Modulations - Cinema for the Ear | Documentary

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Cultures of Resistance Films

Cultures of Resistance Films

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 661
@TheDjhand84
@TheDjhand84 Жыл бұрын
There seems to have been something so futuristic, prophetic and philosophic at works in the 90s scene, which I'm not seeing today. The party is still there, but the depth, the hope and future seems lost.
@frankenjstein9371
@frankenjstein9371 Жыл бұрын
The scene sucks now. I design stages and animations, but I stay home.
@AutPen38
@AutPen38 Жыл бұрын
You just got old and jaded, like everyone else. I'm sure if you talked to some 17 year olds they'd tell you that there's never been a better time to get into music. After all, they can hear the best stuff from our era (because all the rubbish gets forgotten in the filter of history) and make some brand new things the old folks like us don't understand.
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
It was drug fiuled and underground we would rent out old parking geroges and drugs were not hidden then lil kids and cops distroyed it
@bcx1138
@bcx1138 Жыл бұрын
In the 80S too
@Wow-Shares
@Wow-Shares Жыл бұрын
You"re so right my friend
@bionic7252
@bionic7252 4 жыл бұрын
I watched this in 2000, I was blown away and still am after watching it 20 yrs later. Their needs to be a Modulations 2.
@SENSATIONALOOP
@SENSATIONALOOP 3 жыл бұрын
Yes, we really need a documentary on the next wave of electronic music - 2010s house, EDM, dubstep, and the newer genres. That would be fantastic.
@TravelingwithKristin
@TravelingwithKristin 3 жыл бұрын
My mind is blown 🤯💥😍
@AngryBrother360
@AngryBrother360 2 жыл бұрын
Yes!. Especially considering the modern advancements in music production and technology!.💯👍🏿
@supernoob17
@supernoob17 2 жыл бұрын
modulations 2 electronic boogaloo YES
@sklur
@sklur Жыл бұрын
@@AngryBrother360 Ironically enough, I've read that the younger generation is embracing the old styles of DJing and Dance Production, so we're seeing a rejection of the new tech in certain circles. I'm not an expert by any means, but I have heard this around. I'm fine w it. I love the sounds and aesthetic of 90s/00s dance.
@scyfox.
@scyfox. Жыл бұрын
2023 and still fresh. Fresher than current mainstream edm
@DjNikGnashers
@DjNikGnashers Жыл бұрын
Born in 1969, I lived through and experienced the UK HipHop scene from it's beginnings, then House, Acid House, HipHouse, and the best of all, the rave era. 1990-1993 was the best 3 years of electronic music of all time in the UK, nothing before or after could ever be as good. Everything else is it's own genre. It all sounds very samey. It can still be good, but Jungle is Jungle, no mistaking, DnB is DnB no mistaking it for anything else. Rave music from 90-93 had everything, you could have all types of genres played in the same set, it had so much variation, so much experimentation, from 4/4 techno, to reggae influenced breakbeat, to hoover stabbage, to film and cartoon sampled music, and a dozen other styles all mixed together. Nothing will ever top that.
@soundvision10
@soundvision10 Жыл бұрын
You would be happily surprised to find that outer provenances with this music culture was far more peaceful yet just as intense. True story bro. HU Shanti
@Astrosisphere
@Astrosisphere Жыл бұрын
So many genres and sub-genres each deserving of their own name then and some without even their own name. The term Techno was thrown about at everything from Jeff Mills - The Bells to Shades of Rhythm - Armageddon to 2 Unlimited - No Limits! Like you say: so much experimentation and variation! It was lost on a lot of people then (just listen to Top of the Pops' comments about the lack of lyrics being a problem) and is still lost on a lot of people now. I think it's a mark of good music when it can still get the same extreme reactions now as it did then - some people now talk about it like the old fuddy-duddies from back then (e.g. "it's just noise", "how do you listen to that rubbish?") and yet I've played fast Acid Trance and Oldskool Hardcore to a room full of people who'd likely never heard it before in their lives and had them dancing past 3 AM! The early 90s was a truly special time - a golden age of music among other things as well.
@vinman3057
@vinman3057 Жыл бұрын
88 - 92 sunny jim 🙂
@TaigaTundra2.0
@TaigaTundra2.0 Жыл бұрын
Как охренительно читать всё это!😍
@vain.a
@vain.a Жыл бұрын
old people b like
@bangbang4142
@bangbang4142 6 ай бұрын
I was a techno club/party dj for 20yrs plus , & was lucky i met & even had gigs with a few of the artists in this documentary. I enjoyed it so much! Far more than almost all of the many shows that have tried to tell the history of electronic music. Thanks, you made an old dj very happy today 😊❤
@ItsWesSmithYo
@ItsWesSmithYo Жыл бұрын
“Electronic music is the hot rodding of the 90’s” Robert Moog 😎🖤🙌
@mauroa.bermudez7628
@mauroa.bermudez7628 Жыл бұрын
I grow up with rock and never was interested in electronic music, until I come to Europe on 2000, what a time, since then I'm making the most of it!!!!
@billbrasky8525
@billbrasky8525 Жыл бұрын
I always get chills at 59:10 when Oval talks about "just editing the source material" and then that quick cut to black and those choppy sounds and weird tone. It's so wonderful that someone uploaded this absolute gem of a documentary, and just as Gen Z starts to make the 90s electronic revival happen again.
@neverhavingfun
@neverhavingfun Жыл бұрын
@@user-zx5gg8od6l ACTUALLY ALOT CRAZIER THAN THAT IF YALL ON THE UNDERGROUND :)
@terrestrialgmusic
@terrestrialgmusic Жыл бұрын
Genz doesn't do anything 🤣🤣🤣🤣 you'd have to be an artist. They just wanna be tik tok stars.
@EllisDavidPerry
@EllisDavidPerry Жыл бұрын
the word for those chills is frisson, a quality contemporary producers seek in their creations
@neverhavingfun
@neverhavingfun Жыл бұрын
@@terrestrialgmusic ur so outta touch I can tell you're old and unaware of cool shit to say this
@ianswift3521
@ianswift3521 Жыл бұрын
zoomer. not gen z. there's no such thing as "gen z", or hey buy into that social programming and just fall in lockstep with whatever terminology the state run media uses. way to go ya bold beautiful brave and true free thinker.
@QCCatPlanes
@QCCatPlanes Жыл бұрын
Seeing this makes me feel nostalgia for a place I've never been
@vinylarchaeologist
@vinylarchaeologist Жыл бұрын
Fantastic image restoration work on this film, guys. It‘s all very subtle, but I can see it and appreciate it, and it definitely beats uploading it in 480p! Thank you.
@technodance_me
@technodance_me Жыл бұрын
So happy the first person being interviewed is Genesis P Orridge, god father of UK rave scene. People here in Detroit have no clue how important he is or even who he is.
@michaelmarc5516
@michaelmarc5516 Жыл бұрын
Like Holy WOW! I recorded this in about 98 and was looking for the VHS tape the last few months but couldn't find it. I couldn't remember the name of it, all I remember was May and Saunderson and the track at the end with Holger which I thought was his. That track has remained unnamed in my head for 25 years! Until now. Thank you for waiting and I'm sorry it took so long Cosmic Bird. Thanks Cultures of Resistance for posting this up. Boy has life changed since.
@Sharpened_Spoon
@Sharpened_Spoon Жыл бұрын
This doc makes me wish I was older in the 90s. Such simpler times, actual visceral connection with people and ourselves without the facades of today’s superficiality and technological disconnectedness. No nonsense production too, compared with the ever grating hysterical hype and lecturing of todays youtube style of documentary. Just the real deal, direct from the players. Thanks for sharing this, some valuable insights and a bit of history too.
@Skrkro
@Skrkro Жыл бұрын
as a modern DJ, stuff like this is my favorite. I definitely don't play much house or techno, but I identify with the philosophy of most of these musicians. its all about experimenting with sound
@christheghostwriter
@christheghostwriter Жыл бұрын
Out of curiosity, what do you play?
@Skrkro
@Skrkro Жыл бұрын
@@christheghostwriter I like G jones style experimental stuff. lots of big, trippy sound design with booming bass. lol
@christheghostwriter
@christheghostwriter Жыл бұрын
@Skrʞro I don't know that reference, but I'll check it out. I'm a first-wave raver from the late 80s/early 90s, and I still listen to a lot of house and techno. I'm always down for something new, so I appreciate the reply 🙂
@neverhavingfun
@neverhavingfun Жыл бұрын
YEP
@gahdzuwkz6647
@gahdzuwkz6647 Жыл бұрын
@@SkrkroG Jones and Eprom are sound wizards, love their music! Big ups
@yokelectronic
@yokelectronic Жыл бұрын
So much heritage and history... I feel proud to be part of the movement.
@davidmacdonald7679
@davidmacdonald7679 Жыл бұрын
As the blurb says, this documentary “captures a moment”. It’s about 90’s electronic dance music and is really well made. But it’s a long way from being a “history of electronic music”. Everything before the 90’s is summarised visually in less than a minute and hardly mentioned again.
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
And its a black washing
@HealyHQ
@HealyHQ Жыл бұрын
@@supme7558 wtf are you talking about
@Oyasumi52
@Oyasumi52 Жыл бұрын
Oh dear, he said the "B" word. 😆
@davidcottrell1308
@davidcottrell1308 Жыл бұрын
yup...very very limited...kinda clickbait...
@marztar
@marztar Жыл бұрын
@@HealyHQ he probably didn't know about the role Detroit and black people played in the techno music evolution and thinks there's an agenda at play in this documentary.
@makaspla11
@makaspla11 Жыл бұрын
What a trip watching this 20 years later. Love how earnest this was all back in the day.
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Those of us who lived it loved that it was are secret these were sellouts
@NN-HouseMusic
@NN-HouseMusic 5 ай бұрын
black in the day)
@DerekPower
@DerekPower Жыл бұрын
I was a teenager through the 1990s. From there into my young adult years in the 2000s, I was exploring as much as I could in the electronic music realm. This was also building from what I heard as a kid from what passed down (1970s informing the 1980s). It’s fascinating watching this in the 2020s where truly “the more things change, the more they remain the same”. So much has changed as far as tools and such. But at the heart of it all, it’s still about finding sounds to reflect whatever you want.
@MarshalerOfficial
@MarshalerOfficial 6 ай бұрын
Truly a documentary shot on film that has stood the test of time.
@PILMAN
@PILMAN 3 жыл бұрын
really enjoyed this, I was too young to really get into the rave culture , I was born in 85 and most house music we grew up with in the Chicago area was on B96 or dance mixes. I did regularly start to listen with robert miles children and DJ Alice better off alone, Moby, Eiffel 65 remixes and regularly found techno on Napster, Kazaa and Soulseek. I remember it was very different, like computer music and none of my friends were into it. For some reason it was the only music I liked and then around 2000 found out about digitally imported, Armin Van Buuren, Tiesto, Paul Oakenfold, Paul Van Dyk, Ministry Of Sound and the early 2000s that was what got me through hard times. Always dreamed of going to a rave but the highschool was cracking down heavily, we were forced to watch videos about the dangers of X and the music was looked at as druggy music so I didnt get to go to any live events until 2015.
@masoncalvert7823
@masoncalvert7823 2 жыл бұрын
I went to my first live show in 2015 as well. I was born in 96 and grew up listening to electronic music from the 90s. I didnt really keep up with the modernization of the art until i started going to shows
@sooperheep
@sooperheep 2 жыл бұрын
Blahblahblah
@osalas36
@osalas36 2 жыл бұрын
And now, MDMA is being studied for PTSD (and I believe for alcohol use disorder though fact check me please) in Phase 3 trials here in the U.S. Phase 3 is the last phase before something can be put on the market.
@chasey2327
@chasey2327 Жыл бұрын
that sounds terrible man..in the UK the best years were 89 to 94 for mine - top tunes and proper pills! long live club uk
@KrashyKharma
@KrashyKharma Жыл бұрын
I was born in 86 and I was a hardcore raver in NYC and all over New England for like seven years in the mid-00s and early 2010s :shrug: mid-00s hardcore and the early years of Dubstep were particularly exciting, but I've been to plenty of psytrance raves, mixed genre raves, hardstyle and gabber raves, house and techno raves... Just because you miss earlier waves of a culture, and just because a culture has gone through multiple instances of mainstream integration and bastardization doesn't mean the culture doesn't continue on. There are still warehouse raves, underground club raves, raves of every kind, happening every weekend all over the world. You just have to know about them. Don't listen to anyone who burned out on taking pills every weekend and saw the culture change in a direction they didn't personally enjoy telling you that it's dead and will never be the same. Not only might you find the new permutations even better, but there will always be people out there still doing it exactly like it used to be done. Granted, I won't lie and say it'll ever be as exciting as it used to be when it was still newer and technology was still younger, but the world moves on, as does rave culture.
@DrumInfected
@DrumInfected Жыл бұрын
I remember renting this VHS at a VHS rental store that had rare and unique VHS's and where I found this gem and I still remember it to this day. One of the best docs out there for Electronic Music hands down!
@kowloonbroadcast
@kowloonbroadcast Жыл бұрын
yeah, remembering or mentioning VHS rental stores always brings a tear to my eye. i don’t miss paying for the video content that we now have mostly available for free in much more higher quality _(remember, the resolution of a consumer VHS tape was 240p loool)_ , but the sense of magic and naive excitement around that time - i very much do.
@verapamil07
@verapamil07 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 1984 and missed the first wave of techno but was ready for the 90s. As a kid, I really think the electronic music was my biggest love. It was so amazing in the 90s, rave, hardcore, breakbeat, goa, trance, French house, IDM, ambient, ambient techno, DnB, different waves of techno and of course many labels, raves, parties and DJs. There was something magical bout the whole era. Especially since the interent was still young and you had to dig to get the good music etc...
@BenDiscoe
@BenDiscoe 2 ай бұрын
I was watching this, enjoying until 15:51 when suddenly I'm like WHAT?! japanese people getting on a bus to go up the grey rainy mountain to a massive rave and i realize I WAS ON THAT EXACT BUS in August 1997. My only visit to Japan, 27 years ago, my gaijin friends in Kyoto took me to this all-night "rainbow 2000" rave on the slopes on Mt. Fuji in an abandoned theme park, and of all the raves in global history, THIS is the one that appears in Modulations. WHOAAAAA.
@Rave-agent
@Rave-agent 5 ай бұрын
Had this in my 'watch later' folder for ages. Now it will live in my favourites forever.
@Mister8Music
@Mister8Music Жыл бұрын
I have been listening to all these guys since the early nineties, and making my own electronica since the mid 2000s. I have never heard of this film, and I am exceptionally thankful to have found it. It truly ties together so many loose ends for me. Electronic Music is truly a lifestyle, and the music itself has a life of its own, as well. Thanks for sharing.
@universalvibe72
@universalvibe72 Жыл бұрын
For the time when this came out it was brilliant. Looking back at it now with all the nostalgia, it’s sort of a mishmash broken timeline of facts and semi facts of interpretation. However, the overall presentation is very disjointed and so nonlinear it’s chaotic. Doesn’t really exemplify what it set out to achieve. An explanation of electronic music.
@eubique
@eubique Жыл бұрын
I don't know if criticising a documentary that starts with GPO talking about cutups and ends on turntablism, taking in all manner of talk about recombinant culture along the way, for not being strictly linear is really hitting the mark ;-)
@intergalacticdial4967
@intergalacticdial4967 3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much! This made my day... 90s filming and editing style. Hands down. And it has the artists and the sounds I love! I can't believe I found it, what a tape.
@michaelbauers8800
@michaelbauers8800 2 жыл бұрын
I can't say when I first learned there was such a thing as synthesizers or electronic music. But sometime in grade school. I was born in '65. I remember seeing something in school, or on TV, about synthesizers. And I remember for some reason, we had a modular synthesizer brought into a classroom. Maybe for a music class. Anyways, I have loved electronic music for almost as long as I can remember.
@mattyounce2486
@mattyounce2486 Жыл бұрын
Overall found this documentary refreshing because I have owned electronic music devices for the majority of my life and always appreciate different artists and their music. Really interesting
@NITE_SHIFTING
@NITE_SHIFTING Жыл бұрын
This doc is filled with soundbites just waiting to be sampled.
@dezolatestation
@dezolatestation 2 жыл бұрын
as the young guy who's born in 2000, this documentary really help me up with what electronic music is, not just boom boom bigroom kick
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Dont believe it when people try to say they invented anything its ushaly stolen from the real inventers
@dfreeman120
@dfreeman120 2 жыл бұрын
Watched this film at least 30 times since it’s release. Brilliant!
@djtrakakadrunkpoet8598
@djtrakakadrunkpoet8598 3 жыл бұрын
I love the fuzzy filter films still had in the earlier 2000s and 90s we abandoned classic cinematography for quickie eye candy
@breadmaker
@breadmaker Жыл бұрын
That wasn't a filter - that's just what real film looks like.
@tinterlight
@tinterlight Жыл бұрын
In my twenties in the 90s, living in london - the best of times! Gabber wasn't my thing but loved the description of it here!!
@ianedmonds9191
@ianedmonds9191 Жыл бұрын
I recently bought a Behringer 303 clone and after many many years of playing with ReBirth it was the coolest thing to have one IRL to play with. I've now got it synced to my drum machine and it syncs pretty well. I tried syncing to my daw and it does not work well. One drum machine and a 303 is enough to take up hours in tweakage and simple jamming. I love this setup. Luv and Peace.
@madinagoodway
@madinagoodway Жыл бұрын
Amazing doco. So many legends, memories and new ideas. Fusion, sound mashup, curious experimenting - let us never get old, or at least not stale!
@michaelbauers8800
@michaelbauers8800 2 жыл бұрын
This guy says "Electronic music is often more about the character of the sound than the composition." My thoughts exactly! I have tried to explain my love of some songs just because of the textures in them. Sure I like music that's traditional with melodies and and such. But I also like like organized sound. Is that a minority thing to like?
@saul_guudman
@saul_guudman 2 жыл бұрын
each and every piece of music or sound is simply a vibration, you either vibe with it or you don't, but what a lot of electronic music allows is the removal of words, and therefore the removal of the conditioning of language that brings it to a purer level of engagement in the moment of vibration over preconditioned expectation. Sounds matter, some say Detroit techno had 'soul', what is 'soul' in musical terms other than humans attempting to communicate a deeper meaning beyond words in sound?
@AutPen38
@AutPen38 Жыл бұрын
Most people prefer communicating in words. It's what separates us from animals. That said, my lizard brain can appreciate a 909 kick and a squelching 303.
@ricardojmestre
@ricardojmestre Жыл бұрын
That guy is Moby 😊
@michaelbauers8800
@michaelbauers8800 Жыл бұрын
@@ricardojmestre True! I should not have called him "this guy". I admit to knowing his music, but not knowing what he looks like, and might have missed that it clearly said "Moby". Certainly I owned "Play" like I am sure a million other people did :)
@pastkerfew
@pastkerfew 8 ай бұрын
Yeah this random Moby guy lolz
@klastercommunications305
@klastercommunications305 2 жыл бұрын
Thank You! So good to see this again. Loved it upon release, loving it forever after. 43:32 - Alvin Toffler - "Future Shock" & "The Third Wave" - essential material! 27:27 - MMM @ FSOL: "Hello? Hello, Hello .. ? They hung up ... oh, well." Priceless upon precious - thank you, Culture of Resistance, lots of love to all contributors and lots more to Iara Lee
@griffgames9538
@griffgames9538 Жыл бұрын
The best electronic *Ambient* album of the 90s is arguably Global Communication's "76:14". It's an extremely cohesive listening experience front to back as a complete album, and pleasantly tranquilizing, despite the era's technical limitations. Another highlight ambient outing not to be missed: Bola's album "Soup", from '98.
@jubs1117
@jubs1117 11 ай бұрын
this album is really a gem! I have it on vinyl and it surprises me everytime
@RANDOMLOOPGENERATOR
@RANDOMLOOPGENERATOR 3 жыл бұрын
Wow, all my heroes in one place, fantastic, can't believe I hadn't seen it sooner.
@soupy-san
@soupy-san 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for uploading this. Perfect encapsulation of a time & place forgotten and imperfectly now emulated.
@JacobAndJamal
@JacobAndJamal 2 жыл бұрын
I had this documentary on DVD back in days😂. Here I am browsing KZbin looking for a “EDM” documentaries, started watching and was like “I’ve seen this before 🤔”… Strange since this Doc came out EDM has exploded into the mainstream and public consciousness. Things like Tomorrowland and Ultra being attended by pop stars and influencers wasn’t happening in the Rave & Warehouse days of dance music .
@jenshoefer7944
@jenshoefer7944 Жыл бұрын
You can watch "We call it Techno!"...it's about the beginnings of techno in Germany in the 80s...narrator is English, statements of protagonists have English subtitles...they actually complain about the same, in the late 90s it became commercialised with the effects you mentioned...yet today there is again a scene going back to the original idea (far away from tomorrowland and all that mainstream EDM)
@kobey.
@kobey. Жыл бұрын
all the corporate festivals suck ass anyways, warehouses and the underground are still the best
@yannisgk
@yannisgk Жыл бұрын
@@kobey. very true!!!
@Dezzasheep
@Dezzasheep Жыл бұрын
Calling it EDM is a crime
@gee_emm
@gee_emm Жыл бұрын
@@Dezzasheep Agreed. I kinda take issue with the term ‘EDM’. I think it’s kinda its own genre yet people use it as a blanket term. What has ambient or progressive house got to do with the corny stuff that plays in McDonalds?
@albionpatterns3986
@albionpatterns3986 3 жыл бұрын
No way, footage of Rob Playford and his studio.. Thats some rare content
@narot23
@narot23 Жыл бұрын
I had this on DVD when it came out, mostly came for the GPO stuff, but it expanded my mind a lot. Kind of mandatory viewing for anyone interested in electronic music in my book.
@TheGegemon23
@TheGegemon23 Жыл бұрын
Is there any other docs which you consider mandatory? Genuine question, not trying to be an ass
@skyhigh_butterfly
@skyhigh_butterfly 4 жыл бұрын
Brilliant stuff. Was painful to watch the 90s rave scenes during Covid times though...
@Psycandy
@Psycandy 2 жыл бұрын
pure synth pop arrived when aerobics became popular; in the late 70's the first wave of all-synth music was known as "Hi NRG", x cheesy pre-house pop. A series called 'Eurobeat' pumped this formula into the record stores in the early 80's by mixing the tracks and farming out 4-LP sets for the price of a typical album. 'Disco' as a genre gave way to various poorly-spelled niches with "X" in the name, and remixers rose to prominence. By the mid-80's groups like Kraftwerk had established the synth sound for good.
@uurhelo
@uurhelo 2 жыл бұрын
5:38 - 6:05 Daiyego - Footprints 18:46 - 18:53 Autechre - Second Bad Vilbel 18:53 - 19:12 Omni Trio - Renegade Snares [Foul Play Remix] 25:40 - 26:26 The Future Sound Of London - Papua New Guinea
@vladostefanek
@vladostefanek Жыл бұрын
thanx :)
@truthfilter
@truthfilter Жыл бұрын
do you know the track at 5:30 ?
@uurhelo
@uurhelo Жыл бұрын
@@truthfilter daiyego - footprints, but also it seems this song was released in 2021 so i dont really know. i use aha music on chrome to find
@Lzie287
@Lzie287 Жыл бұрын
The on at 28:23 PLEASE
@seangrieve95
@seangrieve95 4 ай бұрын
@@Lzie287 Jeremy Black - Shine On
@GFunkTube
@GFunkTube Жыл бұрын
What a great documtary. A snap shot in time. And all the better watching it back years later.
@heathconrad212
@heathconrad212 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for showing me the film. I'm working on a book that takes a look into the history of Electronic Dance Music (EDM). It's called "Let's Have A Dance Party: The Story Of Electronic Dance Music".
@tranceam
@tranceam 3 жыл бұрын
Jussara Lee, if you're reading this, find me! It's Jeff! Laguna Niguel late 90s!! Miss you.
@zenbrunch4875
@zenbrunch4875 Жыл бұрын
Bravo! I enjoyed enormously ! Aesthetic editing and of course so much integral information for any music nerd. Massive
@websurfer5772
@websurfer5772 Жыл бұрын
The first Moog synthesizer came out the year I was born - 1964. Thank you Robert Moog. 🔈🔉🔊🎹🎼🎵🎵🎶🎶🎶
@albertocastillo7686
@albertocastillo7686 Жыл бұрын
Seen this at the nu-art theater back when it first released. They where handing out T-shirts . I was just 15. Thanks big brother.
@michaelbauers8800
@michaelbauers8800 Жыл бұрын
See also UCLA's Differential Analyzer, and Tide Prediction machine, among others. There was even a machine that did calculations using a hydraulic analog computer. Amazing how many clever gizmos we had to compute before the digital computer.
@SilverfoxJB
@SilverfoxJB Жыл бұрын
We have Genesis P Orridge featured byt no mention of Throbbing Gristle, PTV, Chris and Cozy.
@garrybroadbent8297
@garrybroadbent8297 2 жыл бұрын
Electronic Music is about losing yourself and forgetting about what is going on around you…for some reason the sound takes you away with it…not really into garage or hip hop but that is a form of music that takes other people away into their other world…but pure electronic music stripped bare without lyrics is my go to music.
@dezolatestation
@dezolatestation 2 жыл бұрын
haha same as me sir, am type of who's doesn't really into lyrics/vocal radio music, most of my playlist just beat kick in 6 minutes straight
@Chillikilli
@Chillikilli 2 жыл бұрын
Definitely feel this. I can go to a rave sober and be taken away into my own world.
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Thats called escapism
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Its all about the escape
@ensabahnur4552
@ensabahnur4552 Жыл бұрын
I had this DVD and lost it. Glad its up!
@griffgames9538
@griffgames9538 Жыл бұрын
Those who did it best when the genre (and sub-genres) established a foothold, continue to do it best (and have outlasted the rest): Orbital, Underworld, Chemical Brothers, Aphex Twin, London Elektricity, Squarepusher. No longer formally active: Daft Punk. Scarcely active: The Orb, Tom Middleton. Honorable mentions: Boards of Canada, Caribou, Amon Tobin, Royksopp, Apparat/Modeselektor, Ken Ishii, Basement Jaxx.
@MatthewJohnHayden
@MatthewJohnHayden Жыл бұрын
lager lager lager lager! Best. Band. Ever.
@sweetwheatsy
@sweetwheatsy Жыл бұрын
@@MatthewJohnHayden SHOUTING!
@MsRoshniAli
@MsRoshniAli Жыл бұрын
"We are here. Kids having fun and they want to shut us down" --- well said. No wonder the society is so depressed these days.
@EllisDavidPerry
@EllisDavidPerry Жыл бұрын
New York City has a Night Life Mayor. Not all is lost.
@Leftatalbuquerque
@Leftatalbuquerque Жыл бұрын
What is interesting to me, having been there through this, was that at first, synths sounded like synths - Kraftwerk, M (Pop Muzik) to The Human League's DARE album was all about new sounds. Then, by 1988, SAW was producing sounds that tried to duplicate an orchestra - and now sounds dated. Better to have just booked an orchestra.
@AutPen38
@AutPen38 Жыл бұрын
What I find interesting is that many genres were based on technologies and instruments that failed to do what the adverts said they were supposed to do. The 808/909 were supposed to sound like a drumkit (they didn't), the 303 was supposed to replace the bass guitar (it was nothing like it), the Moog was going to revolutionise orchestral music (apart from Wendy Carlos's Bach thing, it failed). Synth pop was born out of instruments that failed to sound like acoustic instruments. (You couldn't make a convincing guitar or piano sound on a Moog or Juno, but you could make Italo disco, 'Vienna', or 'West End Girls'). Early samplers were supposed to give you access to "real" sounds, but the sampling pioneers did completely original things (think Art of Noise and Paul Hardcastle's 19), and hip hop producers loved the gritty and unnatural artefacts that lo-fi drum samplers created. Even when timestretching arrived on Akais, supposedly so "You can alter the speed and it will still sound realistic", DnB producers started speeding up breakbeats to 180bpm so they sounded nothing like anything before. The use and abuse of technology continues today. I don't have my finger on the pulse any more, but whatever the plugin manufacturers say about using AI to "help get that pro sound" will be subverted by experimentalist musicians that will use AI to create new genres that no one can predict.
@artisans8521
@artisans8521 Жыл бұрын
Talvin Sing....just checked out Sound of the Indian Underground. Owned that CD for 30 years. Still love it.
@ProdFoolish
@ProdFoolish 2 жыл бұрын
Absolutely amazing. It’s crazy to compare this to the present day.
@mv9040
@mv9040 Жыл бұрын
What a classic film about electronic music still pissed I lent out my dvd abd never got it back. Sooo good even now.
@DaPhunkPhenomena
@DaPhunkPhenomena Жыл бұрын
Great documentary and a good snapshot of the 90s electronic music scenes ! Too bad though it didn't mention (between Pierre Schaeffer, Pierre Henry, Karlheinz Stockhausen and of course Kraftwerk and Giorgio Moroder) crucial pioneers from the BBC Radiophonic Workshop : Delia Derbyshire, Daphne Oram and the llkes of David Cain, John Baker, Paddy Kingsland, Glynis Jones, Maddalena Fagandini or Richard Yeoman-Clark.... But eh, nobody's perfect !
@hatzegopteryx.sounds3637
@hatzegopteryx.sounds3637 Жыл бұрын
How about Jean-Michel Jarre?
@DaPhunkPhenomena
@DaPhunkPhenomena Жыл бұрын
@@hatzegopteryx.sounds3637 Yep : Oxygène was composed in 76 and released in 77 (chronologcally between Radioactivity and Trans Europe Expres). Fun fact : Pierre Schaeffer recruited him for his GRM (Groupe de Recherches Musicales - Music Research Group) in 1969, which led him to the path of electroacoustic music.
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals Жыл бұрын
Cool documentary. Im a classically trained pianist and just getting into playing the synthasizer and have hopes of becoming a producer/ DJ. Figured i need to do my historical research for work lol and here i am. My personal Favorites are DnB, Jungle and LoFi and Ambient. Im really excited to dive in and add my contribution to this amazing modern artform. Thank you for posting! Iv never actually been to a rave before..... this was cool to watch:)
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals Жыл бұрын
My new favoite youtube channel is 4 AM Breaks. Great stuff there! kzbin.info/www/bejne/f6G0fmuJobeUbdk
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Join the club
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals
@AmeliaAnnesAnimals Жыл бұрын
@@supme7558 lol l🎹🎶
@EllisDavidPerry
@EllisDavidPerry Жыл бұрын
go. to. a. rave.
@NOEL-004
@NOEL-004 Жыл бұрын
super interesting documentary and there needs to be a part 2 like about the last 20 years
@wensukuang2327
@wensukuang2327 2 жыл бұрын
With the limit of my English ability, after watching it , I want to say it is so beautiful, everything is beautiful and this is the only word I can use to describe my feelings.
@RababaInc
@RababaInc 2 жыл бұрын
what a gem! thank you for uploading this
@nigel-Rollercam-channel
@nigel-Rollercam-channel 3 жыл бұрын
This is so cool, just found my copy of Modulations on VHS!
@clintblack6070
@clintblack6070 3 жыл бұрын
How often can you put up with the sound of a 303... ummm - often
@newkfromrotterdam
@newkfromrotterdam Жыл бұрын
thanx for putting this up, i got the book... but didn't see the accompanied video yet after all these years
@lias4882
@lias4882 3 жыл бұрын
37:20 someone know the name of this song? i can't find it even with shazam
@monat_son
@monat_son Жыл бұрын
Watching this in 2023. Wow. Great document.
@tastelesstouch
@tastelesstouch 2 жыл бұрын
This is an awesome documentary and also a sample goldmine
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Not
@kevankevan
@kevankevan Жыл бұрын
Seriously inspirational doc.
@tinypinata505
@tinypinata505 Жыл бұрын
I've got this on VHS and the soundtrack on CD.
@katiebarber407
@katiebarber407 4 ай бұрын
ive never seen any footage from japan during this time in a documentary on this subject before. theres not a lot in this one either but the fact that there is some is cool. that mt fuji rave must have been amazing
@dorkybeatz
@dorkybeatz Жыл бұрын
this was a very interesting watch, so much possibilities with applying technology to music to create new sounds
@sharoncurtis5820
@sharoncurtis5820 9 ай бұрын
I remember hanging out at Limelight and Palladium in the 90's. The music was off the hook. The good old days!
@Huntermyth
@Huntermyth Жыл бұрын
a-ha, michael jackson, nirvana, radiohead, massive attack, faithless... then my taste in music shaped as --> psytrance, german underground techno, future garage, psybient... pretty much like this. i love music.
@mindcorp.5260
@mindcorp.5260 3 жыл бұрын
Its cool to see the evolution of electronic music. I forgot this doc existed. But right on!
@dannordmann8565
@dannordmann8565 11 күн бұрын
From ChatGPT: In the documentary Modulations: Cinema for the Ear, the segment labeled "Rave Party Asbury Park, NJ" at 46:01 was filmed at a 1996 event called "Future Shock." This rave was organized by the New York City-based collective Pure Children/Earth Program, known for their contributions to the electronic music scene during that era. The footage captures the vibrant atmosphere of the mid-90s rave culture in Asbury Park, New Jersey. I said: What was the line up at this event? ChatGPT said: The "Future Shock" rave held in Asbury Park, New Jersey, in 1996 featured a lineup of prominent DJs and artists from the electronic music scene. While the complete roster isn't fully documented, notable performers included: Frankie Bones: A pioneering figure in the U.S. rave scene, known for his influential techno sets. Adam X: An esteemed techno DJ and producer, and Frankie Bones' brother, recognized for his contributions to the industrial techno genre. Heather Heart: A respected DJ and co-founder of the Sonic Groove record store, celebrated for her techno and house music selections. These artists were integral to the New York City rave movement and played significant roles in shaping the electronic music landscape during the 1990s. I said: What venue housed the event? ChatGPT said: The "Future Shock" rave in Asbury Park, New Jersey, in 1996 was held at the Asbury Park Convention Hall. This historic venue, located at 1300 Ocean Avenue, has hosted numerous concerts and events over the years. Notably, on September 8, 1996, it was the site of the WSOU 98.5 FM 10th Anniversary Concert, featuring bands like Biohazard and Fear Factory.
@OneEyedMonkey9000
@OneEyedMonkey9000 Жыл бұрын
I knew this was made in the 90’s just from the editing style.😂
@guuskaitjily8581
@guuskaitjily8581 2 жыл бұрын
I quite like this documentary me growing up in the 60's experienced it all when it took off.I just like to comment that gabber house from Rotterdam (Holland)evolved from the xtc & speed using scene , the term gabber in dutch means sort a like homie or mate ,so there's your answer to the over the top bpm's .Ofcourse the Berlin techno was huge just as the Belgium & Dutch DJ's and rave culture .Not only the music but specificly the xtc and other so called designer drugs that flooded the world and still does to this day can't be denied in the whole perception of the EDM scene.Especially the Dutch company with the huge dance parties touring the world promoting DJ's and EDM should be at least noted the name ID&T
@STCC
@STCC Жыл бұрын
Completey unexpected to be blown away by this as much as i was. One of the rare occasions when youtube actually recommends something awesome>
@jeremiahzentz
@jeremiahzentz 3 жыл бұрын
I have heard about this since it came out even got one of those post card sized promos of it at a local record store, never did find it...until now, and you released it on my birthday! I MISS film like this! Was so blown away at all of the contributors and artists interviewed
@supme7558
@supme7558 Жыл бұрын
Missing so many
@tatsumakisenpuukyaku9279
@tatsumakisenpuukyaku9279 Жыл бұрын
So thankful to God that these guys exist in music. DJs: ShingoNakamura,SynthwaveCompilations,Aerotek, HiroyukiOda,Kanzaki Hiro,DJElectricSamurai, GiuseppeOttaviani, RickyRyan,TheMarsheaux, BorisBrejcha, Musicians/Soundtrackers: DavidBergeaud -R&C1-3/R&CDeadlockedGladiator/R&CSizeMatters, TakayukiAihara/TakanoriOtsuka -SoulEdge,YokoShimomura/IsaoAbe -StreetFighterII, Mick Gordon -AtomicHeart, TetsukazuNakanishi/KeikiKobayashi/HiroshiOkubo/KatsuroTajima/JunichiNakatsuru -AceCombat4/AC5/ACZero, KeiichiOkabe/KeigoHoashi -Nier:Automata, KenichiroFukui -EinHänder, AkiraYamaoka -SilentHill1-3, MikiHigashino/MasanoriAdachi/TappiIwase -ContraIIITheAlienWars, JesperKyd/AlbertOlson/RaymondWatts -MDK2,TomyTallarico -MDK, AkitakaTohyama/NobuyoshiSano/ KeiichiOkabe/RioHamamoto/TakuInoue/GoShiina -TekkenTagTournament2, ForeverBound/DJVI/WaterFlame/DJ-Nate/F-777/DexArson/MorganDavidKing -GeometryDash, BarryLeitch/HiroyukiMasuno -TopGear, DavidWise/MattFurniss -BattletoadsInBattlemaniacs,
@thejollyjoker187
@thejollyjoker187 Жыл бұрын
Those were the days, 1997 / 2000, we were raving and drooling over Talvin Singh and FSOL and Autechre and Amon Tobin.... Good times, all washed away into a black hole of consumerism and marketing, the main two plagues that corporate governments have applied to people and this way, they rooted the fun out of the music. Now everything is turned into liquid shit..
@EllisDavidPerry
@EllisDavidPerry Жыл бұрын
have you explored youtube? mixes on here w/an adblocker are free and deep cuts
@neonpop80
@neonpop80 Жыл бұрын
Wow. This doc was incredible. Love the style
@MsHeartmelter
@MsHeartmelter Жыл бұрын
Track ID at 1:30, please??!? I heard it in 90s but never heard it again.
@natios100
@natios100 21 күн бұрын
autechre - second bad vilbel
@noiseworks
@noiseworks Жыл бұрын
remember seeing coldcut & koala back in 90s newcastle, very influential
@nicoladellamora1667
@nicoladellamora1667 Жыл бұрын
Just catched Aphex Twin dancin' on Madness at 47:31
@luisd7636
@luisd7636 Жыл бұрын
love this. Great to have lived through the entire evolution of EDM. good times.
@robotjox77
@robotjox77 Жыл бұрын
I am so pleased this came up in my recommendations. I have been trying to find it since it first watched it in 2001. To everyone saying new EDM isn't as good, it's still out there if you look hard enough. Keep the vibe alive!
@Vlow52
@Vlow52 Жыл бұрын
If you want to be an electronic smartass of music definition, any music is electronic, since it perceived by human brain - an electric device essentially. Besides it, music is a fundamental thing based on the waves, so any music (not sound) is also universal and can be restructured without atmosphere pressure mechanism but using another patterned wave forms arranged by rhythm, and it’s beautiful independent of the intelligent specie who “listens” to it.
@pmc5532
@pmc5532 2 жыл бұрын
Disco Never Died !!! It Just Evolved and Mutated .
@otterwithagun1982
@otterwithagun1982 Жыл бұрын
I'm from the mid/late 90's-early 2000's rave scene. Yes, there are EDM parties now, festivals, dancing and all that, but at the risk of gatekeeping, when I look at the new electronic music (and don't get me wrong I listen to some new stuff), I see the festivals advertised and the images, videos from previous EDM fests, it just doesn't have the same soul as the old raves and clubs. I'd love to go to one of these fests but it seems kind of...like one big commercialized (not that it wasn't like that back in my day, but not to this degree) event. Instead of the emphasis on the artist and the people, the emphasis is on the advertisements on the clothes, energy drinks. But even in this documentary people were saying how it was getting commercialized ... I guess like Thanos, it is inevitable.
@gee_emm
@gee_emm Жыл бұрын
I don’t think big EDM parties are really where it’s at. You’re better off looking on Resident Advisor or the like and finding out what’s going on at smaller venues or where your favourite artists are playing. I heard someone describe a Rita Ora song from 2013 as their favourite DnB song ever a few days ago, and a little part of my soul died. I guess you have to dig a little to find the good stuff other wise you just get the formulaic commercial tosh.
@kilimanjaro88
@kilimanjaro88 Жыл бұрын
Beautiful material. Thank you!
@fabianafiesmann8971
@fabianafiesmann8971 4 жыл бұрын
Thanks for uploading! ♥
@norakat
@norakat Жыл бұрын
One guy said Jungle marked a transition into a darker experience but actually Jungle started out w the ‘Intelligent’ variety which was more ambient and light. Also there there was dark and hard electronic music before that transition.
@eubique
@eubique Жыл бұрын
Jungle certainly didn't start with light / ambient / "intelligent" apart from outliers like a few thing Buken was doing. Jungle was mainly ruff with hip-hop and ragga elements, darkside came in in 1993, "ambient" jungle around the same time or little after and really a thing only from 1994. Simon Reynolds probably knows about this better than you or I though.
@AutPen38
@AutPen38 Жыл бұрын
I don't remember jungle starting out as "intelligent". I remember house/techno and rave tracks becoming faster and more basic as dance music moved from the trendy clubs (full of art students that went to Ibiza when it was still a hippy refuge) to the council estates. The early pioneers of jungle had been shat on by Thatcher's governments for 12 years. The shutting down of pirate stations and the Criminal Justice Bill put urban youths into fighting mood. They were poor, often black, and angry, and they didn't have time for "intelligent" DnB. The early jungle records were fierce!
@gee_emm
@gee_emm Жыл бұрын
@@AutPen38 I dunno about black and angry, lol. Let’s not forget, Jungle came years before drum’n’bass. DnB was like a more sophisticated progression of Jungle techno, which was far more gritty, but still fun. I never felt like it was angry though. 🤷🏾‍♀️
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