My Top 5 most influential releases ~ J-Slyde

by J-Slyde

After the interest that Taran M’s Top 5 article received, we thought it worthwhile getting the rest of the krew to write up their own list. I personally found Taran’s list extremely interesting to read, and felt it gave a great understanding of how he’s progressed as a DJ over his career. With this in mind, I hope to illustrate that with my selections.

I’ve opted to include purchase links to each album to encourage those that may be interested in the music to support the artists rather than downloading for free.

So without further ado, here’s my list of the top five albums that have not only influenced my desire to DJ, but those that have shaped the music I play.

1. Hybrid ~ Wide Angle (1999)

I can safely say that this album has influenced me the most, not just with my DJing, but also with my general appreciation of electronic music. When I first heard it I was a young and impressionable phat-pant wearing raver. Somewhat narrow-minded with what I listened to as far as electronic music went, my knowledge was restricted to Hard Trance, Trance, Hard Dance, Hard Style and pretty much every other genre with “Hard” or “Trance” in it. When I briefly came across a magazine review about the album, I was instantly intrigued. I’d heard a lot about these “Progressive” and “Breaks” genre’s, and had only briefly been subjected to them in side-rooms at larger events. On a whim I headed down to my local Dance Arena store (R.I.P) and picked myself up a copy.

At first I thought id purchased the wrong album, and had instead grabbed some kind of orchestral CD. But once the acidic intro of ‘If I Survive‘ filtered in, I knew I was in for something good. Almost instantly my taste in electronic music began to shift. Slowly everything I used to listen to started to sound bland and I began to crave for more depth in my music.

The album itself, for those that have not had the pleasure of hearing it, is a unique work that combines Break Beats, Progressive House/Trance and orchestral elements with a heavy nod towards string arrangements. All fused together, Hybrid create a cohesive journey that’s heavily emotive, at times dance-floor orientated, and ultimately, utterly brilliant. Put simply, it’s an electronic masterpiece of the highest caliber. Even 11 years on it still holds it’s own against current dance music. Every track stands on it’s own, with no fillers.

I could go on and on about how great it is, but will instead urge those that may be unfamiliar with it to give it a listen. It opened my eyes to a whole new world and was the main catalyst for pushing me towards playing Breaks and Prog – two of my most favoured genres.

Disclaimer: I opted to list ‘Wide Angle’ over their 2000 re-release ‘Wider Angle’, purely because it was the first version of the album that I heard. In comparison ‘Wider Angle’ is a much stronger release taking into consideration that they re-recorded a majority of the string sections and bundled it with a second disc of a live recording from one of their shows in Sydney, Australia. Not only do you get a feel for how they are in the studio, but it also shows how they adapted their music for the live stage.

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2. Sasha ~ Involver (2004)

Hands down one of my all time favourite electronic albums, or any album for that matter, this is as close to perfection as Progressive music gets as far as I’m concerned. A unique approach to the tried and tested DJ mix compilation, Sasha and his talented production team (Charlie May, Barry Jamieson and co) took each track and remixed them to construct one of the best Progressive House albums of our time.

Some might classify this album as a straight up DJ mix compilation, but it’s far more then that. The amount of time and care that has been taken with the reworking of each track is mind blowing, and it shows! There’s not one stale part in the whole album – instead, each track compliments the other, blending together seamlessly to create an intensely interesting and highly emotive piece of art. The scope of artists included within the album is also noteworthy – from the intro track of Grand National’s Indie-Rock number ‘Talk Amongst Yourselves‘, to  UNKLE’s vocal Prog masterpieces ‘What Are You To Me?‘ and ‘In A State‘, through to Shpongle’s Psy influenced ‘Dorset Perception‘ – listening to any of these in their original forms instantly demonstrates just how much they were changed and adjusted to fit within the album.

Introduced to me when I was first starting to play around with DJing Prog, this album showed me that not everything you play behind the decks needs to be peak-time bombs, and demonstrated the need for light and shade when attempting to construct a musical journey through the medium of DJing.

Later seeing Sasha live during his Involver tour in 2004, at the then Metro nightclub in Melbourne, changed me forever. Seeing one man command a crowd of thousands was astounding. For his entire 2+ hours set he had the whole venue in the palm of his hand. It was absolutely magic, and something I’ll never forget.

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3. James Zabiela ~ ALiVE (2004)

Released as Pioneer was beginning to take a firm hold of digital DJing, this album played a huge part in the CDJ and EFX revolution. Zab’s first release on Renaissance, this was the album that got everyone’s interest. The digital wizardry contained within the two disc compilation was nothing that had ever been replicated before. Technically brilliant and precise, it showed Zab’s out-of-this-world skills whilst at the same time demonstrating the full potential of Pioneer’s CDJ1000’s and the EFX1000 unit. In my opinion, this album helped lay the groundwork for many of today’s digital DJs, and is in ways responsible for Pioneer now being the club standard world wide.

Not one to be shy about his technical prowess, Zab’s also included a play-by-play of how he constructed the two disc mix – giving an insight into the inner workings of his digitally geared brain, listeners were able to pin-point just how he crafted and manufactured the sounds, transitions and effects within. Thinking back to my first read through of the booklet, I was astounded at how he had pulled off some of the effects and digital tricks – a majority of what he’d done I actually thought were part of the original tracks! Another thing that stood out was his ability to accomplish such a polished and cohesive journey using a huge variety of different genre’s – Breaks, Techno, Prog, House, Electro, all flowing seamlessly throughout.

However, the most significant part this album played in influencing my DJing was in demonstrating the scope and advantages of the digital approach. Before I’d heard the album I was a Vinyl purist through and through – swearing against CDJs and getting on my analog-high-horse at any given chance. Once I heard it, I knew that I was putting myself at a disadvantage by restricting myself to just the one format; it made me realize that whilst there was still a big place for Vinyl in my DJing, that there was also more to it than just beat-mixing two records together.

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4. BT ~ Movement In Still Life (1999)

A true pioneer of the electronic movement, BT is one of those producers that’s been around since the early days and continues to constantly change and adapt with the times. This album illustrated, as my previous selection did, the need for diversity, not only in the music that I listened to, but also later in how I began to approach DJing. Touching on everything from Nu-School Breaks in tracks like ‘Ride’ and ‘Movement In Still Life’, to the Prog-Breaks masterpiece of ‘Running Down The Way Up‘, all the way through to the Trance anthems of ‘Dreaming‘ and ‘Godspeed‘, this is a fantastic example of how an artist album should be approached. Not pigeonholed or confined to any one sound, BT broke away from genre constraints to deliver an extremely varied release that showed his diversity as an electronic artist.

I first purchased this album after hearing ‘Godspeed’ and ‘Dreaming’ – a big fan of Trance at the time, I’d never really been subjected to Breaks. This changed all that and was what initially sparked my interest in the genre.

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5. Gatecrasher Black (1998)

Gatecrasher black was the first mixed DJ compilation I had ever heard. Before then, I had no real grasp on what a DJ was, or what they did behind their consoles. Previously I was of the mind that all they did was press play and stop. Black changed that. My first listen was somewhat confusing – I had no idea why there wasn’t any type of pause in-between each track. After repeat listens I began to hear that the tracks were somehow being pieced together. Further research revealed that the CD itself had been mixed by a DJ. Almost instantly my mind was opened to a whole new world.

If I could pin-point where my obsessive love for electronic music began, it would be this album. Don’t get me wrong, I’d heard plenty of electronic music before this, cheesy shite like 666’s ‘Amokk‘, but none of it had the depth that this album displayed. None of it interested me as much. It sparked something in me that’s still apparent over 12 years on – a feeling that can’t be described in words – just a knowing. I can still remember traipsing round the streets as a young teenager endlessly listening to it on my Sony disc-man. Engulfed in the music, I knew that electronic music was destined for my ear-drums.

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Next up in the series, Simon Murphy delivers his Top 5!

My Top 5 influential releases ~ Early years and beyond, the music that got me playing!

by Taran M

These are the five albums that I feel have influenced not only my desire to play, but also my influence in exploring dance music as a whole.

1.) Paul Van Dyk – Out there and back. (2000)

Paul Van Dyk - Out There and BackI originally bought this because I had heard “For an angel” played out and only knew it was a Paul Van Dyke track, that release was not in this CD I felt like I had been violated. Until I listened a bit longer. I can even remember buying this on my break at Borders on Chapel in 2000. To me this CD was always a perfect car CD on the long haul drive into Billboards from Eltham. With this album Paul really brought his production to a whole other level in my opinion. The albums flow is a graceful progression from the stigmatic Break Beat intro of “Vega”, detouring into the tingling melodic rifts of gems like “Avenue”. This is a beautiful album, incorporating what was back at its time of release all the major elements of trance. The more you get into the album the mood gradually builds, plateau’s then builds again. There is a twist of genius in using “Face to Face” which I would occasionally play as an early morning tune at festivals as an elevator to reach you to the very clubby “Love from Above” which is my personal favourite tune on the album. The album culminates with the massive dance-floor hit of 2000 “We are alive”. Paul proved a lot of naysayers back in the day with this album that he was not a one trick pony and whilst this album did travel over a few pundits’ heads, it flew right into my CD library and never really looked back.

2.) Astral Projection – Another World (1999)

Astral ProjectionNever leave one of your favourite cd’s at a drug dealers house. That is the lesson I learnt with this CD. This was the 3rd or 4th electronic release I ever bought and although i have the digital copy on my laptop, I miss the CD. This was the only Psy trance purchase and probably will be. The thing that really got me about this CD was probably because it was less Psy trance and a little bit more tech. This was when Psy was still referred to as “Goa trance” and this CD to me is a perfect wedge to see how Psy Trance has developed. You have to remember that when this album was released Psy was still very much a two year old bastard child of tech and trance parents, keen to run away and do its own thing, but still heavily relying on its parents for daily necessity. Its a gritty and earthy listen with a constant tech fueled beat. “Nilaya” and “Searching UFO’s” were the picks of the bunch. If you can find it have a good listen.

3.) The very best of 3 years Headline – From Tech to Trance (2003)

HeadlineThis is in short the best tech trance album ever released in my opinion. Myself and my then girlfriend had this wedged in our CD player for possibly six or seven months. Oliver Klitzing basically threw together all of the releases that had spawned of his label, remixes, his production as Chromedioxide 2, Kaylab and his countless other aliases into a two disc marathon of balls out tech trance. This CD testifies him as an amazing producer and I for one feel he was majorly over looked as the likes of Tiesto, Van Dyke and Van Burren came into dominance. His problem which can be noted on this album was that at the time his music really had no genre, he was the only really flat out tech-trance producer and tech trance was being built or probably was built around most of his releases. Oliver is best described using the Hunter S. Thompson rant on Dr. Gonzo “There he goes. One of God’s own prototypes. Some kind of high-powered mutant never even considered for mass production. Too weird to live, and too rare to die”. As trance built and tech backed off he was left a duck in an ever changing pond, It was either Tech or Trance. Not both at once, well at least for the masses. Tunes like “Fucking society”, his remix of Emmanuel Tops “Turkish Bazaar” and Judges “The only one” show off his creative sack of beans. Seriously I cannot stress how unbelievable this two disc compilation is, it’s hard, but not hard enough to be hard trance. The fluffy melodic “I feel love” riff’s are kept in line by swift, non-exaggerated break downs and 808 drum lines. I fear that if you do try to track this down you may hit a number of brick walls. But if you can hunt it down it is well worth the listen.

4.) Hard Kandy Episode 2 mixed by Nexus and the Kandy Kollective (2006)

Hard Kandy Episode 2“One and in comes one, then there comes the two to the three.” “ All your bass belongs to us” “Full Intention” “Oh yeah baby jam your fingers in my……” You get the idea, we all got the idea and the kids were fucking hooked. This CD was seriously like crack cocaine when I was just starting to come up on the scene as a DJ. It had dropped like an A bomb on the Melbourne club-rave scene in 2006 and while Bass Station vol 1 killed “power trance” (whatever the fuck that was anyway) and delivered hard darker style trance; Episode 2 went the other way, showering us with a serving of hard trance and then delivered us the desert of UK hard house and hard dance. The two CD’s in episode 2 act as an amazing catalyst for each other. Nexus’s offering on disc 1 delivers us an array of very serious German hard trance. Relying on a heavy dose of Scott Project who at the time only had to record his farts to have a number one, this CD is littered with classic gems that still get their fair share of rotation. The unbelievably picturesque classic Alex Bartlett “Amnesia” (Flutlicht Vs. SHOKK RMX) is timeless, whether it be the at times haunting female vocals or the intensely crafted breakdown , much like Marc Aurel’s “Running”. Packing his mix with the likes of the Scott Project remix of the Signum classic “Coming on Strong” and Thomas Trouble’s “Insane Asylum” Nexus took us through an intelligent journey in German Hard Trance, culminating with the epitome of classics Ultrashock’s “Sound of E”.

If Nexus’s mix was the sun then disc two was definitely the moon. While Ajax and Krash’s offering on Hard Kandy Episode one pointed me in the direction of what sound I was after, Episode 2 disk 2 stamped exactly the sound I was shooting for and eventually the sound that would define the beginning of my career. Mixed by the Kandy Kollective (Sott Alert, Ajax and Krash) this hyperactive offering of UK hard house and UK hard dance is one of those mixes that has developed into an institution for my generation of ravers. So many scattered days in my memory of running around repeating Tomcrafts “Prozac” “Prozac”….”Prozac” or “This is what we call a global killer….The end of mankind.” Featuring five releases out of the Tidy Two label and offerings from Stimulant DJ’s and War Brothers the key developments of this mix was that it clearly illustrated the cognitive shift Hard house made seamlessly into UK Hard dance. In tracks like “The Birds” or “Snatched” the bounce of the hard house scene is there, but the kick drum is just that little bit heavier and hollow. Songs like “Blow the Roof” and “You’ll know it” have the sharp tight snare rolls and driving bass lines that would come to define UK Hard dance. There is the damn right obscene in Pornrockers “Cuntlicker” and the swiss cheese of cheesy songs, Scott Alert its “10am and there are still 300 people rocking it on the billboards dance floor and we’re not fucking leaving till you drop ‘WE ARE ONE!’” by Chemistry. To those that were partying at that time and for the next two generations of party goers this album will always be an institution in its own right.

5.) Clubbers guide to 2007 mixed by Goodwill and Kid Kenobi (2006)

Clubbers Guide to 2007Usually I am not terribly enthused by Ministry of Sound annuals or cd’s. Unless it’s the chillout albums or the NRG series from back in the day I tend to shy away. However this release was one I actually went in search of whilst I was still living in Sydney during the period where I had left Kandy and starting Substance. This release was in fact very much the “How Taran M, got his groove back” in terms of releases, as this release prompted me thinking about what I was going to play at this club I was starting up. It is very much an album where for one brief moment MOS have seemed to lapse in creative control over DJ’s and just let them do what they are best at. Sure there are a couple of radio friendly bleeders like Fedde La Grand’s remix of “Creeps” and the annoyingly earwormish Body Rocks- “Yeah Yeah”. But where this CD succeeds is the foot tapping Kid Kenobi mix on Disk two. Apart from the Hook and sling remix of Stanton Warriors “Shake it up” which has about as much class as an Ikea vase, The mix is decidedly well prepared. Tracks like Canberra locals The Aston Shuffle “Killer Application”, Trente Moller’s remix of Moby’s classic “Go” and Plump DJ’s- Mad Cow gave me the basis of what I would begin exploring in my sound at Substance. Goodwill’s mix as well carries a very solid feel to it, although being a tad commercial “ (previous tunes mentioned) there is not a lot of pretension and wank which you would come to associate with the general expectation of MOS annual. This was very much MOS’s retaliation against the now famous “One Love” CD’s and for once they actually achieved a release that I’d score over the 8/10 mark.

Well there you have it, that’s my top five influential CD’s in my time behind the decks the last 10 or so years. Other notable mentions would Be Hardware 1-3 for my dollop of techno and Aqua’s first Album, but in terms of what I have played and when, that would be it. Actually Aqua should have been in there, I mean I used to play Brooklyn Bounce back in the day and there the same thing kinda??

Next top 5 in a few weeks, probably chillout albums… Peace out 🙂