Skrillex will debut a new project at Ultra Music Festival. Mysteryland will return for its 20th consecutive year this weekend August 24th , but there's more exciting news as it's revealed that next year's event will take place at New York's Bethel Woods - the site of the unforgettable Woodstock ! Mysteryland is the oldest electronic musical in the world and is held every year in the Netherlands - it has come to Floriade in Haarlemmermeer for the past ten years, apart from where it took to Chile for the first time.
This year, though, organisers have decided to reach a different kind of audience by holding the concert on the holy grounds of the most legendary rock festival in history - Bethel Woods Center for the Arts. It will debut in the US on Memorial Day weekend from May 23rd - 26th and we're expecting a memorable line-up to match.
A conglomerate led by pop-singer Justin Timberlake announced yesterday the social networking site Myspace will be releasing a new music app available on Android and Apple. This is the latest attempt by the site to regain users, lost as a result of the rise of Facebook. The site's re-launch has been targeted at music lovers. This announcement is the latest in a series of features which allow artists and fans to communicate more effectively. According to Timberlake, this was a key feature in his decision to invest in Myspace.
He was really great to work with and gave me some good advice about surviving in this business. Lohan got soaked in the downpour and was taken to hospital on Sunday with a bad lung infection, being treated with antibiotics before getting discharged.
However, it looks as though everything is just rosy. Love to create, proud to showcase and humbled to achieve! On the 8th October Talking Heads released not only one of their most significant albums but also one of the most significant albums of the last Steve Angello. This year's Ultra Music Festival looks set to be the best ever Other examples include Caked Up what a fucking surprise?
You can also check out this comprehensive list compiled by an individual who must have a hell of an ear, however most of the items on that list are non-loop samples. This begs the question, is using a loop and chopping other sounds into it occasionally something that is reasonable, or is it still a weak link in the creative chain?
The instrumentals from each of those songs rely on a loop sample taken from a previously released song. In this particular example, though, the guys have reconstructed the piano, but utilized the same notation as Chopin. Their work is a new age spin-off that pays tribute to another iconic work. It is a revitalization of previous magic, not simply a lazy maneuver to get the song finished more quickly with less effort.
Sampling is a touchy subject. Without even getting into the copyright side of things, we already have numerous sample circumstances, all of which can be judged differently. Although the use of samples more specifically, loops , is not illegal, their use does bring along its own questions. For me, I see the art of sampling as a spectrum that goes from acceptable and awesome, down to poor and illegal. The examples from today deal with that middle ground without any consideration for vocals and other similar sound clips.
Should the producer be shamed for using a pre-made loop? Really, it all depends; each case can be looked at differently and I think the standards for dance music play in a little different to the situation than a genre like hip-hop or with someone like Pogo.
Appears On. Romani feat. Steve Angello - Single Kryder. More To Hear. Steve Angello Big room bangers from the Size boss. About Steve Angello. Similar Artists See All. Sebastian Ingrosso. Swedish House Mafia. Laidback Luke. It's the same with anything. You remember when the digital cameras came along, and everyone was like "Oh, wait, how can you take a picture with that?
It should be analog and real and you should have to develop the pictures. It's like that with everything. Like when the iPhone came, and people were like "What the fuck is this? People like to diss stuff. Especially online.
It's like, "Come on, man. I've never been one of those people who goes in there and comments "Don't buy this album, it sucks. Everyone can have their opinion and if you like something, you like it. With us, some people are like "I can't believe you sold out Central Park. It's just what it is -- people like to be cool about what they think. It's easy to disrespect people who are creative if you're not a creative person yourself.
I had a discussion with a guy and he was telling me [that it's easy to see which DJs perform well], so I tweeted at a DJ and said he sucked. So I asked him what he did for a living, and he said he was a server in a restaurant. So I said, "What would you think, if someone walked two feet behind you and said 'you suck' every time you put down a plate?
Is there anything you miss from when you were doing more scratch and break stuff or just growing your Stockholm parties? You know what I miss? I miss normal. I remember just being excited to go and play at a regular club. And you're thinking "this is my night," and there may only be or people there. And there was no pressure. I kind of miss that it used to be playful. You could be creative, nobody judged you. Today, it's all judgment.
You're never a prophet in your own city, but at the same time, when you grow up and become big, everyone says you're doing well. But the second you get big, they tell you that you suck. I'm a firm believer in being positive and promoting what you love instead of dissing what you don't like. I said I'm a big Coldplay fan, and I told someone that and they said, "Yeah but they're so commercial now.
They still write great records -- the melodies are fantastic, the lyrics are great. Lady Gaga was really cool until she had her first No. I just miss the whole playful thing. And that's why I use a lot of aliases when I produce, because I can take the Steve Angello hat off and just play. Did these things factor into the decision to end Swedish House Mafia?
I think we felt like it had become a very big machine. I think the pressure … It just wasn't having fun anymore. It was this humongous monster. We felt like tired.
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