What music has influenced your own music the most?
https://soundcloud.com/moneykube-qube/s ... d-playlist
Proud Member Of The Awesome League Of Perpetuals
Proud Member Of The Awesome League Of Perpetuals
my step into music was in the 80´2. and then i heard Laserdance
this was a new sound with a "space" feeling
from then on I tried to copy this music
see here
this was a new sound with a "space" feeling
from then on I tried to copy this music
see here
Jarre, tangerine dreams, trance, ambient and chillout stuff. Also amiga and c64 had a great impact in my life. Doing remixes of mods and sids.
Skickat från min SM-G935F via Tapatalk
Skickat från min SM-G935F via Tapatalk
hawkwind etc
Reason 12 ,gear4 music sdp3 stage piano .nektar gxp 88,behringer umc1800 .line6 spider4 30
hear scince reason 2.5
hear scince reason 2.5
The Prodigy, Hybrid (the electronic music other than their's gamemusic stuff), Crystal Method, Fatboy Slim, Chemical Brothers, Faithless, Bomfunk MC's, Moby, so yeah, the golden era of electronic music.
- Creativemind
- Posts: 4876
- Joined: 17 Jan 2015
- Location: Stoke-On-Trent, England, UK
Yeah Kula Shaker are a great band. Rave music was the first music that blew me away with Britpop being next. Oasis were the first non-electronic band to wow when a lad played me the (What's the Story) Morning Glory album. So yeah Oasis, The Verve, Supergrass, Pulp, Blur, Suede, Kuka Shaker, Ocean Colour Scene, Radiohead, Charlatans, Manic Street Preachers, Reef, Space etc. All great bands in the 90's.Auryn wrote: ↑24 Feb 2018Okok, all except Narayan... but I think my point about TFOTL still stands, there's nothing spaced out like "skylined", or like the dark sweaty basement techno of "the heat the energy" on there. But I don't want to argue too much with an Amiga brother
I do also love Kula Shaker though... this track from their last album made it into my favourites playlist:
Everybody was the same with Fat of the Land. The Prodigy were ravers and then FOTL came out Firestarter (although brilliant) was a lot more indie and different.
They still influence me though. So I'd say Oasis, The Verve, Radiohead, The Beatles, Rolling Stones, The Who, The Kinks and Pink Floyd have influenced me the most with guitar music and Noel and his High Flying Birds is still banging out amazing tunes. Check out the title track from his latest album. Top drawer.
And as for Electronic music I have to say Wind It Up, Weather Experience and Jericho by The Prodigy...
And these are some old skool house tracks I love...
Reason Studio's 11.3 / Cockos Reaper 6.82 / Cakewalk By Bandlab / Orion 8.6
http://soundcloud.com/creativemind75/iv ... soul-mix-3
Successively:
- Pink Floyd
- Tangerine dream
- Depeche Mode
- Generally speaking, the forbidden rave scene during the 90's (Psytrance and acid-everything)
Windows 10 64-bit | Reason 9.5 | Live 10 Suite + Push2 | Intel i7 8700K | 16 GB RAM | Scarlett 6x6 | Arturia MiniLab MK II | 2x Novation LaunchControl XL
- Reasonable man
- Posts: 589
- Joined: 14 Jul 2016
The Trainspotting album
Leftism - the album
Brian Eno and his music making philosophy I guess. I remember the track that made me finally decide to buy a computer and try to write electronic music. It was a piece of ambient music used in an Irish drama called Love/Hate. I tracked it down and listened to it on repeat for weeks
Leftism - the album
Brian Eno and his music making philosophy I guess. I remember the track that made me finally decide to buy a computer and try to write electronic music. It was a piece of ambient music used in an Irish drama called Love/Hate. I tracked it down and listened to it on repeat for weeks
John "Johnny" Keating. Superb arranger, musician and composer in his own right.
This version of "I feel the Earth", is immense; as is the whole, "Space Experience" album, (which i believe was used mainly as demonstration material in the newly burdgeoning Hi-Fi market in the early 70s.)
And the "Unknown planet" - if ever a piece of music deserved the title, "A Fucking Master Piece", it's this.
Damn! That horn section gives me the horn.
This version of "I feel the Earth", is immense; as is the whole, "Space Experience" album, (which i believe was used mainly as demonstration material in the newly burdgeoning Hi-Fi market in the early 70s.)
And the "Unknown planet" - if ever a piece of music deserved the title, "A Fucking Master Piece", it's this.
Damn! That horn section gives me the horn.
- platzangst
- Posts: 731
- Joined: 16 Jan 2015
Wire. The 80s era in particular but it's all good.
Negativland.
80s/90s industrial and EBM music - Front 242, Nitzer Ebb, Skinny Puppy, NIN and such, but also darker and more experimental things like Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire.
80s/90s experimental/noise cassette underground.
Electric Light Orchestra.
More recent minimal electronica, along the lines of the Raster-Noton label.
Afro funk, either the real deal from the 70s or the retro-styled modern bands.
Negativland.
80s/90s industrial and EBM music - Front 242, Nitzer Ebb, Skinny Puppy, NIN and such, but also darker and more experimental things like Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire.
80s/90s experimental/noise cassette underground.
Electric Light Orchestra.
More recent minimal electronica, along the lines of the Raster-Noton label.
Afro funk, either the real deal from the 70s or the retro-styled modern bands.
Here's the f***ing Parcels - Live
Aussies , living in Berlin, signed to a French record label, doing "sort of a blend between electro-pop and disco-soul". Their sound has since been described as having "an unmistakeable penchant for the 70s [...] fusing together the old and the new"
Aussies , living in Berlin, signed to a French record label, doing "sort of a blend between electro-pop and disco-soul". Their sound has since been described as having "an unmistakeable penchant for the 70s [...] fusing together the old and the new"
Complaining your parents didn't take you to see Kiss?? Chu-!
I didn't see the Sun set until I was 16 (except for the 4-8 work hrs of a 14-year old)
but, back to O.P. awesome groups/songs. Prodigy. Yes? them, and Mobb Deep.
But, right now, it's about FeedBack. Of course, run though Moog Drive, EQD Tonejob and Roland's Demora:
I didn't see the Sun set until I was 16 (except for the 4-8 work hrs of a 14-year old)
but, back to O.P. awesome groups/songs. Prodigy. Yes? them, and Mobb Deep.
But, right now, it's about FeedBack. Of course, run though Moog Drive, EQD Tonejob and Roland's Demora:
At the very bottom of my list are Motley Crew, Poison, Rat, Kiss, Metallica, Rush and Bruce Springsteen. Plus Richard Harris.
-
- Information
-
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 29 guests