G
Guest
Anyone else a fan of DJ's like Oakenfold, Alice, and Skribbles, and all the other wonderful musicians who participate in this genre of music?
I cannot say enough how meaningful this type of music is to me and I do not hardly ever go to clubs and such.
Personally I do not feel that all music needs lyrics to be meaningful or various traditional effects to be true to musical form.
Many a time have I been able to relate to the beats of electronica in any mood as long as I dig the way the DJ is leaning with his or her beats.
I still think most people dissmiss this kind of music as simplistic and stupid yet it has a depth that most people I have met here in America would never care to understand.
All I can say is bravo to the master DJ's and artists who continue to write emotionally inspiring tracks from a human perspective.
The Ethiopian kids I worked with absolutely love the techno music I played for them but the parents were a little old fashioned to feel the same.
They had their own local mixes and I tried to buy a disc but they refused to sell it and I must admit that is was quite good.
Dire Dawa holds some excellent artists.
Most of the guys in my unit thought I was a nut anyways.....but they appreciated the lax attitude I always brought to situations.
Techno music was real way to unwind as it was not singing about drug wars or wars or anything too based on one aspect of existence.
So I took to it as a way to unwind after a day of tensity.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7273919600479583711&q=paul+oakenfold&hl=en
I cannot say enough how meaningful this type of music is to me and I do not hardly ever go to clubs and such.
Personally I do not feel that all music needs lyrics to be meaningful or various traditional effects to be true to musical form.
Many a time have I been able to relate to the beats of electronica in any mood as long as I dig the way the DJ is leaning with his or her beats.
I still think most people dissmiss this kind of music as simplistic and stupid yet it has a depth that most people I have met here in America would never care to understand.
All I can say is bravo to the master DJ's and artists who continue to write emotionally inspiring tracks from a human perspective.
The Ethiopian kids I worked with absolutely love the techno music I played for them but the parents were a little old fashioned to feel the same.
They had their own local mixes and I tried to buy a disc but they refused to sell it and I must admit that is was quite good.
Dire Dawa holds some excellent artists.
Most of the guys in my unit thought I was a nut anyways.....but they appreciated the lax attitude I always brought to situations.
Techno music was real way to unwind as it was not singing about drug wars or wars or anything too based on one aspect of existence.
So I took to it as a way to unwind after a day of tensity.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-7273919600479583711&q=paul+oakenfold&hl=en
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