Whither the mix CD?

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Something I've been thinking about recently is how important and iconic artist/DJ mix albums were in my formative years as a music fan.

The golden age of these must have been in the late 90s and early 2000s. People talked in husehd whispers about things like 2ManyDJs, Journeys By DJ, Decks, EFX & 909, the Fabric and FabricLive mixes, BadMeaningGood, Immer... All so important to me getting into various styles and opening my mind to new music, as well as gaining an appreciation for mixing and selecting.

But I don't think I've even come across a new one of these in a good while.

There are reasons for this: the demise of the CD and the move to streaming means high-profile hour-long mixes are less likely to be relesed as official albums (even on Spotify you can't get a lot of the above mentioned) and more likely to go out on Soundcloud or Mixcloud.

But I think this is a bit of a shame really. There doens't seem to be this sense of shared occasion with stremaing a DJ mix on Soundcloud, and these mixes feel more like bonuses than carefully-curated main events.

Anyway, maybe there are some recent examples people can throw this way. And what are the some of the most important mix albums to you?

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:18 (two years ago)

Not really what you're talking about, but I miss making mix cds. I would give them away as xmas/birthday presents, leave them lying about for strangers to pick up. It was a fun way of processing the music I liked and seeing how different things fit together. But now there are so few people listening to CDs that I stopped doing it. If I worked I could probably find enough friends through facebook that listen to CDs, but it feels like a moment that's passed.

Cow_Art, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:23 (two years ago)

Yup, same. I still like making mixes and putting them up on Soundcloud but it's not really the same - it's less personal and more something I do to promote my portfolio as a DJ.

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:27 (two years ago)

And don't get me started on mixtapes. What do teenagers gift their crushes nowadays anyway? Roblox experiences? ;-)

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:29 (two years ago)

I’ve made one every year since 2002, bore the shit out of my friends with them. I haven’t made them as physical discs since 2011 but I still use the same software to crossfade etc. and then render to a disc length of audio files. I don’t think anyone really cares but I guess I like the ritual of saving candidates, sequencing, etc.

assert (matttkkkk), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:32 (two years ago)

Boiler Room sets are the closest modern-day equivalent to the commercial mix CD, surely?

Twelves, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 12:47 (two years ago)

I was going to say that the DJ-Kicks series is still issued on physical discs, but maybe it too is slowing down lately?

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/DJ-Kicks

Nag! Nag! Nag!, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:03 (two years ago)

Yeah DJ mixes for home listening have all moved onto Twitch, YouTube and Mixcloud. Curated compilations went the same way - it's all just playlists on Spotify/Apple Music/Tidal now.

You may think that this loses the "shared experience" of tens of thousands (what did those Fabric CDs sell?) of listeners sharing the same experience, but then again, even if 90% of the 22 million streams for this Fred Again mix are bots, that's still a bigger audience than Immer ever got.

Siegbran, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:33 (two years ago)

(shared experience twice even)

Siegbran, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:34 (two years ago)

I loved the Fabric mix cd's but yeah they seem to be winding down a bit. I guess Mixcloud is the way to go now but a part of me likes having these things curated to me (if you know what I mean). Last Fabric CD I got was the Octo Octa one and that was 3 years ago now.

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 13:59 (two years ago)

Yeah and you know what, I just don't really want to sit there and watch a dude mixing on CDJs with drunk people behind him for more than 5 minutes. Kibnd of spoils the illusion of the "mix as journey" really - I dunno, it's the difference between listening to a studio album and watching a concert: They're different levels of experience.

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 14:30 (two years ago)

I have a DJ Kicks release on vinyl and it's weird cuz it's not actually mixed at all, it's just regular edits of all the tracks. great tracks and all but it kind of defeats the point, no??

On the Floor at the Boutique by Fatboy Slim and Brothers Gonna Work It Out by the Chemical Brothers were both massively important to me as a teenager. just the whole idea of a dancefloor filling mix CD was mindblowing at the time.

frogbs, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 14:37 (two years ago)

Soundslike to thread!

brimstead, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 19:20 (two years ago)

xp pretty sure the dj kicks vinyl is for djs

brimstead, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 19:22 (two years ago)

everyone otm + i basically try to make a "mix cd" whenever i post to "djs post your mixes"

i agree with siegbran except i also think the listening experience is significantly different. i can't tell you exactly how except that i really do think my zoomer friends who go to dance tents at coachella are experiencing / approaching it differently than i am when i go to an all night warehouse party

and no it's not just because i'm trapped in a rotting 46 year old body and they're fresh and young, except i'm not in their brains so i can't exactly tell you what the difference is. impossible to say this without sounding like a boomer dinosaur but i think "the music" is secondary to "the experience" for sure

the late great, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 19:42 (two years ago)

I identify with the sentiment in this thread -- dj mixes were very important to me in college when I was discovering electronic dance music, and they opened doors that I would have never explored otherwise.

However I just assumed it was me that became less engaged with the form, not that the form was dying out. Philip Sherburne still does a "best DJ mixes of the month" column for Pitchfork. Best of 2023 so far was published back in May: https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/best-dj-mixes-2023/

Indexed, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 19:48 (two years ago)

I was recently having a related discussion with Deej - we don’t talk/think enough about how changing patterns of music consumption and interaction change our relationship to music. Dance music’s relative decentering of the individual artist discography makes some of these dynamics more interesting to think about.

One aspect of the dominance of the mix-cd especially in the early-to-mid 2000s is that the rise of digital downloads and file sharing, but the fact that we still did not have streaming or endless online mixes, meant that commercially-available DJ mixes entered a sweet spot between gatekeeping and participation. Before that, you had to be very invested in the dance music economy (going to record shops, buying vinyl etc) to really engage with what a DJ mix was doing in an informed manner. Afterwards, the playing field became so levelled that any one mix or mixer could no longer assume or command gatekeeping power.

But for a while there what made DJ mixes so prominent was not just their quality in and of themselves, but how (with the help of soulseek, YouTube, discogs.com and online discussion forums like this one) they could send you on chains of inquiry, down rabbit holes of particular artists, labels or scenes. So you could, say, spend a productive weekend carefully tracing all the creative inflows and outflows that resulted in a finished product mix. Which in turn made the way in which a given mix tied together those various strands into a single articulation seem potentially more important, a framing device for listener and participant perspectives on these scenes more broadly.

It’s the way in which they occupied this role as a pivot point for broader engagement which I think has now receded - this is not a good or bad thing per se, just a thing, but I think people who despair at “keeping up” with dance music (or finding it interesting at all!) now would occasionally benefit from reflecting on how much their changing relationship to the music is a function of the changing structure of forms of engagement which are practically available now.

Tim F, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 22:03 (two years ago)

again not much to add except yeah that sounds right

one of my most played (maybe #1?) mixes on my soundcloud is a deep dive into the acido / sued family of artists, which basically boils down to four or so artists (dreesen, svn, sw, pg) in various combinations

this was cool to make and still fun to listen to but sure in 2023 why not just let spotify serve you up a mix of tracks by these guys and other simpatico artists?

only actual benefit to *my* mix is getting to hear *my own* personal lens on this stuff, and like any average navel my own is mostly of interest only to the navel gazer in question himself and not the average punter

the late great, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 22:13 (two years ago)

Yeah it does sound right. Not living in a city, I used to consume dance music primarily through mix CDs. Now it's more likely that I'll find an EP on Bandcamp, buy it, but mostly just play one key track from it or put it in a Spotify playlist called "Bangin dance choons" or something

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Tuesday, 15 August 2023 22:18 (two years ago)

Yeah I actually really like exploiting the power of Spotify’s algorithms - I spend a lot of time constructing personal playlists chasing highly specific notions of a vibe that probably only exist and make sense in my own head. DJ mixes struggle to compete with that now.

Tim F, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 22:25 (two years ago)

Yeah I actually really like exploiting the power of Spotify’s algorithms - I spend a lot of time constructing personal playlists chasing highly specific notions of a vibe that probably only exist and make sense in my own head. DJ mixes struggle to compete with that now.

Tim F, Tuesday, 15 August 2023 22:26 (two years ago)

I just don't really want to sit there and watch a dude mixing on CDJs with drunk people behind him for more than 5 minutes. Kibnd of spoils the illusion of the "mix as journey" really

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0uyr1UL4tAw

saer, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:03 (two years ago)

XP I like to do this too (the Spotify algo rabbit hole) and (much as it's a burden on my inbox), Bandcamp recommendations also turn up a lot of treasure.

But there's something very satisfying that I miss about those well-curated and mixed 60-minute albums that are intended primarily for listening to at home in your own time, which is slightly different from watching a Boiler Room set or listening to a mix that was recorded in a live setting.

Those Badmeaninggood comps by Skitz, Roots Manuva, Peanut Butter Wolf, for example, gave the artist a brief (What does hip hop mean to you?) and let them go wild. Some of them had barely any actual hip hop on them. Instead it was a whole panoply of disco, dancehall, new wave, electro etc. Just so so important to me at the time

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:11 (two years ago)

XP this is bangin!

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:12 (two years ago)

even if 90% of the 22 million streams for this Fred Again mix are bots, that's still a bigger audience than Immer ever got.

Nobody who bought Immer, or any other mix CD, ever listened to it a second time

serving bundt (sic), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:38 (two years ago)

(can’t properly what saer’s link is on phone but did a looooot of playing mixes / streaming train journeys in 2020 / 21)

serving bundt (sic), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:39 (two years ago)

and then subsequently a fuckloaf of Cercle mixes on mountains and balloons and glaciers etc

serving bundt (sic), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:41 (two years ago)

genuine ty autocorrect

serving bundt (sic), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:41 (two years ago)

Mix CDs were probably more important to me in the '90s than albums. They could open windows onto new worlds of music. They enabled you to hear and own obscure dance tracks in the days before the internet when the only other way to discover them was either in clubs or spending too much time hanging around the counter at small record shops.

Their rise in the early '90s was caused by record labels seeking to catch the market that couldn't get enough of the unofficial mix tapes with recordings of live DJ sets (their history goes back to NY block parties in the 70s). I'll love that Colin Dale mix tape I've got til I die. At their peak they were as talked about as any album. But with thousands of new DJ mixes available all over the internet, with most old mixes a click away, with CDs becoming a niche format there's not the money to be made by them and besides a few legacy series holding on they seem to be going the way of shellac.

Anyways, some love for the X-Mix series. Originally intended as a VHS video with trippy computer graphics accompanied by dance music, the CD releases were amazing. The first had Paul Van Dyk catching the peak of euro-trance in 1993, before the sound of the series shifted on Laurent Garnier's towards techno. X-Mix 2 was my introduction to Detroit techno. The back half's flawlessly mixed run of Galaxy to Galaxy -> Rhythm is Rhythm -> Kenny Larkin had my jaw hit the floor the first time I heard it and shifted my entire taste in music for ever. The series continued with mixes from Richie Hawtin/John Acquaviva, Dave Angel, Ken Ishii, Kevin Saunderson (this one deserves a special mention; when I think of the many faces of Detroit techno this is the first sound I think of), Dave Clarke, Hardfloor... These mix CDs were core to my music tastes.

Spandex, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 08:43 (two years ago)

(can’t properly what saer’s link is on phone but did a looooot of playing mixes / streaming train journeys in 2020 / 21)

★ 4K 🇫🇷 Marseille St-Charles - Lyon Part-Dieu cab ride en BB 22200 [07.2022] Führerstandsmitfahrt

For something more interesting to look at if you are unable to leave the house and look at a mixture of nature and the built environment while the mix is playing

saer, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 09:41 (two years ago)

Not only was it otherwise difficult to hear this music, it was often difficult or impossible to go to a night where these DJs were playing, so this was the only way to get a feel for what a set might be like. Imagining the crowd at one of these gigs was part of what made them great. Certain tracks, or types of track, suggested a certain kind of crowd

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 12:43 (two years ago)

Yes OTM.

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 14:59 (two years ago)

I think Jeff Mills 'Live At The Liquid Room' is one of those. That's notable for not being part of a branded series like JbDJ or DJ Kicks which started the same year iirc.

There are transitions in 90s Radio 1 Essential Mixes that I still think about today, including from sets by acts who were probably better producers than they were DJs.

Getting that same buzz from streaming or downloaded mixes seems quite achievable though, I just seemed to lose interest in listening to mixes by the time that was in full swing.

nashwan, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 15:29 (two years ago)

xpost I agree with those saying watching a Boiler Room set isnt the same. I've never really bothered with them for the most part. I dgaf about watching a DJ. However, I do watch this from time to time. This is the stuff of (meme) legend tbf

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XXJil6osy6o

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 15:31 (two years ago)

I went crazy for one track in a Kaytranada BR set from a few years ago that I heard only recently. IDing the track, immediately buying it on Bandcamp and listening to was very satisfying (dropping it in your own set even more so I imagine :). That whole process just taking minutes is undeniably cool.

nashwan, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 15:39 (two years ago)

hd club/festival footage is ghastly, but I can totally get with 90s/00s shaky handheld footage of raves and stuff

brimstead, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 15:56 (two years ago)

Yeah. I'm not sure which bit of that Solomun set Michael B posted is meant to be the memey bit, but future generations are going to look back on these and ROFL so hard

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:01 (two years ago)

It's almost got a vintage TOTP vibe to it

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:01 (two years ago)

hd club/festival footage is ghastly, but I can totally get with 90s/00s shaky handheld footage of raves and stuff

Recently watched a bit of a Todd Edwards set in Romford from 20 years ago on YT. The footage quality and the music are fine but ayyy the crowd looks at least 80% male.

nashwan, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 16:09 (two years ago)


Nobody who bought Immer, or any other mix CD, ever listened to it a second time

― serving bundt (sic)

this is so absurdly false lmao

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 18:36 (two years ago)

figured that was a joke?

immer 2 > immer 1 while I’m here

brimstead, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 18:38 (two years ago)

even I've listened to my Immer CD more than once

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 18:39 (two years ago)

haha okay! maybe i wasn't following the convo carefully enough

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 18:43 (two years ago)

we don’t talk/think enough about how changing patterns of music consumption and interaction change our relationship to music.


OTMFM

I spend a lot of time constructing personal playlists chasing highly specific notions of a vibe that probably only exist and make sense in my own head.


Yes, and for me this is the natural evolution of mixtapes -> mixed CDs -> playlists

When I moved from tapes to CDs one of the first differences I noticed was the lack of a break between sides. Now you only had one opening track and one closing track instead of two.

The length was another thing to get used to; I made so many 90-minute tapes that an 80-minute CD seemed abbreviated.

Ultimately I didn’t make that many mixed CDs; I didn’t find the process as personal or enjoyable. When you made a tape, you made ONE TAPE, usually with one person in mind. When you made a CD, you could burn as many copies as you had friends to receive them. And the process of making a tape was arduous and manual; a 90-minute tape might take me most of a day to make, ensuring the transitions were right, juggling and re-juggling (and therefore re-recording, in real time) the tracklist. With CDs you could slap 20 songs onto a burn list in seconds, adjust the gap time, and away you run. (I was unaware of the idea that you could import the tunes into audio editing software and do crossfades, etc, and effectively force people to listen to the whole thing as a single track like it was a tape. I might have stuck with it more if that idea had occurred to me)

Spotify playlists are another beast altogether. It’d be nice if you could set the crossfade time individually by track and make it stick for the listener regardless of their settings. The potentially infinite length of them is an interesting feature, with both positive and negative characteristics. (I tend to think that tight limitations often make for more interesting art.) (Yes, the mixtape / playlist is an art — although there’s a place for slapdash and functional ones as well as intensely curated ones.)

The land of dreams and endless remorse (hardcore dilettante), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 19:47 (two years ago)

^altho this discussion is beside the main point of the thread — does the humble “I made this for you” mixtape/CD need its own thread?

The land of dreams and endless remorse (hardcore dilettante), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 19:49 (two years ago)

oh I'm sure there is one already

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 19:50 (two years ago)

I think there was another period in the '10s where curated online mix series like Resident Advisor, FACT, and others (idk, BBC Essential, Solid Steel, Dekmantel, XLR8R, etc) held some weight. There were mixes that felt like an event and artists would treat them with care because it could be a big moment for them. But of course it's different now...there are more mixes online than you could ever listen to, those series are in the hundreds, it's just another form of unpaid work to get some exposure for producers/DJs, etc.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 20:50 (two years ago)

i feel like the "curated compilations" are an adjacent but slightly different thing (similar but not exactly the same as how i've always said "eclectic dance genres" like big beat, balearic, electroclash have always existed just adjacent to "proper" dance music like house and dnb)

they now take up their own space on BANDCAMP mostly

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:23 (two years ago)

As frogbs alludes there was a whole thing of releasing a mix CD alongside a vinyl compilation (and/or CD) of the individual tracks... like "now YOU be the DJ!" and I loved that shit. Clearing all the rights for those must have been hell. I hardly ever listened to the mix, but it was a fantastic way to have all these otherwise unobtainable tracks to mix with. Off the top of my head the Back To Mine series (partic. Danny Tenaglia), Matt Jam Lamont - The Jam Experience, The Grandfather Paradox - Henrik Schwarz, Ame, Dixon, the Strange Games And Funky Things mixes...

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:40 (two years ago)

The first CD mix that properly blew my mind and that I returned to again and again was the Optimo mix from Hogmanay 2000 (I've still got my CD!)

Tracer Hand, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:40 (two years ago)

yeah i've been buying a lot of UNITED DJs OF AMERICA and MIXMAG PRESENTS 3LP sets for ultra cheap on discogs

for a 90s house bedroom nostalgia DJ it's pure gold

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 21:42 (two years ago)

Thanks Dog Latin for bringing this up - it's a topic close to my heart. By the early 90s I was a little bored by alternate rock, was mining 70s dub and reggae, and was into the emerging gritty 90s hip hop. But when I discovered mix CDs, it opened a whole other world of ideas about music to me. So many track I would otherwise never hear (in New Zealand), mixed in ways that just sounded great. Although I was part of the NZ rave scene in the early 90s, the music was mostly rubbish (happy hardcore, gabba, trance, and then, famously, by the mid 1990s, NZ became the biggest tech step market in the world).

I saved all my cash for mix CDs (which were $30 each before I moved to NYC - note that CDs are still $35 in NZ). I became fascinated by the slight differences in the key series: DJ Kicks was early, and then Plastic City, Fabric, Fuse, Stockholm Sessions, Kompakt, Live at Robert Johnson, Sci Fi Hi Fi, Traum, Perlen, Berghain, Body Language, Watergate.

So now, in 2023, one of my key cash holes is 90s / 2000s mix CDs. I think I have about 500?I know it's a pointless fascination, in some ways, but also not pointless, because I love it.And I adore CDs.

paulhw, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 22:21 (two years ago)

The Doc Martin and Jeno United DJs are all time classics. I was living in San Francisco in 96/97 and they really capture that warehouse vibe for me.

paulhw, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 22:23 (two years ago)

The Louie Vega United DJs of America mix is one of my absolute all time favourites.

Tim F, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 22:38 (two years ago)

(yes tlg my joke was that the number of times an indeterminate portion of a youtube is clicked does not correspond 1:1 to single users playing the whole thing through once and once only. though I’m sure plenty of 20somethings are putting on fredagain’s boiler room at house parties just as their dads put on Immer.)

serving bundt (sic), Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:01 (two years ago)

xxp 100% hard agree although don't forget mark farina and garth plus i think there's at least two doc martin mixes that have aged better

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:03 (two years ago)

sorry sic, a lmao well earned in retrospect then

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:04 (two years ago)

never mind Boiler Room, the real nightmare to me is HOR - it just looks like a really dirty club bathroom to me!

boxedjoy, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:07 (two years ago)

yeah i can't even

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:09 (two years ago)

if somehow you were in a position to be asked to contribute to eg RA Mix series as a DJ. Would you offer your best ever mix with all your favourite tracks and sophisticated blends? Or would you offer a simply good mix, in case the chance to submit your best mix for eg Fabric/DJ Kicks was to become available later? What if the ask came from Essential Mix?

boxedjoy, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:10 (two years ago)

well idk abt u but personally i would tell them all get fucked in order to permanently cement my credentials as an authentic underground artiste

the late great, Wednesday, 16 August 2023 23:18 (two years ago)

Personally, I don't think DJ/mix/club culture has truly changed (vs the 2000-2005 mix-CD heydays) as much as we all have changed, and now get reflexively dismissive of young people partying on drugs. Now 1975-1985 DJ/club culture, that was a whole different thing.

Siegbran, Thursday, 17 August 2023 10:12 (two years ago)

I mean, the amount of DJ mixes you had access to was immense in the 2000-2005 era as well - I was into this stuff as much as anyone, and even though I listened to 1000s of tracks a year + mixes, it was absolutely impossible to keep up with the flood of mixes released by Mixmag, Fabric, RA, FACT, BBC Essential Mix, plus all the festival-themed and non-franchise mix CDs, not to mention recorded/bootlegged radio guest mixes, podcasts and livesets. It's really not any better or worse today with the flood of mixes on Mixcloud/Youtube.

IMO the clear break between "mixes accessible for those in-the-know/tapetraders/scenesters" and "widely available to anyone" was around 1995-1996 when the mix CD phenomenon started in mainly Belgium, the UK & Holland (Live At The Liquid Room, Renaissance, Cafe Del Mar, and the various club-branded mixes with often uncredited DJs, like Illusion, iT, Mazzo, At The Villa, Boccaccio). For some reason, the Germans still loved their unmixed compilations much more than mixed CDs until well into the late 90s - clubs like Omen, Dorian Gray or E-Werk never released a mix CD, and neither did their famous resident DJs - there's only two (semi-bootleg) cassette tapes with like 25-minutes of Sven Vath in his 1993-1994 glory days.

Siegbran, Thursday, 17 August 2023 10:49 (two years ago)

I've actually had a big thing for DJ mixes in the past month. I've listened to new (to me) ones by Lo-Fidelity Allstars, Nguzunguzu, Danny Rampling, Tall Paul, Seb Fontaine, Tony De Vit, Digweed, Graham Gold, Graeme Park, A.G. Cook, Wolfgang Voigt, Steve Davis & Kavus Torabi and Nina Kraviz ones alone in the last few weeks.

They were a huge part of my formative years too. And that's mix albums from two different camps really. On the one hand mainstream dance compilations from mix series (I recently dug up Clubmix Summer 2004 and Clubland 5 and 6 recently - mixes that as a six/seven year old I played heavily even though I never liked the euro-trance tracks much. So many memories...) and on the other hand MIXMAG. I had no use for the magazine, I just liked getting free CDs. The allure of the covermount was too much for my autistic 'music boy' brain constantly looking to hear new things. That could lead me to getting my parents to buy shitty red tops, but it also meant Q, Uncut, Mojo and best of all Mixmag. The ones I adored most were Felix da Housecat's Past, Present and Future House and Electro and Soulwax's This Is Radio Soulwax. The others I had in those early days were by Marco V, Paul van Dyk, Plump DJs, Angello & Ingrosso, Loco Dice, De La Soul and Erol Alkan. I can't tell you how much this stuff (cough) expanded my horizons. And I didn't really know anything about any of them. Or even much of the music I liked that was out of my parents' respective comfort zones.

A few other formative examples I loved:
- Ratpack's Mixology was the best 8th birthday present EVER. Because I loved my dad's 'Ravin'' compilation so much and I really wanted a hardcore compilation of my own. Better yet if it shared a lot of my favourites.
- Ministry of Sound Annuals 2002, 2005 and 2006 (albeit I got the first of those a few years after its release). I have lots of problems with these editions now, even the frequently fantastic 2002 installment, but I didn't then so no matter .
- In the wake of that, other kind of crassy mid-period Ministry of Sound compilations and likeminded mixes from other commercial labels. Although I'd take all of them over most of those Clubland ones.

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 12:09 (two years ago)

Ratpack's Raveology*

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 12:10 (two years ago)

Favourite mix albums ever:
- Those Felix and Soulwax ones
- The Annuals I, II and III (Pete Tong/Boy George)
- the Chems' Brother's Gonna Work It Out
- Street Sounds UK Electro
- Anabolic Frolic Happy 2b Hardcore (I know HHC heads turn their noses at this series, mostly for mix reasons, but idc)
- Club Nation (1998)
- Kiss House Nation 2000 (Alex P/Brandon Block) (another one I bought second hand in the mid-00s that I listened to approximately 900 times)
- Larry Levan Live at Paradise Garage

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 12:15 (two years ago)

House Nation 2001*
No use re-reading my comments if I only notice the mistake just as I submit post

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 12:16 (two years ago)

My faves:

Michael Mayer Fabric 13 mix
Carl Craig Fabric 25 mix
Bentley Rhythm Ace FSUK mix
Luciano Sci Fi Hi Fi 02 mix

Saxophone Of Futility (Michael B), Thursday, 17 August 2023 12:39 (two years ago)

Yes I love that Luciano mix.

My favourite mix CD of all time - Altz Tight 20, featuring a stirmonster edit, Mungolian Jet Set, Prince, 10cc, James Brown, Matthew Herbert... I just want to live in this mix. It's like a blueprint for a better world.

https://www.discogs.com/release/15828961-Altz-Tight-Vol20

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:08 (two years ago)

i absolutely love the FSUK vs BRA mix.
all time fave of mine.
and yeah, i was a sucker for a good cd mixtape.

mark e, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:31 (two years ago)

that one is great, i slightly prefer freestylers and even moreso the cut la roc FSUK set

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:46 (two years ago)

I've listened to new (to me) ones by Lo-Fidelity Allstars

if this is “on the floor at the boutique” that’s another of my all time faves :)

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:47 (two years ago)

yeah, the 4 releases under the FSUK brand were all excellent.
they are still my go-to's whenever i am struggling to find something that hits the spot.

mark e, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:50 (two years ago)

in that sort of line of big beat mixes i think those + the three “on the floor at the boutique” + the three (four?) “live at the heavenly social” mixes are about all you need, maybe throw in the “brit hop and amyl house” comp

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 13:53 (two years ago)

I've listened to new (to me) ones by Lo-Fidelity Allstars

if this is “on the floor at the boutique” that’s another of my all time faves :)

That's the one!

in that sort of line of big beat mixes i think those + the three “on the floor at the boutique” + the three (four?) “live at the heavenly social” mixes are about all you need, maybe throw in the “brit hop and amyl house” comp

Oh yeah I listened to Brit Hop and Amyl House a few weeks ago too, which had been on my mental to-listen list for... about 16 years? Ever since I discovered the Chemical Tom rumour. Those are basically all the classic big beat mixes but I'll throw in some strong affection for Fatboy's disc in Essential Millennium too. Some of my favourite transitions ever (Carnival into Jack It Up into Psychedelic Reel, Born Slippy into At the River).

Plus also CD2 of the aforesaid Annual III. Boy George did have a habit of including stuff by mates but that stuff always turns out to be great (Kinky Roland!)

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 14:08 (two years ago)

idk that essential millenium!! thx for the tip, will check

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 14:41 (two years ago)

and i think that rumor is confirmed ?

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 14:42 (two years ago)

Not sure tbh?

you can see me from westbury white horse, Thursday, 17 August 2023 14:58 (two years ago)

if somehow you were in a position to be asked to contribute to eg RA Mix series as a DJ. Would you offer your best ever mix with all your favourite tracks and sophisticated blends? Or would you offer a simply good mix, in case the chance to submit your best mix for eg Fabric/DJ Kicks was to become available later? What if the ask came from Essential Mix?

would you not aim to contribute a series of mixes that (in yr opinion) were all great. i'd understand if the RA one was less great as most people DGAF about RA ticket agency, right?

stirmonster, Thursday, 17 August 2023 15:09 (two years ago)

I mean, if you were going to put together a mix that was your "mission statement" - obviously you would want every mix you put your name to to be excellent.

I think about how Jayda G's RA Mix is incredible and her DJ Kicks is very underwhelming to me. The latter feels like more of an event because it's the one with the physical release that costs money to purchase, and the former is the free mix released when her star was still in an earlier stage of ascendancy. The DJ Kicks mix isn't bad, it just doesn't seem as thrilling or personality-rich as the RA mix - that one to me feels much more like a "mission statement" - and it seems to me the "prestige" is mismatched to the quality of the mixes themselves.

boxedjoy, Thursday, 17 August 2023 16:28 (two years ago)

it's not quite the same but if you play in a band you can't pretend every show is equally good or every song you write belongs on the next album

boxedjoy, Thursday, 17 August 2023 16:45 (two years ago)

Around 2005, a friend hosted a party where he had everyone make a mix cd of their all-time favorite songs, and burn enough copies for all those attended. Oddly, mine was the best! But listening to all those CDs from his friends and coworkers was a fascinating trip through hipster obscurities, comforting classics and pedestrian pop.

My playlist is still in my iTunes

1. Deep Henderson King Oliver
2  Chinatown, My Chinatown Milton Brown
3  Caravan Duke Ellington, Charles Mingus &...
4  Mule Skinner Blues The Fendermen
5  Telstar The Tornadoes
6  We Love You The Rolling Stones
7  Paris 1919 John Cale
8  Oh! You Pretty Things David Bowie
9  Roast Fish And Cornbread Lee 'Scratch' Perry
10  The Passenger Iggy Pop
11  Clampdown The Clash
12  Hungry Wolf x
13  if reagan played disco Minutemen
14  The Mercy Seat Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
15  Sing Sing Sing Flat Duo Jets
16  Lazy Line Painter Jane Belle & Sebastian
17  Clermont Hotel Trailer Bride
18  Hostage Crisis A Frames
19  Hooded The Casual Dots
20  Your Love Is A Fine Thing Reigning Sound

I'd say 1, 3-7, 9, 17-19 would still come up in a current exercise. Seems like it's the years-of-my-youth era I've worn out.

Terrycoth Baphomet (bendy), Thursday, 17 August 2023 16:56 (two years ago)

I had a little period of getting asked to contribute promo mixes related to record releases, and I can definitely point to a couple early ones where I tried to include all my heaviest hitters. Then there were one or two others for 'bigger' places that maybe weren't as strong because I didn't want to repeat tracks, and also overthought/over-recorded the mixing. Not that any of that reeeally mattered in the end, but y'know.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 17 August 2023 17:00 (two years ago)

would you not aim to contribute a series of mixes that (in yr opinion) were all great. i'd understand if the RA one was less great as most people DGAF about RA ticket agency, right?

my jokey answer based on my impulse that nobody *really* gives a shit about any of this stuff (boiler room, RA, HOR, FACT mixes) anymore

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 17:56 (two years ago)

^^^

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 17 August 2023 18:02 (two years ago)

Also internet radio, so many stations going 24/7.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 17 August 2023 18:03 (two years ago)

maybe weren't as strong because I didn't want to repeat tracks, and also overthought/over-recorded the mixing

been there, know it well, wouldn't want to disappoint the seven people who regularly tune in every month

boxedjoy, Thursday, 17 August 2023 18:06 (two years ago)

thanks to this thread i have just found out the rebolledo who made one of my fave mixes on kompakt recently made a mix for RA and it's available in 320.
yeah, it's more of his space/slo-mo chugga thing, but i love it.
thread delivers.

https://soundcloud.com/resident-advisor/ra876-rebolledo

mark e, Thursday, 17 August 2023 18:19 (two years ago)

The one I remember most fondly is Magda

https://soundcloud.com/resident-advisor/ra215-magda

I don't see a mention in the thread so far of NTS radio specifically. This show is what withered the mix for me:

https://www.nts.live/shows/death-is-not-the-end/episodes/death-is-not-the-end-15th-december-2018

Terrycoth Baphomet (bendy), Thursday, 17 August 2023 18:32 (two years ago)

My take is that there are as many (or even more) great mixes today vs the past, but there's an even more massive quantity of unnecessary stuff that crowds them out. Quality control, if it ever existed due to scarcity, has gone completely out the window.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Thursday, 17 August 2023 19:21 (two years ago)

that NTS link - which is tremendous, by the way, thank you bendy - literally has a link at the top saying "endless mixtapes" lol

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 17 August 2023 19:29 (two years ago)

I mean, the amount of DJ mixes you had access to was immense in the 2000-2005 era as well - I was into this stuff as much as anyone, and even though I listened to 1000s of tracks a year + mixes, it was absolutely impossible to keep up with the flood of mixes released by Mixmag, Fabric, RA, FACT, BBC Essential Mix, plus all the festival-themed and non-franchise mix CDs, not to mention recorded/bootlegged radio guest mixes, podcasts and livesets. It's really not any better or worse today with the flood of mixes on Mixcloud/Youtube.

Right - it's more that (in tlg's words) no one really gives a shit any more - or to frame it another way, the prospect of there being some kind of tiered gatekeeping structure where you might feel obliged to check out each and every branded mix from certain custodian-brands (in the mid 00s, this would mainly have been the names you cite above) seems (even) more ridiculous now (though I suppose there are some people who would try it with Boiler Room sets and so on).

IMO the clear break between "mixes accessible for those in-the-know/tapetraders/scenesters" and "widely available to anyone" was around 1995-1996 when the mix CD phenomenon started in mainly Belgium, the UK & Holland (Live At The Liquid Room, Renaissance, Cafe Del Mar, and the various club-branded mixes with often uncredited DJs, like Illusion, iT, Mazzo, At The Villa, Boccaccio). For some reason, the Germans still loved their unmixed compilations much more than mixed CDs until well into the late 90s - clubs like Omen, Dorian Gray or E-Werk never released a mix CD, and neither did their famous resident DJs - there's only two (semi-bootleg) cassette tapes with like 25-minutes of Sven Vath in his 1993-1994 glory days.

I agree with this but it's slightly different to the point I was making, which is whether the underlying source material was widely available and to what extent, and how that then feeds back into our relationship to DJ mixes.

To use a personal example, when I was getting into UK garage in 1999, the only way I could really engage with the music was through commercially released DJ mixes (The Dreem Teem's 'In Session II', the Artful Dodger's Ministry of Sound comp, Timmi Magic's 'Pure Silk: The Third Dimension' etc.) and the occasional commercially released single.

Even within less than a year - with the rapid rise of filesharing etc. - that had started to change and I could engage with the music on a track-by-track basis without needing to source import vinyl, which changed the role of the DJ mix for people like me from being effectively the only document(s) of the sound available to something more like a roadmap and an articulation of value - although even then just due to UK garage's unreliable production/distribution structures I remained more reliant on the DJ mix then I was for other house/techno/etc. scenes.

(this is also demonstrates how these dynamics can shift from scene to scene and as a function of your functional position in relation to a scene - later on, the central structuring role of the radio DJ mix in my enjoyment of uk funky was in large part a result of how practically difficult it was for me to properly engage with the music through any other means)

Tim F, Thursday, 17 August 2023 23:19 (two years ago)

^^ i think that’s it right there. i can’t imagine all those hours i spent in the 90s, poring over mix or comp tracklists, writing down artist and label names, then dragging my ass back into amoeba records to find the next comp that had the right names and labels, then repeat the process. essential mixes too and so on …

well i mean i can imagine it, i lived it for 10-15 years. i just can’t imagine anyone in their 20s doing that in 2023

the late great, Thursday, 17 August 2023 23:54 (two years ago)

My favourite mix CD of all time - Altz Tight 20, featuring a stirmonster edit, Mungolian Jet Set, Prince, 10cc, James Brown, Matthew Herbert... I just want to live in this mix. It's like a blueprint for a better world.

goddammit Tracer I've been trying to download this off you on ******** for *years*

official representative of Roku's Basketshit in at least one alternate u (lukas), Friday, 18 August 2023 18:51 (two years ago)

lol sorry i never fire it up

Tracer Hand, Friday, 18 August 2023 20:41 (two years ago)

i think it should be shared now? it's in Compilations/Tight 20/ for some reason.. i've given up trying to make any sense of my folder structure, it's an untangleable mess

Tracer Hand, Friday, 18 August 2023 21:34 (two years ago)

i'm not actually mad i just find it funny that you'll pop up in a thread and say "oh but you know what mix is *really* good" and i'm just sitting here starting at 'Queued'

official representative of Roku's Basketshit in at least one alternate u (lukas), Friday, 18 August 2023 21:52 (two years ago)

lol sorry. i don't think i have any restrictions on anything i just rarely pop slsk open these days.

Tracer Hand, Friday, 18 August 2023 21:54 (two years ago)

I find the problem is in part at the curatorial level — there’s no “Brand” of mixes I trust, it feels like everyone’s got on this anti gatekeeping tip that is really just anti-taste. I would love a platform that is selective in which djs it does & doesn’t include but when there’s such a proliferation of stuff I imagine that’s pretty difficult, how can you keep up with it all .. unless you’re repping a specific scene. But so many scenes now just feel like historical cosplay

xheugy eddy (D-40), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 07:44 (two years ago)

But so many scenes now just feel like historical cosplay

This is not new, Detroit fetishism was a big thing even as far back as the early 1990s.

As DJ/club culture gets older, it gets more obsessed with reliving its past. In the end, all this will be no different from jazz or folk music.

Siegbran, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 09:08 (two years ago)

It's almost already there tbh!

Tracer Hand, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 09:35 (two years ago)

It feels like you’re kind of arbitrarily deciding what things are and aren’t new — historical cosplay is not new but eventually dj/club culture will be a museum piece (which would be new)

Idk I see a lot of gen z producers etc doing drum n bass or deep house or garage or all three, and being very attuned to the “right way” to do it, in a way I don’t remember anyone really doing when those genres were new — or at the very least not in a way which would take up so much oxygen, as it does now. I used the word cosplay but I don’t even just mean it metaphorically, it feels like this anti gatekeeper stance really *is* like embracing cosplay, that people’s ability to replicate a “feel” with ruthless accuracy is a kind of historical dress up appreciated for how elaborate and particular it is

xheugy eddy (D-40), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 15:43 (two years ago)

What’s interesting to me is dance music itself, its appreciation broadly, is a continuum stretching back 100s of years, like the museumification is true of certain historical periods but there’s no reason our distribution platforms and curators need to play into that, to be overwhelmed by it

xheugy eddy (D-40), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 15:45 (two years ago)

It feels like you’re kind of arbitrarily deciding what things are and aren’t new — historical cosplay is not new but eventually dj/club culture will be a museum piece (which would be new)


im worried im explaining this poorly, but I feel like the 'nothing ever really changes' vs. 'the thing thats ACTUALLY different now' dynamic ... I dont think 'dance music' as such will 'end' the way people predict hip hop will, or that jazz did. 'dance music' is way too general of a concept. techno and house will certainly loop less large as the primary organizing principles as we get further from that time

I guess im lamenting a discursive and curatorial narrowness that is *enabling* the kind of museumification I see happening...subgenre purism so disconnected from whats actually *interesting* in favor of what fits our expectations of these genres' sounds. in other words, genre being reverse-engineered: "this sounds like garage so its garage" "this sounds like drum n bass so its new drum n bass." thats just cosplay

xheugy eddy (D-40), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:13 (two years ago)

certainly loop less large

funny slip. they will LOOM less large

xheugy eddy (D-40), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:14 (two years ago)

the number of “95 era fetishism” intelligent dnb mixes

“this sounds just like the stage selection music on a ps1” … stfu you were born after 9/11

the late great, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:17 (two years ago)

drum n bass or deep house or garage or all three, and being very attuned to the “right way” to do it, in a way I don’t remember anyone really doing when those genres were new — or at the very least not in a way which would take up so much oxygen, as it does now

techstep was super gatekeeper-y, to its detriment

official representative of Roku's Basketshit in at least one alternate u (lukas), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:34 (two years ago)

i know what you mean but i think that was a case of closed production + distribution channels. you couldn’t get played by a big dj if your acetate wasn’t pressed by the right crew (why play a crap pressing on the valve soundsystem etc etc?!?) but you couldn’t get pressed by the right crew if you didn’t have the right engineer or the studio time at the right spot, you couldn’t meet those guys without word of mouth, which … you don’t get if you don’t get played out

so you get the closed system where andy c just plays ram releases and lemon d and dillinja just play their own tracks and so on, and lesser dudes have to go invent genres like dubstep in order to get their records pressed

now the production and distro channels are blown wide open, but paradoxically the sounds are just as conservatively constructed

the late great, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:41 (two years ago)

here’s how i think of it

first wave = mid 80s og chicago and detroit

acid house cash in, brief lull for rave

second wave = early 90s, midwest / ny / berlin

third wave = mid 90s, starting to flowering of weird genres like downtempo and dnb

second lull = millenial turn toward pop and electroclash, renewed interest in disco, crap like moombahton

fourth wave = mid 00s minimal

third lull = everything goes balearic, disco gets huge enough out of proportion (to the second lull) that desperation for new trax leads ppl start listening to crap like city pop

fifth wave = berghain revival of real house and techno, second flowering of weird genres (post dubstep, experimental club, footwork, etc)

fifth wave ends when pandemic starts and we’re more ot less in the next lull right now

the late great, Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:51 (two years ago)

interesting, my personal experience w/minimal was that it peaked in maybe 2001 but I am not a clubber

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 22:55 (two years ago)

I like that summary (and have 5th wave nostalgia).

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Tuesday, 22 August 2023 23:21 (two years ago)

that’s not really a history of “the music” but more “the money”. i see the “waves” as periods where you have a lot of expansion in terms of new genres, new scenes, new styles, big new clubs or club nights that set the tone for an entire genre (like fwd for dubstep or tyrant / fabric for early tech house or berghain for revival techno or twice as nice for ukg etc etc) and yes new record labels and new networks

the “lulls” are interesting because i don’t see it as a lull in terms of creative activity, or even commercial activity. some of the biggest stuff happens during the “lulls”, whether it’s the late late 90s megaclub era or ibiza superclub dominance of late mnml (remember CIRCO LOCO lmao) or every fred whatshisname and four tet playing a packed rave in times square.

i see the lull more in terms of a sort of creative exhaustion. there’s definitely cool stuff happening right now - i still hear good new footwork trax! - but there’s very little sense of new out there

this probably sounds familiar to tim f and others, this is (i think) the last vestiges of an outlook i developed as an early reyn01ds acolyte. i think most of his poptimist ideas about 80s / 90s / 00s dance music aren’t so great now (maybe 25 years later he feels the same way) but i’m pretty sure this ebb and flow view of dance - where the ebb is actually the part where dance music triumphantly struts into the mainstream spotlight, while actually doing very little new, and the flows are mostly hidden from the public and based around insider activity - is stolen from him

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:13 (two years ago)

how it relates to the broader conversation about retro vs new i kind of have no idea. i really do think we are entering something new, if for no other reason than the dominance of beatport and bandcamp is a disruption in the existing dee jay / club night / record label / record store / mixtape / official release / clubgoer ecosystem

plus i haven’t read retromania

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:19 (two years ago)

interesting, my personal experience w/minimal was that it peaked in maybe 2001 but I am not a clubber

― out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve)

i mean when the clubbier perlon / playhouse / kompakt MNML stuff which was dominating clubs. villalobos was voted #1 dj of the year in 2006, 2008, 2010, he and hawtin headlined (?) love parade to a crowd of 300k in 2006, etc

if you’re talking what i think of as “real minimal” ie the “clicks and cuts” type stuff or the “hardcore minimal” of labels like PROFAN or SAHKO, i totally agree with the earlier timeline

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:27 (two years ago)

yes, that Raster-Noton stuff is exactly what I associate w/"minimal", I am slowly realizing that it mutated into something else later

out-of-print LaserDisc edition (sleeve), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:33 (two years ago)

I think 1945-2008 was treated as the norm when it was the anomaly.

Not in music per se, but maps relatively well with a slightly later start date, 195x

anvil, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:35 (two years ago)

I’m actually kind of anti-“retromania” as a concept. I think of it more as a problem of discourse than music, and more like a lack of imagination of people’s reporting on “what’s going on.” That they’re trapped in a linear way of thinking about a future which is unfolding in nonlinear linearity.

I’m sure things are going on we’re not just into. There’s also stuff that is clearly on the edge of what is playing in Berlin ie:

Revived jersey club remixes among tiktok teens
Continual rise of amapiano among both the chill out house boring ppl and the more rugged dance fans depending on their flavor / taste
The weird Russian co option of mid 90s Memphis rap as house music called phonk or drift or whatever into some kind of bro-y Slavic edm
Endless “fast” remixes of pop songs
Etc

xheugy eddy (D-40), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:48 (two years ago)

Whatever the fuck cyberspeed is
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VEI9l1Kgs0g

xheugy eddy (D-40), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:49 (two years ago)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FzkwDEpxPrk

xheugy eddy (D-40), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 02:50 (two years ago)

haha phonk, an entire genre built around the sound of raider klan mixtapes. not sure i’m into it but raider klan probably my favorite rap stuff of the last 15 years aside from flo milli

actually raider klan and flo milli probably the only new rap stuff i got into in the 10s and i’m wondering if the “mysterious phonk” album was not actually late 00s

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 03:14 (two years ago)

they’re trapped in a linear way of thinking about a future which is unfolding in nonlinear linearity

linear yes in that ppl think in terms of cause and effect and other nonsense like “influence” that we know is wrong

but it’s also falsely cyclical, idk how many times since 9/11 i’ve thought “welp that was the mccarthyist late 50s surely the swinging early 60s are back soon” or “damn this stagflation and weak dem leadership kinda sucks but is the next reagan right around the corner”

idk if i’m doing exactly the same thing in music but that false consciousness around “decades” has not done anyone any favors … i think anvil is right in that if you look at 1940s and maybe throw in the 1930s “jazz age” and “the depression” it’s right around when people start thinking in terms of “decade cycles”.

i’m not sure where this decades thing comes from but i think of pew research helpfully pointing out last month that “generations” are a social construction without any firm demographic footing and that their unquestioned prevalence as a unit of analysis has set sociology back a ways (and they’re not going to use them anymore at pew for that reason!)

i have little confidence that people will ever stop saying “wow so 70s” every time jamiroquai puts out a new track but … it might help

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 03:25 (two years ago)

The pattern recognition thing that exists around this is quite interesting when you consider the small time frame in which its based. The current president of the United States was alive both before and after it.

anvil, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 04:44 (two years ago)

someone has probably already noted this but this compulsive search for *whatever* — and in modes of cultural production that are just decades old!— is like if you made an academic practice out of survivorship bias

is that the art of pretend forgetfulness? i’m not sure what the right word is for *whatever* either … “pattern” doesn’t quite cut it, “fixed relationships”, “fixed signifiers” both sound off to me.

in my case i have to put the search down to anxiety, the whatever is not prophecy, it’s not quite fortune telling either but when i talk about this stuff i always feel this need to know that something regenerative is coming our way, something to push back on the sense that OK, now the scene really is dead this time, really

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 06:29 (two years ago)

i guess the good news with cultural criticism in specific and being a scenester in general is that you’re not trying to explain complex long term phenomena, you’re just trying to make ppl buy into your biases your expertly curated tastes, so a little survivorship bias isn’t the end of the world

the late great, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 06:33 (two years ago)

What do teenagers do for their crush now - whatsapp them a link to a Spotify playlist? Do the really precious ones make actual mixtapes and give their crush a thrift store Walkman to listen on?

papal hotwife (milo z), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 06:36 (two years ago)

I feel like there's something weird about the concepts of progress and regeneration in this context. Its kind of a quirk of a technology which led to entire genres arriving and then being discarded in incredibly minute timeframes, and now if that kind of churn doesnt exist we think of it as some kind of cultural ossification, but why?

We never churned through styles so quickly before, its an anomaly due to technology. And mixing up technological progress with creativity. Are the later genres progress on the former genres? What if they had arrived in a different order due to a quirk of things being invented in a different order?

anvil, Wednesday, 23 August 2023 06:45 (two years ago)

I don't think it's entirely due to technology, it makes me think of jazz where there was a prevailing narrative about progress and iteration at least through the '70s. From bebop onward the harmony and rhythm got more complex, drummers' limbs got more independent, it went from dance music to listening music, then the new thing started dispensing with boundaries of harmony and rhythm entirely once they couldn't get any more complex, then technology started becoming a factor with fusion.

There's also the narrative that pops up about some of these changes being driven by outpacing white/Euro imitators, which I haven't really seen reflected in interviews, but there's certainly a competitive drive in jazz (virtuosity, have your own voice, do something new). And other economic & culture factors (big bands not being feasible financially, especially after losing popularity to r&b and rock & roll).

You're probably right that technology is the main driver in electronic music though. And while I don't necessarily agree with 'progress' as an unquestioned value in jazz since it can lead to people discarding earlier music, looking for 'new' (to me) sounds and styles in electronic music is a big part of the appeal for me.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 14:26 (two years ago)

Oh and about minimal, I found this podcast was pretty interesting as far as the initial rise and timeline: https://www.stitcher.com/show/not-a-diving-podcast-with-scuba/episode/071-jeremy-p-caulfield-304152591

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Wednesday, 23 August 2023 14:36 (two years ago)

re: Boiler Room mentions above I'm very fond of this channel of early 20-something Brooklynites DJing in various house party settings

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4nvewes8Inc

papal hotwife (milo z), Thursday, 24 August 2023 09:19 (two years ago)

I like that. Less obviously garish than Boiler Room

Stomp Jomperson (dog latin), Thursday, 24 August 2023 10:06 (two years ago)

I don't think it's entirely due to technology, it makes me think of jazz where there was a prevailing narrative about progress and iteration at least through the '70s. From bebop onward the harmony and rhythm got more complex, drummers' limbs got more independent, it went from dance music to listening music, then the new thing started dispensing with boundaries of harmony and rhythm entirely once they couldn't get any more complex, then technology started becoming a factor with fusion.

Technology surely a factor throughout this story, i.e. the evolution and popularization of radio and records?

So you can see the entire 20th century as an "anomaly" in that more ppl were exposed to more music than ever before, and this accelerated as the century went on, and now we live post this era because it's plateaued into everyone, at least in theory, having access to everything. And I can see how that would mean this narrative of progress goes away, but also feels strange to think it would be back to the pre-recorded music status quo.

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 24 August 2023 10:29 (two years ago)

Yeah, good points.

I like Keep Hush as another Boiler Room alternative: https://youtube.com/@KeepHush?si=FJ8KcI35TKrBcZUp

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 24 August 2023 12:25 (two years ago)

Also every time I listen to Mumdance's weekly radio show I get that 'rush of the new'.

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 24 August 2023 12:27 (two years ago)

And I can see how that would mean this narrative of progress goes away, but also feels strange to think it would be back to the pre-recorded music status quo.

Its not necessarily that "progress" goes away, but that the rate of "progress" was anomalous and it didn't make sense to assume that rate would be continuous.

I don't really like using the word progress in this context. Unless its like if I walk from north to south everything is new but it would also be new if I walked from south to north.

I think there's also a weird expectation being landed on music. A new record doesn't just have to be new and interesting on its own terms, thats not enough,, it must also be a precursor or vanguard of a whole new genre too, and this should happen every 3.5 years. If this doesnt happen (or if in the past this didn't come quickly enough), this is a sign of musical or cultural ossification. Or a sure sign that a big social/cultural/musical wave is coming, just like it did last time, like the pattern recognition says

anvil, Thursday, 24 August 2023 13:23 (two years ago)

Jordan's jazz comparison is v interesting, and I take Daniel's point too. But my hunch (not very informed) is that art historiography was the template for understanding the "progress" narrative, particularly the history of painting from some point in the 19thc. up until abstraction & minimalism. The way this story was told to me was an intense but meticulous analysis and deconstruction of every aspect of painting method and theory, unfurling in a series of startling, even shocking revelations of the new.

rob, Thursday, 24 August 2023 13:52 (two years ago)

Literature and cinema have comparable but maybe less linear trajectories?

rob, Thursday, 24 August 2023 13:53 (two years ago)

Well note I didn't say "progress goes away", I specifically said "the narrative of progress" by which I meant exactly the kind of expectations you mention - music as a succession of brand new movements that clash with each other and supplant each other. Agreed this is a terrible way to think if you truly take "progress" literally, i.e. each new movement is better than the last, but I don't know if anyone actually does that? For me as a young music geek it was admitidely just a very exciting framework, less a question of inferior musics being replaced by superior models in a technological kind of mentality and more like a good mystery novel where every other chapter something happens that shakes everything up, which obv doesn't render the previous chapters retroactively less compelling.

Anyway I agree that it's not really fit for purpose anymore as a framework for music in 2023. But if the rate of "progress" of the 20th century was an anomaly nonetheless the current situation is radically different from that of a pre 20th century musical landscape, meaning the anomaly has surely landed us somewhere else, so can't just be shrugged off.

xpost to rob

Daniel_Rf, Thursday, 24 August 2023 13:55 (two years ago)

I don't think it's at all strange to think music would continue to change at a rapid pace when that is exactly what we all experienced for most of our lives. Yes, it might be an anomaly if you take the very long view, but from the perspective of anyone growing up in the late 20th century it would seem completely normal.

Muad'Doob (Moodles), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:02 (two years ago)

And now that now that computers are so powerful, ubiquitous, and affordable, it feels a bit ironic and disappointing that instead of empowering a world of previously unheard sounds & styles, more often than not this just means producers can more easily reproduce retro sounds and assemble Splice samples like Legos.

(a gross generalization of course, there's obviously a lot of creative and crazy music out there, but it does feel like this sometimes)

Random Restaurateur (Jordan), Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:14 (two years ago)

I don't think it's at all strange to think music would continue to change at a rapid pace when that is exactly what we all experienced for most of our lives. Yes, it might be an anomaly if you take the very long view, but from the perspective of anyone growing up in the late 20th century it would seem completely normal.

From within the timeframe of course it seems normal, during that timeframe it IS normal. But once we're outside the timeframe and starting to have these questions and laments about "what happened?, something has changed" it can then make more send to look a longer view

pre 20th century musical landscape

I was thinking pre WW2 rather than pre 20th century, but these things are fuzzy. Not specifically in musical terms but I think we're much closer to that landscape than we were 20 years ago, as the post-effects of the war gradually filter out

anvil, Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:20 (two years ago)

I agree with all that Daniel, if that wasn't clear. And in painting I don't think anyone ever tried to convince me that, say post-impressionism was superior to impressionism, more that you couldn't have gotten to Cezanne without Renoir first (or what have you; I'm on shaky ground with art history, it's been too long). And yes "progress" I think even in the rigid and quasi-mystical version of this narrative mostly means the steady arrival of novelty, though I liked Jordan's point that in jazz there was a self-conscious attempt to achieve literal progress (clearly tied to related visions of political & social progress, I think it's safe to say?) and you do see that crop up in various avant-garde movements. I'm no expert on dance music, but a lot of its ethos/discourse/whatever is explicitly about the future or futurism

rob, Thursday, 24 August 2023 14:29 (two years ago)

I reject a lot of the framing in here and say again—I think the notion that there's 'not progress' is being oriented around 'what is happening in music' and not in 'how we're telling stories about what is happening in music' is basically wrong

there was a tremendous amount of forward motion in the 2010s hip hop scene, right as sfj was writing in the new yorker that it was dead. just as an example.

anyway re what Vahid was saying about decades up above, and the fact that the past is *always* a part of us but that doesn't mean it has to be so in a retro cosplay way, I like this spoken bit from utah phillips

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BHcQ0XkiGU8

xheugy eddy (D-40), Thursday, 24 August 2023 19:42 (two years ago)

i also dislike framing things in terms of "progress", prefer to just think in terms of "change", or perhaps maybe just "reacting to the past" vs "progressing into the future" ... even "evolution" in the biological sense is just change, not progress

agree w/ deej also that we want to separate "what is happening" vs "how we're telling stories"

i was kind of getting at this with my "false chronology of dance culture" but to give another example there's a story of disco that involves donna summer tv appearances and disco dance lessons on late night with johnny carson and the the disco demolition rally, that's a sort of a broad storytelling where america is telling itself stories about it's relationship to disco music (it's the hottest thing! it's for everyone! no we hate it and it's anti american, burn it!)

then there's a different story that's about disco moving from meaning a place or event where hipsters dance all night to soul funk and pop music with heavy rhythms to meaning long 12" singles where the rhythm section is doing a heavy 4x4 and there's lots of repeated string and horn parts and big drum breakdowns etc, which is more of a "what is happening"

both stories are important, both are about change vs progress, but they sort of happen separately (the disco arc the average person knows is pretty much wholly separate in time from the disco arc described by soul jazz comps)

the late great, Thursday, 24 August 2023 21:06 (two years ago)

I dunno, I'd assumed that the entire conversation so far had been explicitly about "how we're telling stories about what is happening in music", as I said above it's the narrative of progress we're talking about not progress itself, etc.

But of course it's difficult to keep that distinction tidy because the stories we tell about what's happening in music inevitably bleed into the music too.

Daniel_Rf, Friday, 25 August 2023 08:07 (two years ago)

Going back to technological progress being behind much of the rapid turnover and changes in the postwar period, it would be more accurate to say a changes in material conditions (with technological progress being an example of, but not the only form of)

But we should probably also separate out the idea of individual innovative new records or innovative developments in local scenes Houston or Ankara, from the wholesale genre turnover, the lack of which is being lamented, and there seems to be some conflation.

The laments above don't seem to be about a lack of interesting new records, but that they are not ushering in new paradigm shifts. These seems to completely different things

anvil, Friday, 25 August 2023 14:30 (two years ago)

ten months pass...

damn this was a good thread

xheugy eddy (D-40), Friday, 19 July 2024 20:09 (one year ago)

i still love a mixtape.
last few days i have been all over soulsavers/dj shadow + cut chemist/psycho pab/girl talk/dj format etc mixtapes that i purchased on cd of course.

mark e, Friday, 19 July 2024 20:16 (one year ago)

lukas i can’t remember if we ever got this sorted but my slsk is up and running

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 19 July 2024 21:35 (one year ago)

i had to break in through a skylight and evade your laser motion detectors but I did get it

default damager (lukas), Friday, 19 July 2024 21:40 (one year ago)

sweet!

Humanitarian Pause (Tracer Hand), Friday, 19 July 2024 21:48 (one year ago)


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