all over the world I.E. Disco, Hip Hop, Punk, New Wave, Free-Style, HI-NRG, House, Techno, and Grunge all started in American large cities
The amount of screaming into a microphone during a set is a weird trend. You never heard a DJ back in the day. They let their mix speak for them and the crowd could get lost in the music. Now every drop is disrupted with the same few orders. Buzzkill
You also used to have people go and know the lyrics to the music. Now it seems like people just go to be seen on camera and make tik toks. Times sure have changed 😞
Need more comments
I’m Appalled, That Big City Beats World Club Dome Didn’t Get The Recognition, they So Deserved for Broadcasting EDM from Space, through a Joint Collaboration with NASA and The European Space Station.
I remember when the DJ was that guy with the yard full of rusty modified civics and nobody liked him until their sons got married...
rave > show
It should be...EDM: from underground raves to Sell Out festivals
Techno Pop ?
Uk festivals are way more organic than usa ones imo
To me, mainstream EDM seems a very, very far cry from the post-Disco Mid 80s House and Techno from Chicago/Detroit and the Acid House and UK Rave scene. Musically a lot of it feels like lowest common denominator Dance influenced Pop music aimed at a predominantly white, good looking, affluent bikini girl and musclebound douche-bro crowd. To me Dance music should be a bit more sweaty, more working-class, a bit uglier, a bit less hetero and a lot more inclusive. It all comes across a bit like the Nü Metal/Fast food version of Dance music to me.
Even in small town new zealand it has become a combination of both... And of course it relays on djs that can bring the different classes togethor
I get the feeling but this documentary is mainstream it is really rubbing me up the wrong way I am 16 minutes in and I feel very irritated
Feels like it was made by someone who discovered “EDM” in its festival era and only aware of that world .
I hate the term EDM. House, techno, trance is my preferred term EDM is a relative new term
RSPX 2 ANNIE MAC!!! It became da opposite of wat it was & wat we lived & pushed!!! Fn' sell out$!!! Jmho...😢🤔🤬
As an American EDM to me is trendy ass mashups and high energy vocal garbage. Americans still don’t know what real techno and real house is unless you live in Miami, LA or New York, or Chicago.
There is hope for America with ppl like you, fully agree!
Or if you're in a gay club which is where house started and still lives.
It is so funny to hear a lot of these statements if you were part of the scene back in late 80‘s and early 90‘s. Like rather save money and go once a month than once a week to a club/rave. Yeah, once a week, from Thursday to Sunday 😂
Arc music festival , movement , seismic, all great techno festivals in America . Not to mention , trance still has a strong following too
Even though I'm from Alabama we actually had a radio DJ that played Messiah, Lords of Acid, The Shamen, LA Style etc.... getting fined for playing I Sit on Acid... he was playing Rave, Techno way back may seem ODD, but I love the old style (just my preference).
Addendum to the title ( without watching this film )…and the wake of mediocrity that commercialism left behind.
🇻🇪 ❤😉🫶🏽
This dude hating on Vegas is a loser. I've lived in Vegas since 2000, been to about 60 countries, and Vegas is one of the best spots on the planet, especially for EDM music. I'm so happy living here. Sounds like this guy knows nothing but The Strip. That's his fault. We have that, but also Area 15, Downtown Las Vegas Events Center, EDC, and many other awesome places for EDM music. This whole documentary is mid. Can't wait to watch "What We Started" like some others have recommended
Love the scene and business aspects of this, but hate what the music has become.