Another good example is http://youtu.be/3OhcHDo5zsA
Even this is fine by me
http://youtu.be/fv_KITDbUyo
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Another good example is http://youtu.be/3OhcHDo5zsA
Even this is fine by me
http://youtu.be/fv_KITDbUyo
In the early 2000 I was really big into mixing trance up until about 2006 when things got harder to find good tracks and kinda went away from it and then believe it or not iTunes got me back into it
Hands down this one of my all times favorites http://youtu.be/XDygH_ylIlE
Andrew Bayer is definitely my go to guy for Prog/tech trance. I used to really like the Jaytech sound when he was signed to Anjunadeep. Not so much now he's moved over to Anjunabeats. The Anjunadeep podcast is a great source of inspiration. Jody Wisternoff, James grant, Shingo Nakamura, suspect 44 all play and produce great progressive tunes IMO.
Cheers Koop .. just subscribed to that one :)
Yup ajunadeep has been pretty reliable for decent tracks at least for past year I've been following
http://youtu.be/eLXzxULQFXg. This remind you of this
http://youtu.be/GfaJOmbZI4A
Here one that'll do maybe bring some Cheeder from early 2000s back
http://youtu.be/p0HyW1a13Vs
That lasgo label looks awful familiar....I think I might own that on vinyl.
Also, anjunadeep has been good for a lot longer than a year. I remember when A&B started it. It wasn't long after I started spinning, and I was still on vinyl at that point. I don't think I got my first DVS until later that year, which was about the time I switched to what was, at the time, called "progressive".
And it seems like the non-boring part of "progressive" evolved into one of the deep houes sounds that also gets labeled as a bunch of other things...and is pretty fun in the right context.
And the best thing is that we're not paying $12/record. So, keeping up with a couple sounds is possible. Keeping them separate....that's harder.