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Support KTRA on Patreon and get extra shows here: https://www.patreon.com/ktra This week we showcase some of the most anthemic beats to come out of the 2000's with a UK hardcore retrospective! J-Trax - Back Around: https://snd.click/KTRAR094 Full tracklist: Tracklist Get KTRA Merchendise here: KTRA Merch Grab the KTRA 2022 album here: KTRA 2022 Support Kutski with a virtual beer here: Beer Commission Kutski for a custom DJ mix here: Commission Kutski Grab music from the KTRA store here: KTRA Digital Store Follow Kutski on Twitch for livestreams here: Kutski Twitch KTRA on Spotify: Spotify
1:41 Labiotech.eu news4:17 Longevity Science Foundation23:07 HTID35:56 CanSinoBio54:47 JLLThis week, we have three interviews, and four guests. We chat with Pierre Corneille VP of the HTFC, which is responsible for HealthTech Innovation Days; Sergey Jakimov, co-founder and managing partner of LongeVC and the Longevity Science Foundation's CEO Lisa Ireland; and Pierre Morgon, executive vice president of CanSinoBIO. We also have our weekly contribution from global commercial real estate services company JLL, with Travis McCready. HealthTech Innovation Days brings European healthtech ecosystem togetherThe 4th edition of HealthTech Innovation Days (HTID), organized by HealthTech For Care, took place recently in Paris, France.The two-day event had the objective of finding financing and encouraging new industrial partnerships to accelerate the development and market access of new products and treatments for all patients. Around 1,600 formal and informal face-to-face and virtual meetings were organized this year, alongside 19 round table discussions. The event brought together more than 165 European health technology companies, 15 pharmaceutical and industrial companies and more than 300 international investors. 86 international experts gathered and animated 19 round tables. CanSinoBIO presents data on inhaled COVID vaccineCanSino Biologics Inc. presented clinical trial data for the recombinant COVID-19 vaccine (adenovirus type 5 vector) for inhalation (with the trade name Convidecia Air) at World Vaccine Congress (WVC) Europe recently in Barcelona, Spain. Jean-Denis Shu, vice president for medical affairs of CanSino Biologics showed Convidecia Air induces a strong and lasting immune response, with greater immunogenicity against the Omicron variant than recombinant protein or inactivated vaccines. International nonprofit Longevity Science Foundation expands to U.S. with new CEOThe Longevity Science Foundation (LSF), a global nonprofit organization providing research funding to establish a longer and healthier human lifespan, has recently expanded by launching operations in the U.S. and appointing a new president & CEO, Lisa E. Ireland. A group of physicians, investors, and other stakeholders founded the Longevity Science Foundation in 2021 to convene biotech founders, physicians, and research institutions in pursuit of lengthening the healthy human lifespan. The Foundation uses a blockchain-based voting platform to distribute grant funding to projects advancing longevity science, focusing on therapeutics, artificial intelligence, personalized medicine and predictive diagnostics. SponsorInterested in sponsoring one or more episodes of the podcast? Learn more here!Leave a review on Apple podcastsReviews are hugely important because they help new people discover this podcast. If you enjoyed listening to this episode, we would love to hear your feedback!Connect with uslabiotech.euSubscribe to our newsletter
Support KTRA on Patreon and get extra shows here: https://www.patreon.com/ktra Hot off the release of his track Drumsteppa on the KTRA label, Rick Chubbs joins the show in the guest mix this week to showcase his ravey interpretation of the freeform sound!! Full tracklist: Tracklist Get KTRA Merchendise here: KTRA Merch Grab the KTRA 2021 album here: KTRA 2021 Support Kutski with a virtual beer here: Beer Commission Kutski for a custom DJ mix here: Commission Kutski Grab music from the KTRA store here: KTRA Digital Store Follow Kutski on Twitch for livestreams here: Kutski Twitch KTRA on Spotify: Spotify
Dans ce numéro hors-série du Journal des biotechs, Maryvonne Hiance vient présenter la 4e édition des Healtech Innovation Days (HTID) qui se tiendront les 13 et 14 octobre au Palais Brongniart et en ligne. La fondatrice présidente de Healthech for care, vice-présidente de la biotech OSE Immuno et ancienne présidente de France Biotech détaille les objectifs de cet événement, plateforme qui rassemble les enterprises innovantes de la santé afin d'accélérer leur croissance et amener l'innovation jusqu'au patient. Elle analyse également l'état actuel du secteur des Sciences de la vie en France et en Europe et liste les raisons d'être optimiste sur ses perspectives.
Support KTRA on Patreon and get extra shows here: https://www.patreon.com/ktra This week Klubfiller joins the show to showcase all his latest tracks representing the UK hardcore sound!!! Full tracklist: Tracklist Get KTRA Merchendise here: KTRA Merch Grab the KTRA 2021 album here: KTRA 2021 Support Kutski with a virtual beer here: Beer Commission Kutski for a custom DJ mix here: Commission Kutski Grab music from the KTRA store here: KTRA Digital Store Follow Kutski on Twitch for livestreams here: Kutski Twitch KTRA on Spotify: Spotify
Support KTRA on Patreon and get extra shows here: https://www.patreon.com/ktra From legendary MC of the UK scene to cutting edge producer and DJ of all things ravey, Whizzkid joins Kutski on the show this week along with all the usual show features. Full tracklist: Tracklist Grab the KTRA 2021 album here: KTRA 2021 Support Kutski with a virtual beer here: Beer Commission Kutski for a custom DJ mix here: Commission Kutski Grab music from the KTRA store here: KTRA Digital Store Follow Kutski on Twitch for livestreams here: Kutski Twitch
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Support KTRA on Patreon here: https://www.patreon.com/ktra This week Kutski celebrates his birthday with a mix of his top 40 all time favourite tracks across the harder styles of dance music! Grab the KTRA 2021 album here: http://2021.keepingtheravealive.com Support Kutski with a virtual beer here: http://beer.keepingtheravealive.com Commission Kutski for a custom DJ mix here: http://book.keepingtheravealive.com Grab music from the KTRA store here: http://store.keepingtheravealive.com Follow Kutski on Twitch for livestreams here: https://www.twitch.tv/kutski Tracklist M&M - I Feel This Way (Remix) 2 Unlimited - Twilight Zone (Rave Version) DMS - Exterminate (Day Of The Hardcore) The Prodigy - Charley (Alley Cat Remix) Terrorize It's Just A Feeling Sy-Kick - Nasty (Remix) Mauro Picotto - Iguana DJ Kim - Jetlag (Alphazone Remix) Arome - Hands Up! (DJ Scot Project Remix) Hennes & Cold - The Second Trip (DJ Scot Project Remix) DJ Shredder - Chainsaw (The Crow Remix) Derb - Attack Walt - Let The Music Play Pavo & Blutonium Boy - Floorkiller (Blutonium Boy & Neo Remix) DJ Isaac - Nobody Likes The Records Lowriders - Don't Get Back Cortina - Music Is Moving (BK & dBm Amber Remix) OD 404 - 9 Bar (BK Remix) Tony De Vit - Are You All Ready Audiofreq - Warcry D-Block & S-Te-Fan - Music Made Addict Cocooma - Another Race Sequel Base -The 3rd Chapter Dune - Cant Stop Raving (12 Inch Mix) Jimmy J & Cru LT - Take Me Away (Remix) Endymion & The Viper - How Long Hard Creation- Bastard Asshole DJ Outblast - Eardrumz DJ Buzz Fuzz vs Bass-D & King Matthew - It's Alright (Stunned Guys Remix) Prime Recordings - I Need Your Lovin Druid & Sharkey - Bonkers Anthem Visa - Holding On 4 U (Visa Treatment) DJ Hixxy & MC Sharkey - Toytown (Bonkers Vocal Mix) Rave Nation - Going Crazy DJ E Rick & Tactic - Bring The Noise Diss Reaction - Jiieehaaa 4 Tune Fairytales - My Little Fantasy (Bass D & King Matthew Mix) 4 Tune Fairytales - Take Me To Wonderland (Hard Mix) R. Wagner - Listen Carefully Diplomat - The Screamer
On this episode, 14, we are LIVE in the studio of the legendary Simon Apex and his lovely wife The Queen "B"! Hear their stories and struggles with substance use and abuse that is so prevalent within the rave community. Over the years Simon has developed into one of the USA and UK's premier UK Hardcore producers and DJ. Now Simon has joined forces with his lovely wife and they rejuvenated the record label, SSU Recordings. Hear how both of their journeys have brought them into sobriety and have helped their thriving record label with phenomenal talent based out of the US and UK. This is one episode that you will not want to miss as we go deep into the underground! If you have gotten to the next episode you have gone too far!! For more info on SSU Recordings, including artist bios, newest tracks, DJ mixes, merchandise and more visit: SSU Recordings HomeBuzzsprout AdBuzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched! Start for FREE Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/thedrunkenwormpodcast)
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Well it's Loading Artist... Again and I thought I'd go Happy Hardcore with the fantastic HIXXY. Hixxy or DJ Hixxy (a.k.a. Ian Hicks, born 03 August 1975) is from Portsmouth, UK and his DJ roots can be found with an obsession for US Hip Hop and Rap and watching DMC Championship Videos. Getting into rave music in the 1990s, he became resident DJ for Overload (promoted by Supreme on the Isle Of Wight, under the name DJ Hix (he later added an extra "X" so his DJ name looked bigger on flyers). Whilst DJing here he met lots of the top DJs of the period, including his DJ hero, Carl Cox. He also struck up a friendship with Dougal and began pestering him about setting up a label. He also started hanging around the Fusion record shop in Portsmouth, constantly asking if he could use the studio upstairs which was manned by Sunset Regime. He eventually got into the studio and released his first track, People's Party. Ramos also advised him to add an extra "Y" to his DJ name, as Hixxy was what everyone called him anyway. 1995 saw his friendship with Dougal lead to the Essential Platinum label being born. His track, Toytown was one of the biggest hardcore tunes of the period and led to him meeting with React about licensing it. Whilst in their offices the conversation turned to putting together a compilation, and the legendary Bonkers series was born. After this period, he began working in Stu. J.'s Movement record shop in Southampton, as well as helping him promote his Adrenalin raves. He also hosted the happy hardcore show on Kiss FM. With the hardcore scene in decline in the late 90s, Hixxy thought about leaving the scene, and experimented with slower, trancier sounds. When hardcore recovered and set up the Raver Baby label and parties. He also co-founded the rave organisation/label HTID (Hardcore Til I Die) with Mark Lambert. He went on to promote the Uproar events as well. As of 2014, he is now signed to DJ Breeze's Future World label. He has also left HTID. **Tracklist** * Hixxy & Styles - Happiness * Hixxy & Re-Con - Devastated Motivated * N-Trance - Set You Free (Hixxy Remix) * N-Trance - Forever (Hixxy Remix) * Hixxy & Re-Con - I Can't Wait (Squad-E Remix) * Hixxy - Sacrifice (Dougal & Gammer Remix) * Hixxy - Deep In The Night * Hixxy - Take Me To Heaven * Hixxy - Now That I Found You * Voodoo & Serano - Overload (Hixxy & Re-Con Remix) * Hixxy - One Spliff * Hixxy - Million Miles (HTID Mix) * Hixxy & Squad-E - Beat Drop * Hixxy & Re-Con - Come Alive * Paul EP & Smithy - All I Wanna Do (Hixxy Remix) * Hixxy & Chris Unknown - The Music I Love (Sy's Re-Rub) * Hixxy - Only Time * Hixxy - Feel It In The Air * Hixxy & Re-Con - I Can't Wait (Original Mix) * Hixxy & Sunset Present OMG - The One * Hixxy & Vinyl Blair - The Meaning Of Life (That Mix) * Hixxy & Bananaman - Forever * A Sense Of Summer - On Top (DJ Hixxy Remix 1) * Hixxy & MC Sharkey - Toy Town ('Noddy & Bigears' Mix)
Spring is in the air... Lambs are born... Rabbits are humping... And the foul Stench of another Geecast is incoming! After the Northern Gathering Reunion sets we get back to what we do best. Blowing your ears out! This month we feature a DJ that has run labels in Hardcore, and currently in Drum N Bass and Bass music, as well as successful rave nights, worked in record shop across the country, been a successful producer. And he survived the cut throat politics of the Hardcore scene to tell the tale. LEE UHF!! So, first Ill be playing part 1 of a classic Darkstep 2005-2010 mix & then Lee will take over with a brand new mix done just for us. So without further ado, Lee! Thanks for joining us! Thank you for having me Kev, Its been a while hasn't it? Always good to have a catch up with some of the old crew. Can you talk me through your early days within the rave scene? How did things start for you? I'll try my best. Haha. For me music has always been a big part of my life. In fact up to the age of 12yrs old, my Dad ran a record shop in Sheffield called Roulette Records. I spent most evenings for years after school and Saturday mornings in his shop helping out, which basically translates to me being in the big store cupboard going through 1000s of tapes and vinyls and claiming which ones I wanted to take home. I must have had near £50k of music over the years for free from the shop looking back now, insane! At this time in the late 80's and early 90's, I had no idea what rave music was as I was pretty young, but I was obsessed with a lot of rave music that charted such as 2 Unlimited, Snap, The Prodigy, Silver Bullet, Praga Khan & The Shamen. In fact, when my Dad gave up the shop I got heavily into Gangster Rap (Wu-Tang, Onyx, EPMD etc) and really lost touch with anything rave sounding. It wasn't until 1995, while on a family holiday in Chapel St Leonards, Skegness that I met a guy from Lincoln who used to play Vibealite and Pleasuredome tapes, but as I was obsessed with Rap music, I hated the happy, high energy stuff that he was playing and always shot it down saying it was shit. A year later in 1996, I was back at the same holiday camp with him again and he managed to persuade me to go to a rave. The Pleasuredome, at The Zoo in Ingoldmells. It took a lot of persuading. I was only 14yrs old and was way under age (He told my parents it was a teens night lol) but once I got inside and saw the legendary big clowns head/ DJ box, It blew my mind and i ended up really, really enjoyed it. I got home to Sheffield, and had done a complete 180 with my music taste. My friend from Lincoln was sending me tapes in the post all the time to feed my new addiction and I even found some of my mates at School were heavily into it also, one being a guy you might have heard of, MC Keyes? Where did you used to go raving? When getting back from the holiday me and my school pals found out about a weekly running event just down the road from my house. `Uprising` and discovered the wonderfull world of MCing, which lead to me and my friends all thinking we were hot shit on the mic at 15/16yrs old. Haha So you wanted to be an MC back then, more than a DJ? Absolutely! At 16 when I left school, I had carried on attending Uprising and through a mutual friend, I had started hanging around with a few older lads who were also into the same music, one being Martin Space. We'd all pile into Martin's house at weekends where he and his mates would be DJing while me and Keyes did the MCing. I literally had no interest in Djing at all until I kind of got forced to do it when people wanted a break from the decks. So what kit did you have when you first started Djing? Martin Space actually sold me my first set of decks. He upgraded his at the time and this is what got me off the MCing and into Djing. They were old belt drive Soundlabs. Horrible to use, but believe it or not, I recorded my first demo for Uprising on those bad boys and got a booking from Paul-O, who I sent it to. Can you tell us who were your main influences when you first started out? Early on, I only really went to Uprising, due to it being local and weekly. Plus I never thought to venture out of the area due to how young I was. So the main influences I had were Uprising performers early on. For MCing, Domer & ELL were the best for me hands down. They hard a darker edge, quite like the gangster rap music I loved in the early 90's. Dj wise - I loved Paul-O. Always diverse, playing different genres and always the harder / party style sound, which for me is the direction my tastes were heading towards. And, like most people at Uprising I had a soft spot for Sy & Alchemist early on when they would guest spot. Later on, as I discovered my own style and sound, and this lead me to be a huge fan of Sharkey & Lomas too. Did you send out demo tapes or go to events and give the promoter a demo in person? Yes for sure, back then before we had Social media and Soundcloud etc. you had to record the demo's on a physical tape. My god it feels so weird saying that, like Im an ancient age where tapes are like chalk & slate, but for most Djs now, its an unheard thing to record something on a physical format. Before I had made a name for myself, I can safely say every club that booked me, I had attended them prior and handed in a tape to the promoter. When I promote nights myself I have always thought the same way. The amount of Facebook private messages I get on our event page saying "I'd love to come play at your event" with a soundcloud link, is a daily occurance. I don't think this is a good way to get promoters to take notice of you. One message I had not long ago said "u need to book me for ur nite" Oh do I? Really? lol I am completely dumbfounded how people think this is a way to get a booking, especially in the digital age. It's so easy for anyone to get a mix online and be a DJ. How can you think this behaviour makes you stand out from the sea of competition out there? You have to do even more in my eyes with everyone and their mom mixing now. I can't think of a time, when I was an unknown DJ, that I did not make an effort to support the event I wanted to play at, and actually go and get to know the promoter. To me there was no other way. You got quite a few residencies when you first started, at events like Future Dance, Vibealite and North. How did those come about? For the exact reasons I mentioned above. I attended the events. I networked well and I called the promoters constantly. Yes, I could be annoying but I was young and hungry and I think for the most part promoters respected the hustle I gave back then. I was everywhere and speaking to everyone. The Future Dance residency came out of nowhere due to me buying records from Wax City in London over the phone every week. Dj Kaos owned the shop, and he sent me a few flyers for the first Future Dance event with an order that I had made. It was on my birthday, so me and a few friends decided to go there to celebrate it. I obviously took a bag full of demos too. I got on well with the boys that ran it, and by their 3rd event I was a playing for them. With North, this actually came from getting to know the owner Andy Bowler, by playing in the North hosted Techno rooms at Future Dance. I was a good fit for their Technology room as I was playing alot of the old Hard Trance / Reverse Bass tracks and had my own selection different from M-zone,Mark EG & Vortex. Around this time there was not alot of people spinning it in the UK this so I ended up playing most North events and tours from then on. Vibealite was also a very fun residency that I kept for quite a while, and this was achieved by (again) attending and sending demos. Around 2002 I met Gary at an event he did up North. We got chatting and he invited me onto his guest list for their first Fantasy Island event. I ended up playing an impromptu set out of nowhere and it went down so well I ended up playing every event from then on until 2006 It also led to co-promoting a couple of events with Vibealite and even hosting rooms for them at larger parties they did like Fantasy Island. And last but not least, there was also a residency at small club night called Defiance in Barnsley. Not on as big a scale as the others but just as much fun to play at. This event holds a very special place in my heart, as it gave me the idea to start promoting myself, as I realized you could do a decent event on a smaller scale at a budget. Did you always drive to your gigs or have a driver? Bit of everything really. Early on there was a huge crew of us who would be going to raves and parties so If I was playing it was just who wanted to go at the time, and who wanted to drive or not. So getting there could be either a car full of a friends. A driver and me. A mini bus full of us. The train. A bus. You name it. Nothing stopped me getting to the parties. What kind of music did you play back then? At the very start of it all I learnt my craft Djing with the happier stuff (Quosh, Jal etc) But as I started to understand mixing more the main styles that I played were Freeform and Hardcore Techno. These 2 genres are where spent all my buying tunes and they're the sounds that got me my first bookings. So you were always into a variety of music back then as well? (Drum & Bass, Hardcore, Trance etc) I didnt like Drum & Bass at all back then. Haha, and it took me a couple of years to enjoy Trance. But eventually I was spinning everything. Trance, Hard House, Gabber, Hard Trance & Techno and I even got a few gigs doing these genre's too. I think having such a diverse music taste back then also helped me get more gigs at events outside of Sheffield. When I gave Future Dance & Vibealite demos I would give them multiple tapes showcasing Hardcore, Hard Trance & Hardcore Techno. Reason being is that I loved all these styles equally and they had multiple rooms at their events, so as I was only starting to be booked by them, It would be impossible to be playing the main room right away. So this helped me start playing for them in their 2nd and 3rd arenas that were specific to other genres. It was great for me, as I was booked much more often and had an opportunity to play out lots more performing sets with music that I loved. From this the Hard Trance / Reverse Bass stuff really took off for me, as there was not many people playing it back then, so there was plenty to go around booking wise. Eventually though I lost interest in this sound when UK distributors re-packaged it as Hardstyle and made it more accessible for everyone to buy, meaning every man and his dog started playing it. The Dutch got hold of the sound then too, and the releases went all screetchy with those "Hard Bass Powaaaa" vocals. So I then started putting my full attention into just Hardcore alone. Nowadays there isn't much music I dislike. I started a DJ stream during lockdown last year where I played everything from 90s rave to 70s Disco. The whole series can be found on www.soundcloud.com/LeeUHF (Quick plug) Tell us about the Bedlam events? How did they come about? Bedlam was the name of mine and Martin Space's house parties back in 1998- 2000 They were ace, Our mutual friend Pat would host them at his house and we even booked Djs and MCs that were known locally (DJ Max was one) It wasnt until I started getting booked at a night called Defiance in Barnsley in 2001 that I realized It was possible to put a good event on with a small budget. In June 2001 the first real Bedlam event was hosted at a The Mulberry Tavern pub on Arundel Gate in Sheffield. We had Topgroove play and although it seemed and felt a good night it was the most stressfull thing I had ever done in my life at the time. Haha. But the seed was planted and we then put on a Thursday night rave, just up the road at Uropa club and booked Sharkey. It fucking bombed... Hard. LOL It wasnt until November that year we found a function room, quite similar to the one Defiance used in Barnsley, It was situated on Infirmary Road, Sheffield and the place was called `George IV` This really helped us elevate the event more and we were regularly putting on parties with different themes (Old skool night, North night, Future Dance night) and booked some top DJs along with it, but around late 2002 the pub got sold and the new owners were not up for us doing our events, despite zero trouble happening there and them always being full. Who was promoting these with you? Martin Space for the most part was my partner doing it, With some help from a couple of local friends we knew along the way. So when did the Total Bedlam events start and why ? in late 2003. It was at the time I was working in Reflex Records, a friend from school I had not seen in quite a few years came in the shop as he had heard I was Djing out and about. It was Mc Keyes. Obviously Keyes was the person I came up with early on Mcing and attending raves and we lost touch for a few years after I left school as he had stopped going to raves. Long story short he told me he was still Mcing and wanted to get involved back in Hardcore I suggested we could look into events and told him about Bedlam. The idea was for us to do something totally different and on a much bigger scale, We did our research, Found a big popular venue in the centre of the UK (The Venue in Long Eaton) and Total Bedlam was born. We started with 2 huge events in April 2004 both of them had huge line ups including Force & Styles, Devastate, Vortex, Hixxy, Storm, Whizzkid, Demand, Jay Precott & Frantic they also had 3 rooms to put music in enabling us to bring in a seperate new talent room and a Techno room. Our idea was with it being central we could showcase the best of everythng across the country and try and bring the Yorkshire scene and the rest of the country to one spot. Unfortunately it did not work that way down the line. Not many people in Yorkshire were willing to go to raves outside of the area, despite us booking Mcs & DJs from there so as time went on we catered more for our crowd that was there and what they wanted. I would loved to have supported my roots alot more back then but our crowd dictated what we did, It wasn't all bad though as it went on to gain some huge success being voted No.1 Monthly event in the UK by Mixmag and we were notorious for bringing alot of `firsts` to the UK rave scene in the form of Foeign DJs, B2Bs and Live PAs. Doing Total Bedlam really got me to understand more about music culture and rave culture on a larger scale, as we got to really feel the high's and lows of this from being involved at this level. Big lessons were learnt, good and bad. You also get a lot more haters when running events, trust me. Few little known facts about Total Bedlam Joey Riot & Dj Kurt met at Total Bedlam and I persuaded them to play B2B for us which was a catalyst for them starting their partnership up. There's a story about how Brisk & Seduction absolutely hated each others guts. They did not speak to each other for years. We booked them in the same room on the same night one time (Accidently of course) We narrowly avoided a fist fight but we did actually get them to hash it out and talk. A couple of months later Brisk was playing Uproar. Haha We were also the first event outside of London to Book Finnish Freeform DJs There was numerous times Mixmag mentioned us as the best monthly event in the Midlands When we put our 1st Birthday event on, out of nowhere HTID put on a free party at Air in Birmingham. This seemed to anger a lot of the internet (ush.net for one) and the backlash was so big Hixxy called me asking me to post something online saying I was alright about it.... Righteo! Theres some recordings on the events of me Mcing.. The last time I ever did it (Most Total Bedlam & Bedlam sets can be found at www.mixcloud.com/BedlamRecords So talk us through how you started producing music? Okay well around 2002 Brian Topgroove invited me and Martin Space to his studio up in Hull, Me and Martin had spoken about doing some music ourselves so it was a great opportunity for us. We made a bootleg of Deep Incision by Helix... It had Human Traffic movie samples and It was terrible. Haha. After that I really caught the bug for it, but Bri had decided to focus all his efforts into improving himself in the studio and making tunes for his trance label so did not have time to do much more with us, but he did introduced me to Dave Devastate who had moved his studio into the same building as Bri up in Hull and I carried on from there with Dave. Obviously with me wanting to write Hardcore Dave was a great fit as he was already wel known for his huge hit releases on the Blatant Beats & Next Generation labels. I was up with Dave every month writing tracks and he would engineer and put my ideas together while teaching me bits and bobs along the way. So how did Bedlam Records come about? We wrote A LOT of music over 2003 and 2004. and naturally I wanted to get it out, so with Daves direction and advise I put Bedlam Records together mid 2003. How did you set it up? Dave pointed me to the pressing plant and to the distributor, and I paid for artwork to be done for releases. It also helped that I worked in a record shop (Reflex Records) at the time, which was great to help promote it. What tunes came out and what artists involved etc! You can find the releases on discogs but our first 5 vinyls were by Me, Devastate, Riddler, Freestyle, Mc Domer, Invader, Adam J, Vinyl & Devotion You mentioned you worked in Reflex Records, Sheffield. How vital was that in helping you get contacts/networking within the Underground scene? It had its plus points but also negatives to go with it. The good points were that I never missed music being released. Nothing got passed me. I also got on great with distributors like Simon Underground at UM and Jay at Alpha Magic who always hooked me up with test presses and early promos before they were due to be released in the shops. I was making sure I was selling more music than any other shop, so this really kept the distributors happy who were pushing the releases to us. I was the head buyer for most of the music there. and I did a bloody good job of it. Having upfront music was great for me. Along with my own label stuff, it was a time when people started booking DJs for having original music and not what everyone else could get and play. I also got to know everyone buying the records too, making some cool friends and acquaintances during that period. On the downside you had to work Saturdays and I was severely underpaid I obviously did not learn my lesson with this though as I ended up working at Hard To Find Records in Birmingham years later. Haha. Is there anything you really miss about those early days? Event wise I miss undiscovered events and not knowing everything there was to know about a rave until you actually got there. The unknown was quite exciting and turning up somewhere that was fully banging was always a nice surprise Music wise I miss the hunt. Getting on a National Express coach every Saturday when I was 17yrs old, to an unknown city to find a record shop you saw on the back of a Vibealite or Slammin Vinyl flyer. You`d turn up and find a gem like Selecta Disc Nottingham .Or get a big fat `L` landing at a marketplace in Chesterfield not selling anything at all. It was 50/50 most weekends but it was an amazing time for me. You didnt have discogs or Youtube etc so most music was new and unknown and travelling around was the only way to find the tunes you wanted. Especially if you liked a lot of genres like me. I did this every weekend for over a year when I first bought my decks, I look back on this really fondly as we had such a laugh travelling up and down the country Now days with social media you know everything about every event and Dj now and track now. Thats not where the excitment is now. And things you dont really miss?! Swings and round abouts though. I guess It is quite nice to have every tune ever at your finger tips now. And I definitely do not miss having to carry a 40kg Record box anymore (My back wouldnt handle it either) Moving into recent years can you talk to us about your switch away from Hardcore & Harstyle and into Drum & Bass? With Hard Bass It got really stagnent when the UK Distributors got a hold of all the big releases as I said earlier so that frazzled out for me around 2005 I was still releasing and DJing hardcore up until 2010 but I wont lie, my love had fizzled out over time. The main reason for it fizzling out was when a friend of mine helped me to discover a sound in Drum & Bass I never knew existed named `Neurofunk` It was all quite sudden really but I went to a legendary night supporting this music in London called `Renegade Hardware` Up until this, I thought the hardest and darkest D&B you could get was Dillinja. But on this night I discovered Noisia, Spor & Black Sun Empire. I walked out that club finding a brand new love and as it was such a new sound I had found I got the buzz I got back in the day from hunting for music, and I was now out to discover as many producers as possible making it. From then I found a lot of Drum & Bass that was a lot harder, It had a lot of Hardcore Techno elements too and it really appealed to me a lot. The artists I was really feeling back then were Current Value, Ewun, Evol Intent, Dylan & Tech Itch. This new found love taking me back hunting really got my disinterest for hardcore to grow and I just eventually stopped buying and listening to it. Looking back now my original loves were Freeform & Hardcore Techno. Neurofunk for me is the D&B Equivelent of Freeform while the Harder side of D&B is almost Hardcore techno. What goes around comes around I guess. Tell me about your D&B project Drtbox? Well aound 2007 I was still DJing D&B under `Lee UHF` and I was promoting a multi genre event called `RAW` (Sets can be found at www.mixcloud.com/Raw_Birmingham) We booked a world champion beatboxer in 2010 called Reeps One and he brought along a DJ with him. They did like a DJ vs Beatboxer battle set and it was amazing. It inspired me to try something similar. My idea was to find a beatboxer, a Drummer & an MC and tour performing sets live. This is how Dirtbox was born, it was basically a band. But doing this got me some insane gigs around the world and really helped me to get my name out especially being a small fish in such a big pond as the D&B/Bass music scene. I ended up touring a lot. Playing across the pond in Australia, USA, China, All over Europe, Canada, Dubai & loads more. Its been an amazing experience doing that the past 10 years and very humbling. Since mid 2019 though, we stopped playing together regularly as its really hard getting 4 people together constantly to practice and tour abroad, so I am back to my Lee UHF alias doing sets alone... For now The name lives on though in the form of a clothing brand and a record label Ahh so are you still running labels now? Yes still in the thick of it all. Dirtbox Recordings is the first D&B label of mine and is doing exceptionally well. (DirtboxRecordings.co.uk) We havent done any vinyls as yet due to the current climate with music but its getting alot of support from some really huge names in Drum & Bass such as Noisia, Benny V, Mollie Collins, Drumsound, Ray Keith, Koven, Aphrodyte, Freqax & Doc Scott to name a few I also run a Bass House label called `R U SRS?` (Pronounced "Are you serious") Its just a bit of fun for me as a project but its getting huge support at the moment from people like DJ EZ, Flava D, Korrupt FM, Marcus Nasty & Djs on Kiss FM & Rinse FM radio stations. ( RUSRS.co.uk ) And more recently, I have launched a brand new label, VTO Records. Which is co- run with a friend of mine. (A former freeform producer from the early 2000s now turned D&B producer) Dan Traced. This project is something for us to sign as much music as possible from around the world under the Neurofunk banner and I also wanted to seperate this sound from what I have planned on Dirtbox ( VTORecords.co.uk ) The first release lands in June and I am proper fucking excited for it. So what about writing your own music? I still do, but my output is nowhere near what I would love it to be.I released an EP on Dirtbox in October and I have one in June too. There is also a Neurofunk/Hard D&B album I released a few years ago that you can download for free ( www.soundcloud.com/DirtboxRecordings ) Drum & Bass is so fuckling hard to make, I was not fully able to write music on my own until 2009 and when I started attempting Drum & Bass in 2012 I had to learn a lot of new stuff. It seriously is another level of skill to writing hardcore and it takes a lot longer. Im still way, way off anything I consider to be the highest qualty. Back in the day it wasnt unknown to just knock out a full hardcore track and start a new one in just one day, but for Drum & Bass It can take weeks or even months to get something finished Being older also has its disadvantages as I have alot of new responsibilities now running my own businesses and spending time with my family so sat 12hrs a day making music is unfortunately not something I can do as often as I did when I was younger. How different in the scene in Birmingham compared to Yorkshire? Depends really. If I was to comment on the Drum & Bass or House music scene, which are the 2 biggest music genres in both cities. I would say they are very very similar. In Sheffield for example, just like Birmingham you have your older clubbers who like the classic nights, You get your rudeboys who like your `Jump Up D&B` and your house music posers. In both cities you also have huge Universities full of youngsters wanting all this music so I dont see much difference at all. Hardcore wise, Im not so sure about Yorkshire any more. Are there any regular hardcore nights happening? Obviously Uprising, Dizstruxshon and the like are one in a million. Very very different than any other Hardcore city or region in the world Birmingham had a really good Hardcore scene in 2004-2009 with a few regular nights and of course the mighty HTID, Uproar & Hardcore Heaven doing regular parties here. You dont see many of those now though in the whole country let alone Sheffield & Birmingham You've also played at events around the world, how do they differ from the UK in organisation & scale? Not many differences. You get your huge, huge festivals and your underground, more intimate clubs also every where you go. It does depend on the sound though Europe has huge festivals literally only playing Neurofunk D&B. far more big events there than the UK. One thing I do find abroad in some places is the level of excitment people have for you being there. Its unmatched due to the fact some places dont get to see alot of Djs from abroad often. Australia for one. These guys are 1000s of miles away so they dont get many events where as with Hardcore & D&B in the UK we have been spoiled over the years. Between September & November in Birmingham you will find D&B parties constantly 2-3 times a week. All at capacity too. Drum & Bass has most certainly given me great opportunities travelling. I feel truly blessed to have touched every contenant on earth and to have played music on it. What do you have planned next? Any new music or events on the horizon? Of course, Im not happy unless Im busy, The labels will be releasing constantly through the year again like last (COVID or not) and the new label VTO Records launches in June. Events wise I do have some plans for something when things get back to normal and it will be outdoors but I cant say much more than that until have things set up after the Pandemic restrictions ease up. Gigs are not on the top of my list at the moment though as I have had my first child recently and I dont think I could bare to fly away from her for the night just yet. Any plans to make Hardcore again? Maybe even some Crossbreed?! Hardcore.. Ummm, I am not against it. But I have had nothing inspire me to do it. Crossbreed & D&B you will see a few releases by me this year 100% Vinyl or CD/Digital? The age old debate! You pro digital? No Im just pro-music, and pro-innovation. I dont care what you play music on I just care that its great and inspires me. People get so torn up about this debate its hilarious because none of these people could tell you if a WAV or a vinyl is played in a club unless they saw inside the DJ box. I always say you're not exactly learning chess or are qualified to fly a rocket if you Dj on vinyl. I learnt a 3 year old once how to mix 2 records together. So people need to get off their high horse on that one. Makes no sense to me. Its all about how you make the music sound and how you get a crowd to pay attention. If thats beat juggling on turntables like a DMC champion or using a CDJ in a ridiculously profound way with effects and live edits. It doesnt matter both have the same outcome, so neither side are right when they debate whats best. I see benefits in both angles. Although I always wonder why DJs rock up with a boatload of MP3s and then expect punters to buy vinyl when they are not playing it themselves?! I dont think its expecting punters to buy vinyl If you are releasing music you are wanting punters to enjoy your music. No matter how they play it or pay for it. I think its great when producers put out a few options for us to choose from. But I dont know any out there spinning MP3s and forcing vinyl down our throats. 99% of music released is digital anyhow. Personally I use Mp3s for convenience and to take a bigger selection. Carrying vinyl is rough lol. But I still do vinyl sets as it just keeps it interesting for me and I have a great collection so I want it to be put to good use I think the main flaw of download music now is the fact its very "throw away" theres tons of it out as its easier to release, so you do get a lot of stale poorly made music. When you only had vinyl to release it on for DJs, it was expensive so you were a lot more choosy about the releases you paid to press up because the financial investment to pressing them up was a lot greater. It is harder now to promote music though masses of releases every day.. Anyone can set up a digital label nowadays but the big difference in a quality one is understanding the quality control. promoting it properly and promo'ing the music to the right DJs. I look at each release I put out by deciding firstly would I release it on vinyl given the chance and second am I going to spend money promoting it? Ok then! The Mix!! Can you talk us through? Why did you chose these tracks?! Okay so I have put together a selection of Neurofunk & Hard edged Drum & Bass for you. I thought since alot of people would be seeing and hearing this who were possibly familiar with my hardcore I would do something to help them get familiar with what I do now. Theres a few older bits thrown in but also alot of promo material from my label so you are getting some exclusives right here fella. Thanks! Thank you kev. Its been great And finally!! Any Shouts?!!? Of course. Obviously a huge thanks to yourself for having me onboard letting me talk some shit, Its been really nice to reminisce. Also, everyone from my journey in the late 90s to the present day. If you Dj'd with me, for me or even booked me. Thank you. Lots of people have given me chances also along the way to, and I am truly grateful. What people don't know, is that behind events, labels and DJ tours, there are a lot of colleagues behind the scenes that are intricate in making things work, Diaries, Drivers, Artwork, Distrubutors, Sound Engineers, Promoters. The list is endless but I've never forgot anyone and Im forever grateful even if we have not spoken in a long time. And finally a big shout out to Lucy, my missus who literally looked after our daughter all day without my help to do this interview and mix haha. She`ll deserves a medal for what she does x Kev Gees Darkstep Classics Part 1 2005-2010 1 - Audio - Delusional 2 - Current Value & Donny - Nightmare Man 3 - Dylan & Bkey - Slave To Life (Limewax Remix) 4 - Audio - Warehouse VIP 5 - Current Value - Fear Machines (Remix) 6 - Nanotek - Fresh Hell 7 - Limewax - Strike From The Land 8 - Mystification - Computers 9 - Current Value - You Cant Play God 10 - Limewax - Pain 11 - SPL - Denied 12 - Raiden - RM Bleeps 13 - Current Value - Addict 14 - Proket - Norilsk 15 - The Panacea - Burning Like Fire (The Sect Remix) 16 - Evol Intent Feat Blip - Flipside 17 - Evol Intent - Middle Of The Night 18 - Current Value - Clear Blue Water Lee UHFs Tracklist:- 1/ ID- Traced- Forthcoming (VTO Records) 2/ Agressor Bunx- The Offering VIP (Eatbrain) 3/ Phace & Subtension- For Good (Neosignal) 4/ Phace- Caged (Vision) 5/ Phace- Spray (Vision) 6/ Traced- The System (Dirtbox Recordings) 7/ Lee UHF- Epic Ping Pong (Dirtbox Recordings) 8/ Lee UHF- That Wiggy Thing (Dirtbox Recordings) 9/ Full Kontakt & Deejay Delta (Dirtbox Recordings) 10/ Lee UHF & Rogue- The Music (Traced Remix) Forthcoming (Dirtbox Recordings) 11/ Burr Oak- Teleporter (Blackout) 12/ Jade & MNDSCP- Dangerous (Korsakov) 13/ Killbox- Cypher (Ram) 14/ Resurgence & O`Den- Chicago Style- Forthcoming (Dirtbox Recordings) 15/ 3rdknd- Pingers (Neonlight Remix) (Barcode) 16/ Gancher & Ruin- The Sect (No Music Allowed) 17/ Donny & Katharsys- Cause & Effect (Barcode) 18/ Mefjus- Suicide Bassline (Panacea VIP- Lee UHF Edit) (Unreleased) 19/ Jade- This Is Neurofunk (Unreleased)
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Wooooo Woooo Erm WOOOOO! Im the ghost of Christmas past. And im here to share some early millenium Banging Trance & Hardcore courtesy of Mr Jake Nicholls & D-stroy... Woooo Woooooooo............ Its now part 3 of our Northern Gathering Reunion! Please enjoy & share the mixes whilst your neck another baileys & mince pie!! (and maybe a sneaky Gary?) Interviews below! Merry Xmas you filthy animals! Kev Geex So can you talk us through how you became involved with Northern Gathering? I'd been resident at Uprising for a number of years at the time and was asked by Firthy 'king of the forest people' if I'd like to play for his station, it was something different at the time and lots of other great lads were involved too, it was a lot of fun. What can you remember about your first set? Tunes played? other djs there? Where was it held? As I recall, we were all at DJams, Bombjack, Martin, Tommi etc.. were all there, it was a brilliant atmosphere. My set for this Xmas special is a fairly accurate snapshot of that era. What do you think of that era of Rave compared to nowadays? There seemed to be a lot more going on, loads of cool people and parties, it was a really enjoyable ride. It's hard to compare the two eras though, as the dynamic has changed a lot since. In a way I think much of it felt more underground at the time as social media didn't really exist, everyone was in it more for the fun and not for page likes. More noticeably you didn't see anyone on their phone trying to record anything, the dancefloor was fully dialled into the music & it all added to the atmosphere. So much different to how it is now. What have you been doing since Northern Gathering finished? Do you still play out etc? I've been producing trance and hardcore, and DJing here and there, I'm grateful to have played in the Netherlands, Ireland, Germany, Thailand, HTID in the sun, and Ibiza a few times since. What lessons have you learned about the rave scene in general since the mid 00tees? Far too many to list
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Christian Pierret, former French Minister of Industry and member of the board of different biotech and MedTech European companies gives a report on the recent in-person and virtual HealthTech Innovation Days held in Paris in October 2020. Now in it's second year, HTID attracted international participants, global pharmaceutical companies, and investors in life sciences, MedTech, biotech and digital technology. COVID-19 is not only a crisis for this community but a challenge to invent and create new R&D to breakthrough the current landscape. @HTID_Paris #HTID #HealthTechInnovationDays #healthcare #COVID19 HTDI-Paris.com Download the transcript here
Christian Pierret, former French Minister of Industry and member of the board of different biotech and MedTech European companies gives a report on the recent in-person and virtual HealthTech Innovation Days held in Paris in October 2020. Now in it's second year, HTID attracted international participants, global pharmaceutical companies, and investors in life sciences, MedTech, biotech and digital technology. COVID-19 is not only a crisis for this community but a challenge to invent and create new R&D to breakthrough the current landscape. @HTID_Paris #HTID #HealthTechInnovationDays #healthcare #COVID19 HTDI-Paris.com Listen to the podcast here
Mixcloud-Soundcloud-Apple Music fanlink.to/undergroundpoliticsradio Follow @holley_frisky Playing out since the age of 17 when she landed her first residency in Swansea, Frisky quickly made her mark on the hard dance scene. She took the UK and beyond by storm with her harder sounds, using her own tunes alongside bootlegs to wow the crowds. During that time, she came a long way, securing International bookings in Denmark, Germany, Australia, Spain, Holland and USA. Frisky consistently destroyed dance floors all around the UK playing for the likes of Frantic, Bionic, Pam's House, Atmosphere, Resonate, HTID, Hindsight and Storm. She was also a regular at the big scale events which include Slammin Vinyl's Westfest and Tranz-mission, Defqon1, Q Base and Infinity Rave (Germany), Escape Into The Park and HTID In The Sun. Since taking some time away from the harder styles she is back to showcase her new Techy mix. With the same level of energy and exciting mixing style this still has Frisky written all over it! 1. Free Love (Original Mix) - Genix feat Sue McLaren 2. A Good One (Original Mix) - Market Memories 3. Ketamine Dream (Original Mix) - Eli Brown, Daddy Dino 4. Hocus Pocus (Original Mix) - Eli Brown 5. 3am (Original Mix) - Eli Brown 6. Sometimes (Original Mix) - Don't Blink 7. False Truths (Original Mix) - Mason Maynard 8. Freak (Original Mix) - Cari Golden, Camelphat 9. Immortal (Original Mix) - Eli Brown 10. Moon Rocks (Original Mix) - Enrico Sangiuliano 11. At Night (Original Mix) - Dave Spoon 12. Climax (Original Mix) - Marco Faraone 13. Comatose (Original Mix) - Eats Everything 14. Make It Better - (Zac & Bakka BR Remix) - Maxximal, Zak, Ashibah Follow UP Radio: www.facebook.com/Undergroundpolitics www.twitter.com/UndgrndPolitics
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Lee UHF at the first ever HTID at Air Superclub Birmingham
My Set from the second Hardcore room for HTID Milton Keynes NYE 04/05 I believe I played at around 1am after Sharkey B2B Kevin Energy and was followed by Marc Smith
HTID first time putting an event on at Ministry Of Sound London. I plated a full on Bedlam Records Hardcore set
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Andy Whitby’s BOUNCE ANTHEMS100% Vocal Mix - Volume 4All episodes: www.BounceAnthems.comMonthly Podcast: www.BounceHeaven.co.uk146 Track Album: www.BounceCD.com
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
On Friday 10th April 2020 (Good Friday) Chapel Of Chaos goes once again back in time to the millennium hardcore era 2000 to 2012 with a whole night of music from this magical period. Throughout the 2000s exciting club nights like North, Oblivion and Species were pioneering the sounds of this new, exciting hardcore sound and happy events like HTID, Slammin’ Vinyl and Uproar we’re showcasing the harder sounds in their second arena throughout the UK. Only a stone’s throw from legendary venues like Air, Custard Factory and the HMV Institute in Birmingham we will celebrate this era once again at our home Suki10c with the DJs and producers that reigned supreme during this time. Warming up to this party we will have promo mixes from DJs on the night: Tones Tech Nick The Doctor Alarm Enigma Thumpa Tomo Expect to hear music from Angerfist, Ophidian, Tommyknocker, Nosferatu, DJ Mad Dog, Hellsystem, Art Of Fighters, Evil Activites, Neophyte, The Outside Agency, Promo, The DJ Producer, Dione, Hellfish, Noize Suppressor, Meagashira, Catscan, Korsakoff, The Playah, Nitrogenetics, DJ D, Endymion, E-Noid, Scott Brown, Negative A, Darkcontroller, Placid K, Tymon, Unexist, Headbanger, Meccano Twins, Tieum, The Wishmaster, D-Passion, Na-Goyah, Dr Z-Vago, Enzyme X, Deathmachine, Dyprax, Peaky Pounder, The Viper, Nexes, N-Vitral, Rotterdam Terror Corps and countless others...
★ Next BOUNCE HEAVEN Event!!!★ Saturday March 7th 2020!!!★ PARK HALL CHORLEY!!!★ http://skiddle.com/e/13718109Episode 20 of the World's #1 Bounce Mix Series welcomes STARMAN and INITI8 into the studio alongside a 60min 3 deck mix by ANDY WHITBY of the biggest & best tracks smashing up the clubs right now!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.BounceHeaven.co.uk
Episode 19 of the World's #1 Bounce Mix Series welcomes ANNE SAVAGE and PITCH INVADER into the studio alongside a 60min 3 deck mix by ANDY WHITBY of the biggest & best tracks smashing up the clubs right now!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.BounceHeaven.co.uk
★ THE NEW ALBUM!!!★ www.BounceCD.com★ SIGNED TRIPLE CD & ULTIMATE USB!!!!!Episode 18 is here - ending the year and decade LOUD - featuring guest mixes by MATT WIGMAN & KRITIKAL MASS!!!!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.Bounce-Heaven.co.uk
★ THE NEW ALBUM FOR CHRISTMAS!!★ www.BounceCD.com★ SIGNED TRIPLE CD & ULTIMATE USB!!!!!Episode 17 of the World's NUMBER 1 MIX SERIES welcomes SCOTLAND'S FINEST - GBX & SPARKOS!!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.Bounce-Heaven.co.uk
BOUNCE HEAVEN HITS NEWCASTLE!Friday 1st November 2019DIGITAL!bit.ly/BounceHeavenDigital //For Episode 16 of the World's #1 Bounce and Hard-Dance Podcast, Andy invites Klubfiller back onto the guest mix, but not before Whitby smashes out a chaotic mix of his biggest & best tracks from his show-stopping performance at BTID ZN!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.Bounce-Heaven.co.uk
BOUNCE HEAVEN HITS NEWCASTLE!Friday 1st November 2019DIGITAL!bit.ly/BounceHeavenDigitalEpisode 15 sees ANDY WHITBY deliver the biggest & best big bounce bass bombs from his insane SUMMER OF BOUNCE 40 SHOW TOUR, plus welcomes rising Star DJ Angel to deliver an absolutely incredible guest mix!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.Bounce-Heaven.co.uk
BOUNCE HEAVEN HITS WIGAN!Saturday 31st August 2019PURE NIGHTCLUB!www.skiddle.com/whats-on/Wigan/Pu…-Heaven/13606077/A month after the biggest & best episode to date, ANDY WHITBY returns for Podcast 14, smashing together his favourite anthems from his weekly club sets around the World!For the guest mix HEADZUP continue their epic rise through the scene by dropping a full-throttle 30mins of madness!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!www.Bounce-Heaven.co.uk
Andy Whitby’s BOUNCE ANTHEMS100% Vocal Mix - Volume 3All episodes: www.BounceAnthems.comMonthly Podcast: www.BounceHeaven.co.uk146 Track Album: www.BounceCD.com
As we pass the halfway point of 2019, Andy Whitby has delivered an insane 60min showcase of the biggest & best tracks, bootlegs, smash ups and mixes from his weekly sets that has made him the most indemand artist in the game.For the guest mix OUTFORCE drops in and delivers a selection of all his own productions, making this the biggest & best episode to date!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
This month one of Whitby's closest friends and studio partner AUDOX smashes onto the guest mix, delivering an absolute monster selection of Big Bounce Bass Bangers!Each month, ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
This month we welcome DARIO ROSSI onto the guest mix who smashes out an absolute monster selection of sing-a-long anthems!Each month, ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
GRAB THE ALBUM - www.BounceCD.comJoin us as we prepare for THE GOOD FRIDAY GATHERING on April 19th in Evoque Preston - BOUNCE HEAVEN vs SANCTUARY!This month we welcome RAUL SOTO into the mix who delivers a massive masterclass of quick fire mixes and chaotic Bounce Bass Bombs!ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
Bellanova “Carla aka. Bellanova, inicia su seguimiento hacia este subgénero en el año 2008, descubriendo a través de videojuegos de simulación: DDR y festivales de renombre como “”HTID”” a unos de sus mas grandes ídolos e inspiradores: DARREN STYLES & DJ GAMMER. Enamorada del ambiente de estos festivales electrónicos y artistas especialmente relacionados con él mundo HDM, decide en representar algo muy distinto a lo que muchos siguen como Hardstyle o Hardcore: ser DJ y exponente emergente de UK Hardcore/ Powerstomp en Chile. con el objetivo de mostrar un concepto nuevo, único y diferente. CONOCE MAS SOBRE BELLANOVA imperiohxc.com/hxc/bellanova
ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!This month we welcome POOMSTYLES onto the guest mix, who delivers an incredible smash up of his biggest & best studio bombs!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
Join us for the 4th instalment of MC's unplugged were we find out about various MC's journey through their musical career. This episode find out about MC Enemy, one of the most talented & all round gifted MC's the UK Hardcore scene has produced.
ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!This month we welcome John Neal onto the guest mix, who cuts, chops and smashes his way through a 30min selection of the biggest bangers doing damage in his weekly sets!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
ANDY WHITBY delivers the World's #1 Bounce & Hard Dance Podcast directly to your ears - featuring a 30min mix by the main man, featuring every smasher from his weekly club performances around the World!This month we welcome ONE&2 onto the guest mix, a man making his incredible return to the decks at this years BTID ZN, tune in to catch some of the hottest tracks in the game right now!THE BOUNCE HEAVEN PODCAST; For the car, bus, gym, pre-party, afterparty and every party in between! WE ARE THE BOUNCE GENERATION!
Take us back to HTID with this episode! Special thanks to Daniel Seven and Nobody for their contributions to this episode.
Take us back to HTID with this episode! Special thanks to Daniel Seven and Nobody for their contributions to this episode.
Take us back to HTID with this episode! Special thanks to Daniel Seven and Nobody for their contributions to this episode.
Take us back to HTID with this episode! Special thanks to Daniel Seven and Nobody for their contributions to this episode.
Happy Hardcore France Podcast presents a brand new mix from Miguel Kore! It's time to warm up for the best event of the year! HTID IN THE SUN (Magaluf SP) A few tunes inside, only brand new and worldwide imported tracks! TRACKLIST : 1 / Seventhrun - Angolmois 2/ Spojaz - Find Me 3/ Getty - Doper 4/ Relect - Rave More Than Ever 5/ Hommarju - Pull on Horn 6/ KO3 - Make me crazy 7/ Abitan - Falsehood 8/ Darren Styles & Callum Higby - TMA 9/ Gammer - Pegboard Nerds X Quiet Disorder - Go Berzerk 10/ GTA - Saria's Turn Up 11/ Jekyll & Clarkey Ft. MC Astro - New Skool (Dave Castellano & DjFatSteve remix) 12/ Seventhrun - Rinne 13/ T4TSUYA - Electro 14/ Seventhrun - Infinite Star(Stu Infinity Remix) 15/ Rain Man & Krysta Youngs - Habbit (Dave Castellano remix) 16/ Diplo - 6th Gear (Twine Remix) 17/ Ryunosuke Kudo - Starship ALSO AVAILABLE ON ITUNES @ HappyHardcoreFrance
First up with our new signing from LA, America MITOMORO https://soundcloud.com/mitomoro
If you wear HTID on your sleeve, then you're probably already Laser's friend. Influenced by the sounds of rhythm games, Laser's weapon of choice became hardcore rave music after years in the fandom dedicated to furry art. Their enthusiasm for high energy rave music and the fur community inspired them to create FURRY RAVE CREW, a podcast to promote a generation of pretend animal people with love for electronic music. SUPPORT AND FOLLOW LASER: SoundCloud Mixcloud Twitter FurAffinity SUPPORT AND FOLLOW FURRY RAVE CREW: Twitter Telegram JOIN THE CREW BY APPLYING HERE Laser artwork by Seiryuuden Podcast intro produced by ♥GOJII♥ Podcast feed hosted and maintained by @Veyote
This week on #TheBassline we teamed up with HTID to bring you an official ITMS Bootcamp winners announcement! Ft Guest Mix from 2013 HTID Comp Winners Technical Difficulties & HTID Boss man Ajay! ## Technical Difficulties ## Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/technicaldifficulties HearThis: https://hearthis.at/technicaldifficultiesofficial/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Technical-Difficulties-209695825736146/?fref=ts https://www.facebook.com/groups/116067331876338/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCvB6Y5NS60Xa4HPAs5y76ww ## Ajay & HTID ## Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/andrewpickering?fref=ts HTID FB: https://www.facebook.com/htid.official/?fref=ts Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/ajay-pickering Dont Forget to Like/Share/Comment if you Enjoy feel free to feedback! :) keep up to date with the show: Stu Woods: www.facebook.com/DJStuWoods The Bassline: www.facebook.com/NextGenerationInMusic Thanks for the support :) #OneLove
Stu Woods & MC Leggett - HTID Itms Bootcamp Mix california love edit Eufeion - Exhilirate Alex Prospect - Calypso Lady Dubbz - The Meaning Fully Focused - Bright Lights Mizel & Wilson - Crowd Reaction Dave Castellano Ft Lewis - Waiting MC Eruption Ft Macks Wolf & Yorkshire Ripper - Im Here Diplo & GTA - Boy oh Boy (Gammer Edit) Dextone - Ninja Kid Joey Riot & Mob - This Could Be Love Styles, Dougal & Gammer - We Stay Young Chris Fear - First Serve (Jakka B Remix) Switch Bootleg Joey Riot V Bassline Animals - Mad World Congratulations to everyone who made the finals.. make sure you check out the event page for ITMS... set to be the best one yet!!!! https://www.facebook.com/events/1661103997507146/permalink/1721249574825921/
Within the last couple of years, JAJ has helped bring back the happy vibes! Having been featured in many online radio shows and collaborated alongside well-known djs through 7D The Seven Dimensions of Euphoria and his current show on HappyHardcore.com, Vibez 2 Da Core, JAJ has been able to spread his name throughout the hardcore community. Coming from San Diego, California, he is one of the few djs representing the happy hardcore scene locally and continues to help promote labels and djs from around the world. He is also part of Kikwear's National Street Team and a sponsored dj from US label, Justice Hardcore, supporting and promoting Kikwear's rave clothing and the sounds of Justice Hardcore in Southern California.
Within the last couple of years, JAJ has helped bring back the happy vibes! Having been featured in many online radio shows and collaborated alongside well-known djs through 7D The Seven Dimensions of Euphoria and his current show on HappyHardcore.com, Vibez 2 Da Core, JAJ has been able to spread his name throughout the hardcore community. Coming from San Diego, California, he is one of the few djs representing the happy hardcore scene locally and continues to help promote labels and djs from around the world. He is also part of Kikwear's National Street Team and a sponsored dj from US label, Justice Hardcore, supporting and promoting Kikwear's rave clothing and the sounds of Justice Hardcore in Southern California.
Australian Happy Hardcore producer, S3RL, joins The Producer Podcast. DAW of choice: Reason 7 Workflow: Waits for an idea, gets the vocals, makes a bass line, and makes the rest of the song. Usually starts with vocals or bass line. Production tips: Start with an idea. Don’t’ make something out of nothing. Training resources: YouTube tutorials Influences: Breeze and Styles, Kevin Energy, and Gammer Favorite Softsynth: Subtractor Favorite Effects: Scream and Neptune Hardware: Voice tune and TC Helicon Successful career actions: Touring the US and performing at HTID in the sun. Best advice for aspiring producers: Make music you like. If it’s good people will share it. Production most proud of: MTC Links: Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/s3rl Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DJ.S3RL.Official.Fan.Page YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/S3RL Show notes by Sean Hanagan aka Time Aperture https://soundcloud.com/timeaperture
Episode 4 of the JB Recordings podcast Mix by DJ Fallon
Music In The Sun is the 2013 podcast from DjFatSteve & Dave Castellano
the 3rd episode of the jb recording podcast with a special guest mix from DJ JJ
This is the second episode of the JB recordings podcast. we have the latest hardcore tracks featured in the first half of the mix which is mixed by DJ Fidjit and in the second half we have a special guest mix from the justice hardcore label which is mix by an American DJ called Nobody Justice hardcore guest mix track listing TRACKLIST *Bring Me Back - Joey Riot VS Chaz Powerstomp Mix [Lethal Theory] *Part Of Me - Nobody (Joey Riot & Tom Revolution Remix) [F/C Justice Hardcore March 11 2013] *Soldiers On The Frontline - Alex BassJunkie & Riche [F/C Justice Hardcore Feb 4 2013] *Wait Up - Breeze & Modulate Feat Marie Louise [Future World] *Wonderland - Gisbo & Nobody Feat Gemma Macleod [F/C Justice Hardcore April 1 2013] *Sharp Dressed Spam - Technical Difficulties [Technical Difficulties] *Paradise - Tom Revolution Vs Rescue [F/C Justice Hardcore 2013] *Make It Right - Klubfiller [Klubbed Up] *Like It Loud - Alex Prospect & Becci (Joey Riot Powerbounce Remix) [Lethal Theory] *Titanium - David Guetta (Nobody Bootleg) *Give It To Me - Lady Dubbz [F/C Justice Hardcore March 18 2013]
April 2011's mix, mixed by Clodhopper. 1. Flyin & Sparky ft Charm - You Mean The World To Me (Joey Riot Remix) Beatfeet Records 2. Hixxy, Ramos & Punch - You're Gonna Love Me RSR Recordings 3. Petruccio vs Geos & Scandal - Sex, Drugs, Hardcore (Chaos Remix) Electric Euphoria Records 4. Joey Riot & Clodhopper - Pretty Slut Can You Feel It Media 5. Recon & Ramos - Sonic 909 RSR Recordings 6. Marley - Rave is Forever Electric Euphoria Records 7. Punch - ButtaMilkBizkits RSR Recordings 8. UFO & Scandal - Crazier (Technikore Remix) Electric Euphoria Records 9. Clodhopper - Spread Your Wings 10. Ramos, Punch & Protocol ft Shelley - Open Your Eyes RSR Recordings Clodhopper has been a resident at Fusion, played HTID, Hardcore Heaven, HTID in the Sun, Global Gathering, Global Energy Weekender, Hardcore Heaven Weekender, Sanctuary Festival and many other events. You can check her playing on april 21st at "On A Mission: Bank Holiday Madness 2011" , and find her on Facebook, Twitter & Soundcloud by using the buttons on the top of the page!