How do you guys explore music that isn’t among the top40 . I see so many DJ’s playing sets that are not the Top40 charts from Billboard/Beatport/Soundcloud.
Just Wanted to discover some underground music (If that’s what its called)
There isn’t really a surefire system. It’s different for everyone. Some people browse soundcloud endlessly. Some people read blogs until their eyes bleed. Some people follow specific labels. Some snipe DJ tracklists and use that to learn about new artists. There’s also a really nicely contributed to thread here that could help.
I started going to underground raves 3 years ago. This was when soundcloud was in its prime and I’ve been on it everyday since. I started DJing because I wanted to mix my favorite songs. I absolutely despise top40 music but I will occasionally play the top40 remix banger find a few labels on soundcloud to fallow and that should be a good start
Listen to lots of mixes/podcasts/shows. ALL. THE. TIME. Find tracklists. Find artists you like. Listen to their mixes/podcasts/shows. Find remixers. Listen to their mixes/podcasts/shows. Build up a good front page on Mixcloud/Soundcloud. Follow big festivals and clubs on YouTube/Mixcloud/Soundcloud. Listen to their mixes/podcasts/shows. This is the new crate digging.
Just go through Beatport and save what you like. What sounds good to you. And use the My Beatport feature. It saves labels and artists so when they release new stuff it pops up automatically in your My Beatport tab.
You can’t think of “Top 40” and “underground” as binary categories. There are literally dozens of genres that fall under the umbrella of “electronic,” and 99% of electronic music would not be considered ‘top 40.’ It’s only in the past five years or so that commercial EDM music became the most popular form of pop music.
So you need to find what it is you like and continue listening to it. Basically there are four broad genres of electronic: house, techno, trance, and bass. Each of these has a bunch of subgenres.
Solomun is deep house, so maybe that’s a good place to start for you. Listen to his sets and look up the track lists. Find your favorite songs, see which DJs produced them, and then listen to those DJs. Rinse and repeat.
If you have good taste in music, over time your taste will naturally drift away from what is popular. But don’t force it. It has to be organic or you’ll end up stop listening to electronic altogether.
I first got into electronic music from a DJ called Grum. His sound is heavily influenced by New Order and indie rock, and I was coming from a rock background. He mentioned Guy J as his favorite (or one of his favorite) DJs a few times, so I checked him out. I thought it was really boring and repetitive music and too mellow. I liked listening to 90’s trance because I saw Paul van Dyk around this time and found it really enjoyable to listen to. And some 90’s house too (eg Paul Oakenfold). I was exposed to EDM and enjoyed it but then got into Buenos Aires’s underground house scene. It was a bit EDMish (lots of Melbourne bounce as this was 2014) but they played mostly unknown music and a lot of local tracks. This music though was only played at after parties…during normal hours (before 7 AM), the clubs would mostly play techno and progressive house with international DJs coming in. I never really liked the music that much, it seemed repetitive and boring and lacking in melody. The drops never satisfied me.
After six months or so of this (but I listened to A LOT of music, as I would go out Friday and come back Monday afternoon every weekend, only sleeping on Saturday afternoons, and went out during the week sometimes, too, only going to electronic parties…I wasn’t working at this time, just depleting my savings), I finally went to a techno party that blew my mind. It was this crazy house party off in the countryside with insane drugs and this one (local) DJ that absolutely destroyed it. I had never heard anything like it before. And since then, I’ve never looked back. I’m horrible with DJ names when it comes to techno or deep house, but I’ve gotten into progressive house. Upon returning to listening to Guy J, I discovered that he’s the world’s best DJ/producer, IMO. So I listen to him and similar DJs (Guy Mantzur, for example) and then find other DJs from their sets and listen to that music.
I’ll never forget the time I saw him live. I candyflipped and it was absolutely glorious. Probably the best set I’ve ever heard. I’m going to do the same in three weeks time after he plays here and Guy Mantzur (literally my second favorite DJ) opens for him…it’s going to be Hiroshima times ten.
For the record I love listening to him sober now, too, and I completely stopped listening to mainstream house. But I guess it’s just as my dad says, “Doing drugs opens doors that you can’t close.” Not that I wasn’t on drugs in my early days when I was still listening to mainstream house, but if you do enough drugs and listen to the music long enough, that techno/progressive house stops sounding boring and repetitive and starts sounding really awesome.
find record labels that have releases you like from the sets you’ve heard great tunes. Research the label - who runs it/owns it? Check out their tunes. Check out the labels that have other releases from the artists you like. Check out the top lists of music on vinyl retailers and RA. (many times vinyl releases wind up out electronically after a few months - if not, consider buying a turntable for vinyl only releases and recording digitally for your sets) Again, research other releases from the artists and labels. Eventually you’ll have a nice list of underground stuff.