Quote Originally Posted by Deacon
Quote Originally Posted by MARK EG
my personal opinion is that those hard house dj's are jumping on the acid techno bandwagon and making you think like this.
Alot of people are slagging hard house DJs for this, but surely its a good thing? people who would not otherwise have encountered techno are becoming exposed to it. Maybe this has something to do with why techno is in the potlight so much right now.

I have been thinking these two point for the last few days but really didn't want to get into the argument after the flame war on inside-out.tv - and couldn't find such a good way of putting it.

:clap:

...and welcome H3lx! We're all really nice here - and very helpful. You'd be supprised at the quality of responses to the most obsure questionswhether be be progressive, intellegent, tribal, hard tek, gabba, acid what ever takes your fancy. Dj Amok and Henry Cullen shoulder to shoulder :)

One record I recommend you listening to if you can is SUF 49 Dynamo City - Old Skool Rush/New Skool Rush, if you can get hold of it. The A is an old school acid techno track B is as the name suggests a new school acid techno track - like a lot of the tracks on Cluster Records they are acid techno without the 303s. SUF 49 is a great way of hearing the key change in the London Acid scene from bouncy trance influced acid to harder techno influenced acid.

I personally love London techno (as the rest of the board can already guess). I love the parties and the people but most of all the big ****ing smile it puts on my face every day. But like many on here I also Skoog, Simms, Gayle San, DJ Rush... Manu Le Malin, Loftgroover... Stingrays, Milkshakes and the odd bit of Ray Keith :) So we love to heard what others think is great and as mark said when the do dodgy releases - alway helpful on otherwise good label - but don't expect everybody to agree with me :)

:lol: hello! Peace!