The version I acquired that could possibly be the original, in question, starts out with the music looped in Ishkur's Music Guide, with a random "come on" inputted every once in a while. It then transitions into quite an alluring rhythm, slightly old school breakbeat, with a PHAT bassline, then it transitions back to the "Ishkur participant" melody, with a synthetic choral voice melody added.
Even if it isn't the original, this is the version I'd have put on my list anyway, it's the best one I've heard.
Well geez. At this point I'm not sure if I have the original version after all. I'll tell you this much, I have two versions. One's labeled as the "Watch Out For Stella" Version, at 5:45, stating it was from an album called Human Traffic: Disc 2 (I acquired this from Soulseek, thus my description sounds novice), and the other version which I thought was the original might not be... it's lengthed at 3:57 and is featured on the ID&T Top 500 (I get various trance songs off of Soulseek that state this under album). I'm pretty sure it could be the original version, but I'm not making any definite remarks.
I started comparing my songs' ratings to one another, and I really found "Symphony" to be unbeatable, in my opinion. In fact, I might be moving "Nothing" down a few places soon enough, I still love it, but its only so stimulating. It can't rest at number one any longer. :)
There are a few tracks that signify high standards for me, but the album as a whole is quite a disappointment now that I've listened to it a few times.
And the music videos... don't ever watch them... they'll just bore, age, and waste your life...
Although I disagree with like... 50% of this list (bite me), I like the fact that you don't let other people tell you otherwise. And you include things like "bite me."
Slightly irrelevant to this list. Okay having nothing to do with this list... but does anyone know when Ishkur changed his "classic trance" section? He seemed to have taken Caucasuss off, and added Cosmic Baby and Datura. Did he change anything else?
I thought there was some serious decoding to do... and I figured out some overlapping procedures. But the last part really did baffle me, and now that you've decoded it with a walk through, it's actually kind of interesting! You should post like this more often. Haha.
Although it might mean a tad bit of a communications break between the two of us. Well, not a break, but more of a complication... since I'd be annoying and ask you to decode every message.
Perhaps you shouldn't. Lol, I've just made myself look like a future nuisance. And I'm done.
Lol that post's format made little sense to me, but the combination of reading both posts results in that I can't find myself to stop laughing. I don't know why I'm laughing but I'm laughing so hard I can't even control myself... and it totally hurts... I'm burning like 1000 calories a minute with this hard-ass laughter...
Okay I'm good. In pain, but healthy and good. Now I need to download these and listen to them in the recommended order. Because your text-mercial intrigues me.
Okay so I've done a little bit of studying as far as Massive Attack and Craig Armstrong are involved. Because you've officially sparked my curiosity on this matter. And you totally rock for reading my tidbit on "Rare Duet." (I'm guessing you read it)
First I went onto Discogs. I went under Massive Attack and noticed there was no Greatest Hits album in specifics.
THEN I looked up Massive Attack along with Craig Armstrong. I found three spontaneous links between the two artists. The links/songs are "Protection," "Weather Storm," and "Sly." All three songs are done by Massive Attack, but "Protection" and "Sly" are produced and arranged by Craig Armstrong. "Weather Storm" features Craig Armstrong on the piano.
Then I totally did something that surprised even myself...
I. Studied. MORE...
I googled Massive Attack and Craig Armstrong. The same similarities. THEN... I googled Massive Attack and Greatest Hits. I came up with the album Collected. It's not titled as a greatest hits album, but it features their biggest successes.
The final touch? I looked at the track listing. Track number 13? None other than "Sly." Fitting all hints and conditions I'm going to download this one. You should too, or come across it somehow and listen to it to see if it matches what you've come to know as Massive Attack's "Craig Armstrong."
... that'll be exciting. Cuz it means I'd solved a mystery.... :)
17... what people refer to as "ruffie?" believe it or not i just heard about it the other day...
I respect your final order of trance tracks.
Although your introduction, no matter how factual and true, depresses. Haha.
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA I love it. I LOVE IT.
That would ROCK.
The version I acquired that could possibly be the original, in question, starts out with the music looped in Ishkur's Music Guide, with a random "come on" inputted every once in a while. It then transitions into quite an alluring rhythm, slightly old school breakbeat, with a PHAT bassline, then it transitions back to the "Ishkur participant" melody, with a synthetic choral voice melody added.
Even if it isn't the original, this is the version I'd have put on my list anyway, it's the best one I've heard.
Well geez. At this point I'm not sure if I have the original version after all. I'll tell you this much, I have two versions. One's labeled as the "Watch Out For Stella" Version, at 5:45, stating it was from an album called Human Traffic: Disc 2 (I acquired this from Soulseek, thus my description sounds novice), and the other version which I thought was the original might not be... it's lengthed at 3:57 and is featured on the ID&T Top 500 (I get various trance songs off of Soulseek that state this under album). I'm pretty sure it could be the original version, but I'm not making any definite remarks.
I started comparing my songs' ratings to one another, and I really found "Symphony" to be unbeatable, in my opinion. In fact, I might be moving "Nothing" down a few places soon enough, I still love it, but its only so stimulating. It can't rest at number one any longer. :)
..... Discogs... is where I found additional information on Ultraviolet... perhaps you were just in a different area than I there...?
No... I was kidding... or ignorant, perhaps.
There are a few tracks that signify high standards for me, but the album as a whole is quite a disappointment now that I've listened to it a few times.
And the music videos... don't ever watch them... they'll just bore, age, and waste your life...
Although I disagree with like... 50% of this list (bite me), I like the fact that you don't let other people tell you otherwise. And you include things like "bite me."
Slightly irrelevant to this list. Okay having nothing to do with this list... but does anyone know when Ishkur changed his "classic trance" section? He seemed to have taken Caucasuss off, and added Cosmic Baby and Datura. Did he change anything else?
There's a bit of pig cruelty in The Name of the Rose.
I thought there was some serious decoding to do... and I figured out some overlapping procedures. But the last part really did baffle me, and now that you've decoded it with a walk through, it's actually kind of interesting! You should post like this more often. Haha.
Although it might mean a tad bit of a communications break between the two of us. Well, not a break, but more of a complication... since I'd be annoying and ask you to decode every message.
Perhaps you shouldn't. Lol, I've just made myself look like a future nuisance. And I'm done.
Lol that post's format made little sense to me, but the combination of reading both posts results in that I can't find myself to stop laughing. I don't know why I'm laughing but I'm laughing so hard I can't even control myself... and it totally hurts... I'm burning like 1000 calories a minute with this hard-ass laughter...
Okay I'm good. In pain, but healthy and good. Now I need to download these and listen to them in the recommended order. Because your text-mercial intrigues me.
Okay so I've done a little bit of studying as far as Massive Attack and Craig Armstrong are involved. Because you've officially sparked my curiosity on this matter. And you totally rock for reading my tidbit on "Rare Duet." (I'm guessing you read it)
First I went onto Discogs. I went under Massive Attack and noticed there was no Greatest Hits album in specifics.
THEN I looked up Massive Attack along with Craig Armstrong. I found three spontaneous links between the two artists. The links/songs are "Protection," "Weather Storm," and "Sly." All three songs are done by Massive Attack, but "Protection" and "Sly" are produced and arranged by Craig Armstrong. "Weather Storm" features Craig Armstrong on the piano.
Then I totally did something that surprised even myself...
I. Studied. MORE...
I googled Massive Attack and Craig Armstrong. The same similarities. THEN... I googled Massive Attack and Greatest Hits. I came up with the album Collected. It's not titled as a greatest hits album, but it features their biggest successes.
The final touch? I looked at the track listing. Track number 13? None other than "Sly." Fitting all hints and conditions I'm going to download this one. You should too, or come across it somehow and listen to it to see if it matches what you've come to know as Massive Attack's "Craig Armstrong."
... that'll be exciting. Cuz it means I'd solved a mystery.... :)