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Whats This Song Guys House/dubstep/electric

What is the difference between trance techno house and dubstep EDM music?

It's different by the BPM, thats what divides the genres in electronic music apart.

Traditionally

Trance is 135-145

Techno is 120-130

What is the name of the electro house song from the Red Circle club scene in John Wick?

The Red Circle club scene is a combination of four tracks. The first track is reminiscent of the drowning scene in Casino Royale, where Wick finishes a goon off by drowning him. The music is suitably titled "The Drowning" by  Le Castle Varna and it is 2:25 long: The transition scene involves Wick moving inside and outside from the club to the pool area and a chill-out track plays in the background. The juxtaposition of Wicks violence and the sweet female vocal in the track titled "Think" by Kaleida Which is a light bass-driven techno with a pretty female vocal. The track runs for 3:59:The next track in the ultra-violent nightclub scene is a filler track which builds tension before the full-on shootout of the main club. It is called "LED Spirals" by Le Castle Varna and it runs for just under a minute, or 58 seconds to be precise, It is the perfect build-up track to what is to be the final bloody conclusion of the nightclub scene:The main Techno track during the nightclub fight scene is by Le Castle Vania again and for the next three minutes and 12 seconds, all bets are off. Anything goes. The song is called "Shots Fired" and believe me I gave up trying to count them:When all the parts make up the whole, you get a ballet of violence quite incomparable with anything else of its time. The Red Circle Club scene mixes these four pieces of music to beautifully choreographed martial arts and gun-work which is completed in the least number of cuts possible. The violence is earthy, streetwise and even though the motivation of the main protagonist doesn't quite justify the bloodshed that follows, John Wick does work on so many levels. If you want to cut to the chase, forget the music above and sit-back and enjoy Keanu at his very best.The Castle Vania - The Red Circle (John Wick)Enjoy!

What is the difference between Techno, Trance, EDM and electronic music?

EDM, as has been previously answered, is Electronic Dance Music. It is a generalisation that was first coined in the mid-later 2000’s to describe the genres of music still performed in many night clubs following the “rave era” of the 90’s and early 2000’s. This included everything from Trance, House, Techno to Electro. In the following decade, the term EDM became used to describe a more “pop” form of electronic music that used some of the “cool bits” from the original genres and stirred them up into a quasi-trance, quasi-house bubblegum soup that millennials could dance to at festivals, though it is not identifiable as any of those genres from which it stole any characteristics.Techno: Emphasis on beat/percussion and sound FX. 128–135 bpm, but there is faster techno around. One of the oldest electronic genres alongside drum’n’bass, that had it’s beginnings rooted in the 1980’s. Techno could be considered Trance’s ‘father’.Trance: Emphasis on melody integrated into a masterful bassline with sound FX. 128–155bpm. Trance evolved out of Techno when Techno producers began experimenting with euphoric sounds and melody. The new genre that developed was an instant hit on the dancefloor, immediately adopted by many clubs during the 90’s rave era. The original Trance, or “old school” Trance sounded a lot more like Techno than it does today, but it evolved very quickly into the “classic” sound that characterised it in the latter half of the 90’s. It continued to evolve and refine itself during the 2000’s and beyond and has spawned ever increasing sub-genres. Trance and House could generally be considered genre siblings.EDM (#1): A general term to group electronic forms of dance music.EDM (#2): A bastardisation of the original dance genres that I often describe as “bubblegum”; its culture characterised by kids adorning 20–30 multicoloured wristbands on their arms and making hearties with their fingers, following an assortment of “pop star” DJ’s that find the time to stage-dive and occasionally throw cake at them.

House song that sounds like Infinity 2008!?

Hey I heard a song on the radio that sounds like infinity 2008. Has the whole sax thing going on and a male singer. I'm pretty sure it's not an old song. It be great if you guys could post some songs that might be it. Thank you!

Why do people tend to think electronic music is bad?

Most people think it sounds like a 3-5 minute song that sounds exactly the same all the way through. A lot of people don't have an ear for the progression changes that happens in electronica. Sometimes it can be subtle, so I can understand. I think it mostly has to do with people not listening to (or appreciating) the details that electronic music has within it.

EDM/Indie/Folk lovers, recommend me artists and songs please?

Yes, I know EDM and indie are completely different music genres. Anyways, I love indie, alternative, folk, and I'm starting to like EDM music. Can you guys recommend me some songs or artists?

I enjoyed the song "Don't You Worry Child" - Swedish House Mafia, so it would be great if you can recommend me songs like this one. Please and Thanks guys!

What is the name of that techno/dance song that goes dance dance dance?

possible three answers:“Blackbox - strike it up”. It has a sample that says dance 4x's tho.“Chic - Dance YOWSA, YOWSAH, YOWSAH”. Classic disco group and track! Nile Rogers the bass player, played the bassline for Daft Punk/Pharell - Get lucky (Up all night)“Earth People - Dance”. This track sampled the classic disco group “Chic - Dance dance dance Yowsah, Yowsah, Yowsah. This house track was a big club hit in the early 90’s. Please let us know if these helped, happy listening from Thee original Dj Mach-1 :)

Quality of music deteriorating?

Disclosure: I listen to nothing but rock music. I use that term rather loosely, by rock I mean there's an electric guitar and someone may or not be singing (so everything from Mogwai and Death Cab for Cutie to Underoath and Poison the Well).

Disclosure: I am also nineteen years old.

What I mean is that a lot of music coming out now (that I've heard) is utterly abhorrent. This seems to be happening across the board, but I notice it more with rap and pop music. Take a ten second beat, loop it fifteen times, add a person singing the same three lines and autotune it to hell and you've got your typical rap song. Music nowadays just seems to be lacking originality and imagination. All of these cookie cutter "musicians" like Lil' Wayne and Lady Gaga are turning music into nothing more than noise pollution.

I don't even care for how they influence people, because every genre negatively influences people in one way or another. I know there is good rap/hip hop music out there (Mos Def, Hieroglyphics, De La Soul) and I can only assume there is good pop music, too, but I don't hear that music. Likely, most people don't hear this music, either. Old rap music used to be about making a positive image of yourself, defying the stereotypes that plague ghetto youth. Today, we see morons like Drake and Kanye West talk using describing their upbringing with such hyperbole it's not even funny.

Rock music is the same thing, too. Bands and solo artists such as Nickleback and Avril Lavigne are, to put it nicely, a disgrace to rock music. At best, they are pop rock and at worst, not music at all. I ask people who listen to that kind of music if they've ever heard of Joe Satriani, Ramones, Nirvana, or even The Beatles and I'm lucky if they even know one.

Yes, I fully understand that 50 Cent is not rap, I understand that and agree with you, but most people don't, and that's what I'm trying to address. Go ask your average kid who listens to rap to name one rapper from the 80s/90s and you'll be lucky if they say Tupac or Notorious B.I.G.

I've gotten rather off-track, but do you think music in general is heading down the same downward slope? I'm in the minority, or so it seems, of people who dislike mainstream music because it is bad.

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