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Airheadz are best known for the trance hit single "Stanley (Here I Am)" which first came into existence as a bootleg record entitled "Stanley - Stanley's in a Trance Mix" due to it containing a vocal sample from Eminem's "Stan", and which itself was a sample taken from Dido's "Thank You". The 'Stanley's in a Trance Mix' rapidly became popular ...
All copies of Chilled Acoustic feature a mistake in the artwork, where the top half of the Ministry of Sound logo used on the reverse side of the digipack; is upside-down. 2011 saw the year with the most releases in the series, with seven being released, four of these featuring 'Anthems' in the name.
Year Artist Origin Song 1990: Snap! Germany "The Power" [4] 1990: C+C Music Factory: United States "Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)" 1991: 2 Unlimited: The Netherlands "Get Ready for This" [5]
Trance Energy Festival at Utrecht Psychedelic trance culture of KaZantip in 2006, with decorations commonplace at trance parties. The KLF's "What Time is Love? (Pure Trance)" was released in the UK in 1988. The earliest years of Trance were defined by Frankfurt labels such as Eye Q, Harthouse, Fax +49-69/450464, Force Inc., and others.
Pearce had 10 consecutive top 10 dance compilations and a number of gold albums including Transcendental Euphoria, Very Best of Dave Pearce Dance Anthems and Dave Pearce Trance Anthems. In 2001, Pearce was honoured with a coveted British Independent Film Award (BIFA) for his work on the soundtrack to the Richard Parry film South West 9.
[7] Larry Flick from Billboard commented, "Robin Albers, the act's mastermind, cooks an appetizing stew of chunky tribal beats and free-form trance keyboard noodling. The track gets its edge from an aftertaste of subtle techno spice." [8] British magazine Mixmag ranked it number 15 in its "100 Greatest Dance Singles Of All Time" list in 1996. [9]
Over the years, its remixes have been hailed as one of the greatest trance songs of all time, over two decades after its initial release. [1] The Tiësto remix of the song was voted by Mixmag readers as the 12th-greatest dance record of all time. [2]
In general, uplifting trance is a style much happier in tone than other trance genres (such as Goa).Instead of the darker tone of Goa, uplifting trance uses similar chord progressions as progressive trance, but tracks' chord progressions usually rest on a major chord, and the balance between major and minor chords in a progression will determine how "happy" or "sad" the progression sounds.