It's gonna be a tricky and rather specialised search - your best bet is probably to just ask ThirdForm for his top ten thousand in that style.
there aren't really any tunes like that, by the end of 93 techno was filing for divorce from trance.
It's gonna be a tricky and rather specialised search - your best bet is probably to just ask ThirdForm for his top ten thousand in that style.
Just cos there aren't any doesn't mean you don't know some.there aren't really any tunes like that, by the end of 93 techno was filing for divorce from trance.
@IdleRich that’s exactly what I like about it, the wrong-footing bit, I tried listening to the producer’s other stuff under his ‘New Decade’ moniker but none of it has the same out-loud ‘93 composite rave pluralism, which is all the more notable as the different sub-genres of hardcore and techno were crystallizing, the ‘expected assaults’ increasingly rote. Would love to find some more like it
you might like this.
Apparently it's called freeform hardcore/trancecore though most of it doesn't sound like anything to do with hardcore at all to me, just very fast hardtrance. But this one is quite ravey, in that 92-93 lineage.
@Pearsall did some mixes of the stuff. So he can probably advise you on which tracks have the most hardcore DNA.
in general this stuff was pretty much just very fast hardtrance, maybe something that could work for you would be this one from Citadel of Kaos, who had done some pretty big breakbeat anthems in the early 90's before moving in a more trance-influenced direction
part of the issue with defining early trance is that it can mean several things at once
A)the housier end (brit prog house of sasha/digweed, oakenfold, which is way cornier and soppier to my ears than 93 chipmunk ardcore.) Paul Van Dyk in Berlin is one of the main guys to link that sound back to what was happening in Germany, and was pioneering/ahead of the curve for the white Euros and package holiday chelsea/manchester united/liverpool fan Brits, even if I think his music is absolutely diabolical.
one track which I think exemplifies how prog house of 92-93 sounds way cheesy to my ears is this one from Spooky, archetypical ShitBrit
It lacks the actual classy restraint and fine tuned cavernous production of US garage of the time, instead being rave lite and whimsy.
It also illustrates why the back room of jungle clubs played bumpin garage. You can already begin to here how this sort of sound is more a just-4-u-Surrey take on house, more trippy for the secular UK audience without any link to the church.
B)Sven vath type frankfurt technotrance, starts in 91, (more ebm-indebted and consequently more cold.) Basically over by 95-96 as it gets re-absorbed back into proper techno. This is the kind of music your Colin Dales, Favers, Dave Angels were playing, when they did venture there. Paralleled by the early hard trance of Bonzai, Pure Dance etc. The Belgians were particularly raging hardcore/acid heavy on this front, check the work of Danny Casseau as trax-x which is pretty extreme and is barely trance, hanging on by the thinnest of threads. Also, protect system - arachnophobia. Pure gloomcore quasi-trance! Jones and Stevenson - First Rebirth is probably the best trance track ever made and it is basically archetypical 93 belgian hardcore, Wagnerian pomp on a bad acid trip. Although it is not representative of most hard trance, which is probably what makes it great.
part of the reason why I think (and this is a tentative guess on my part) that frankfurt trance was seen as a form of more intelligent music is because it came through the same import channels for the UK techno djs. There was not much floor burning dancefloor techno in this country until 94-95, with the exception of people like Luke Slater, Russ Gabriel, Universal indicator/Kosmik Kommando etc. For sure, there were outliers on Rephlex, Praxis etc, but some of those tunes are still weird by contemporary techno standards.
Based on set lists (so anyone who was there, correct me if im wrong) the north London, Bandulu type infinite sound really takes off in 94, same with the high speed detroit indebted Stockwell sound of Dave Angel.
So where as your Vaths and Taniths quite logically followed their ebm techno into techno-trance, it was an import phenomenon for most of the UK jocks in 92-93. Ironically, this is why I prefer UK techno djs to german techno djs on the whole, they are much more prone to bringing their attitudes from soul, hip hop and pre-92 ardkore. Loftgroover the funkadelic fan playing hard acid, extreme metal, gabber, and speedcore, etc...
c)or the germanic/Italian rave hardtrance in 94-95 (absolutely not played by any of the UK/euro techno djs) which you get with labels like EDM, Spaceflowerer, United Ravers Records, some Suck Me Plasma, etc. In essence, a more teutonic version of happy hardcore, so absolutely cheesy by definition. Instead of the E-xtatic pianos you get angel choir stabs.. Played by the likes of M-Zone, Mark EG at northern/provincial happy hardcore raves. I don't like this music so I can't give you in depth recommendations unlike pearsall, but it pretty much all sounds like this record, give or take 20-30 bpm+.
Sunbeam - Outside World E.P.
View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the 1994 Vinyl release of "Outside World E.P." on Discogs.www.discogs.com
Another one is Legend B - lost in Love, which still retains the 303s from the techno trance sound, but the burning mercurial corosive textures are totally annihilated, to be replaced by something squiggly and cuddly.