"Break!" episode artwork

EPISODE · May 16, 2014 · 3 MIN

"Break!"

from Kurt-thee-Inducer · host Kurt-thee-Inducer

(Updated!) As it turns out, the actual pattern that this track was created is from -- to the best of my memory -- sometime 2001 or possibly 2002, although I'm not sure. Regardless, this bad little ma'amma jamma of a track was created by the mighty John Wang (https://soundcloud.com/#john-wang-2) roughly two decades ago, when we our crew, Eff-Kay, was filtering through the rave scene. Plus, as a collective, we were finally starting to understand how to use sounds effects on my Roland MC-505, and distortion quickly became a favorite to experiment. While possibly being within the first ten patterns John Wang had made on my 505, this is also one for the first tracks he used distortion on. The distorted riff of "Break!" reminds me of something ATB or AK1200 would play. As for this particular (Hard Prairie Trance) mix, it is completely, and utterly brand new! While browsing my back catalog of potential tracks, I came upon this catchy little tune called "Break!" by John Wang. Me being me, I send Wang a message telling him about this really great old pattern of his. He said he'd like to hear it. So, I made a quick mix to show him. He dug it, and it gave me an idea of how to turn Break's pattern into an actual track. I love this mix, because it shows how I'm finally learning how to mix a dance track, and make it memorable. There are a couple of parts I would like to exploit more in this mix, but, when I did, it lost the integrity of what you now hear and feel. I'm at the point of my music making career where, if the music stops making me want to move, then it needs to be cut and remixed to retain that progressing feeling; to usher the unconscious foot tapping upon hitting the play button.

(Updated!) As it turns out, the actual pattern that this track was created is from -- to the best of my memory -- sometime 2001 or possibly 2002, although I'm not sure. Regardless, this bad little ma'amma jamma of a track was created by the mighty John Wang (https://soundcloud.com/#john-wang-2) roughly two decades ago, when we our crew, Eff-Kay, was filtering through the rave scene. Plus, as a collective, we were finally starting to understand how to use sounds effects on my Roland MC-505, and distortion quickly became a favorite to experiment. While possibly being within the first ten patterns John Wang had made on my 505, this is also one for the first tracks he used distortion on. The distorted riff of "Break!" reminds me of something ATB or AK1200 would play. As for this particular (Hard Prairie Trance) mix, it is completely, and utterly brand new! While browsing my back catalog of potential tracks, I came upon this catchy little tune called "Break!" by John Wang. Me being me, I send Wang a message telling him about this really great old pattern of his. He said he'd like to hear it. So, I made a quick mix to show him. He dug it, and it gave me an idea of how to turn Break's pattern into an actual track. I love this mix, because it shows how I'm finally learning how to mix a dance track, and make it memorable. There are a couple of parts I would like to exploit more in this mix, but, when I did, it lost the integrity of what you now hear and feel. I'm at the point of my music making career where, if the music stops making me want to move, then it needs to be cut and remixed to retain that progressing feeling; to usher the unconscious foot tapping upon hitting the play button.

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"Break!"

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Kurt Vonnegut: Reporter on the Afterlife Fountainhead Transmedia, Inc. Could death be a quality? A place? Not an ending, but an occurrence that changes those it happens to?In Kurt Vonnegut: Reporter on the Afterlife, Vonnegut skips back and forth between life and the Afterlife as if the difference between them were rather slight. In light hearted interviews with Sir Issac Newton, Adolf Hitler, Isaac Asimov, Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, William Shakespeare, Joan of Arc, and Kilgore Trout, among others - Vonnegut trips down “the blue tunnel to the pearly gates” in the guise of a roving reporter for public radio, all the while dodging the crotchety bureaucrat, Saint Peter.Kurt Vonnegut: Reporter on the Afterlife, began in 1999 as a series of 90 Second interludes for WNYC, New York City’s public radio station. It has evolved over the past 25 years through writing and rewriting, into a fiction podcast adventure series - available everywhere you listen to pods.This provocat Psychological Reading Club luguosong adventure:Angel of the Revolution By: George Griffith (1857-1906)Dorothy Dale In The City By: Margaret PenroseMystery of the Secret Band By: Edith Lavell (1892-1957)Arizona Callahan By: H. Bedford-Jones (1887-1949)Mysteries of London Vol. II By: George W. M. Reynolds (1814-1879)Last Rebel By: Joseph A. Altsheler (1862-1919)Doctor Syn By: Russell Thorndike (1885-1972)Chicago Princess By: Robert Barr (1849-1912)Tales from the Works of G.A.Henty By: G. A. Henty (1832-1902)Bill Biddon, Trapper By: Edward S. Ellis (1840-1916)We Were There at the Normandy Invasion By: Clayton Knight (1891-1969)Cripps the Carrier By: Richard Doddridge Blackmore (1825-1900)Billy Whiskers Out for Fun By: Frances Trego Montgomery (1858-1925)Countdown By: Kurt Becker. S. J. (1915-2010)Forged Note: A Romance of the Darker Races By: Oscar Micheaux (1884-1951)Double Crossed By: Wilfrid Douglas Newton (1884-1951)Plag Dirty Rumenal Demos DOGS DOGS - Dirty Rumenal Demos1 Sparks intro2 The Nightrider3 Scorpions of the Night4 Wheels of Destruction5 Tattooed DemonStetson Malone (aka Falcon Malone) - Golden Chord Ripper Thee Ginger Hammer - Axe Grindin'/Chord Destroyin' Cactus Vella - Lead Axe Thrashin' Coco Morris - Throbbin' Point-Five McClutchen - Poundin'Recorded by Mike at Rumenal 2006Cover photo by Nic at HackphotographyNight Rider video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gRjKnoqIwqQThis is a rough mix, the masters were lost. Enjoy You, Me, and IBM i You, Me, and IBM i lives at the intersection of wit and wisdom, and offers an inside look at the lives of the technical support experts at the IBM i Global Support Center. Each episode explores a new aspect of support, and leaves listeners better able to solve their own issues and get back to business. Kurt Schroeder ([email protected]) welcomes your comments, questions, and show suggestions.

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This episode was published on May 16, 2014.

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(Updated!) As it turns out, the actual pattern that this track was created is from -- to the best of my memory -- sometime 2001 or possibly 2002, although I'm not sure. Regardless, this bad little ma'amma jamma of a track was created by the mighty...

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