View Full Version : How many diffrent types of Trance is there.
blue_screen
07-11-2006, 14:10 PM
Hey , just wondering how many diffrent type of trance there is.
and how do u tell the diffrence?
can any one help, maybe give me an example of the diffrent type.
:(
Puppetmaster
07-11-2006, 18:23 PM
Downlow some different kinda genres and some info about them.
I think a lot of people put artits in different genres, as everyone "hears" it different.
Also some songs/artists are a mix of like acid or house etc, so it's almost impossible to mark them as one typical genre.
Acid trance: An early '90's style. Characterized by the use of a Roland TB-303 bass machine as the lead synth.
Artists: Hardfloor, Art of Trance, Eternal Basement, Solar Quest, Kai Tracid
Anthem trance (also known as uplifting trance): Style of trance that emerged in the wake of progressive trance in the late 90's. Characterized by extended chord progression in all elements (lead synth, bass chords, treble chords), extended breakdowns, and relegation of arpeggiation to the background while bringing wash effects to the fore.
Artists: Vincent de Moor, Ronski Speed, Tiësto, System F, 4 Strings, Super8, Ayla, Paul van Dyk, Armin van Buuren, ATB, Blank & Jones, Marco V, Matt Darey.
Classic trance: Original form of trance music, said to have originated in the very early 90's. Characterized by less percussion than techno, more melody, arpeggiated melody, and repetitive melodic chords/arpeggios.
Artists: Westbam, Dance 2 Trance, Jam and Spoon, Sven Väth, Oliver Lieb, Cosmic Baby, Union Jack.
Euro-Trance: Euro-Trance is a hybrid of hard trance and Eurodance music incorporating hardstyle bass drums and trance elements. The trance synths at times sound like techno hoovers with trancey effects and strings backing it up. The vocals are often pitched up for the most part, but sometimes they can be heard as in normal pitch range. This is often confused as vocal trance because of its use of vocals. The lyrical content is usually pretty simple, containing an introduction to the song with usually no or little drums, and often includes renderings of classic happy hardcore anthems or melodies.
Artists: Jan Wayne, Rob Mayth, Special D.
Goa trance: A complexly melodic form of trance named for Goa, India, and originating in the early 90's. Often uses the Raga.
Artists: Psygone, S.U.N. Project, Man With No Name, Astral Projection, Juno Reactor, Shpongle
Hard Trance: Aggressive and faster trance sounding, Originating in Frankfurt, includes influences from hardcore. The style has first's tracks in 1993 and decline in the late 90's.
Artists: Pascal F.E.O.S., Resistance D, Legend B, Nostrum, Gary D, Genetic Line, The Hooligan, Flutlicht, Trance[]Control.
Hardstyle: Closely related to nu style gabber and hard trance. Its sound is usually characterized by a mix of gabber and hardcore like kick/bass sounds, trance like synth stabs and sweeps and miscellaneous samples. However, Hardstyle usually has a lot slower BPM (between 140 and 150).
Artists: Lady Dana.
Progressive trance (aka Progressive House): Style of trance that originated in the early-mid 90's. Differentiated from the then "regular" trance by bass chord changes that gave the repeating lead synth a feeling of "progression".
Artists: BT, Cosmic Baby, Art of Trance, Sasha, John Digweed.
Psychedelic trance: Better known as psytrance; ambiguously synonymous with Goa trance, less melodic more abstract and futuristic.
Artists: Shiva Chandra, Etnica, Infected Mushroom, Astrix, Phacelift, Total Eclipse, Hallucinogen, Zombie Nation.
Progressive psytrance: Emerged from both progressive house and psytrance. Identified by slower BPM range (roughly between 125 and 138), deep, low bass line, similarities to house in percussion, track structure and other things as well as psychedelic trance depth and relative musical unpredictiveness.
Artists: Magnetrixx, Ticon, Phony Orphants.
Tribal: A trance derivative that took classic trance and overlaid it with polyrhythmic percussive beats, ethnic samples, bongo sounds. It emphasizes the rhythmic core of trance. It shares many things with early Goa trance and Balearic House. Tribal can also be understood not so much as a style in itself, but as a component of any other trance style that has a bongo polyrhythm to it.
Artists: Etnoscope, Tarentella
Vocal trance: Broad term referring to trance with a full set of lyrics, which may or may not be any of the above genres. Oftentimes an artist will borrow a singer's talents as opposed to the singer himself or herself (vocalists are typically female), or sample from/remix more traditional pop music. Note that there is some debate as to where the divide lies between vocal trance and Eurodance.
Artists: 4 Strings, Lange, Ian Van Dahl, Above & Beyond, Fragma, Tiësto, Lost Witness, Armin Van Buuren, Chicane, Lasgo.
Electro trance: This Trance style has influenced by electro and take some elements to Uplifting Trance. Originated around 2004.
Artists: Ferry Corsten, Elevation, Marcel Woods, Gabriel & Dresden.
-------------------------------------------
Here another description of the Trance genre which we like most over here:
Vocal trance
Vocal trance is a subgenre of trance music, and contains highly melodic sessions, intro/outros which are similar to those of hard trance and tracks of usually about 6 to 8 minutes long.
A typical track consists of three elements. At the beginning of the track there is an intro of progressive beats, which lasts about 1-3 minutes. The melodic part (2-5min) starts incrementally, combining vocals, usually female, and melodic sound (for the most part high pitched and fast) with the bass pattern to give a great melody cycle. Finally when the outro is approaching, the melody fades out and we get the same rhythm as the intro, usually with some minor changes.
The most important defining element of vocal trance is the vocals (as implied by the name). Most of the time the vocals are high pitched, usually from a female vocalist, and is intended to create a chilling sound. in some tracks there are male vocals, but are usually confined to speaking and responding to the female vocals. it is not uncommon for vocals to repeat themselves many times, to be constant with the "loop" idea present in most techno music.
Vocal trance is popular listening in Europe, notably Germany, Sweden and Great Britain. The term "vocal trance" is closely related to uplifting trance as opposed to Eurodance and it's sub-genre style Euro-Trance.
Examples:
Andrea Montorsi Black Door - Single (2003)
DJ Dean It's a Dream - Single (2004)
DJ Carlo Nautilus - Single (2003)
Beam Vs Cyrus Lifestyle - Album (2003)
Solar Stone - Seven Cities (Armin van Buuren Vocal Mix) - 12"/MP3 Download (2002)[1]
The Thrillseekers featuring Sheryl Deane - Synaesthesia (Fly Away) - Single (2000)
Andy Moor vs. Above & Beyond - Air For Life (Airwave Mix) (2005)
Lange featuring The Morrighan - Follow Me - Single (2003)
Lange featuring Sarah Dwyer - I Believe - Single (2003)
Lange feat Skye - Drifting Away - Single (2001)
Rising Star - Touch Me (Original Vocal Mix Part 1) - Single (2000)
Angelic - Can't Keep Me Silent (Original Mix) - Single (2000)
4 Strings - Let It Rain (Original Vocal Mix) - Single (2003)
4 Strings - Diving (Original Vocal Mix) - Single (2002)
Michael Woods - Solex (Close To The Edge) - Single (2004)
DJ Marc Aurel - Running (DJ Marc Aurel Club Mix) - Single (2002)
Paradise - See The Light (Original Mix) - Single (2005)[2]
Paradise - Wanna Be Free (Original Mix) - Single (2006)
Deestylistic - By My Side (Gerry Cueto Mix) - Single (2003)
Whiteroom (feat Amy Cooper) - Someday - Single (2005)
DT8 ft. Roxanne Wilde - Destination - Single (2002)
Corderoy - Deeper - Single (2004)
Sun Decade - Follow You - Single (2004)
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Clear Blue Water
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Satellite - Single (2004)
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Sky Falls Down - Single (2002)
LeAnn Rimes - Suddenly (Riva Mix) - Single (2003)
[edit]
External links
Digitally Imported - vocal trance station. http://www.di.fm/vocaltrance/
lyrics.trancestation.nl - Site dedicated to vocal trance lyrics and more vocal trance related. :nuts:
Puppetmaster
07-11-2006, 18:26 PM
Downlow a trip back in time included with songs produced in that year and some descriptions of songs so you have good examples and know what is what.
1990
Age Of Love by Age Of Love
Many DJs and fans of the time as well as trance historians consider this record a trance classic, even before trance became a genre of its own. The ethereal sound of this record is the foundation of the trance sound. The original mix from 1990 should not be confused with the far more well-known Jam & Spoon remix from 1992, the latter having been produced and released after trance had become an established style in the German underground, complete with gated choirs and dramatic chord progressions. The original mix from 1990 was far more minimalistic and quite similar to the slower techno and new beat recordings of the time. Nonetheless, sufficient similarity can be heard between this and other early trance tracks to consider it truly a member of the genre. Released near the beginning of the year, in March!
1991
Papua New Guinea by Future Sound Of London
A classic rave-era, UK progressive breaks track that also defined a huge part of trance's later sound, direction and high prooduction values. FSOL were established at last.
1992
Stella by Jam and Spoon
A classic Balearic trance track.
1993
Love Stimulation by Humate
The Paul van Dyk Lovemix is easily considered a defining moment in art of remixing, giving an otherwise plain tune "classic" status.
Outface by Komakino
Outface is in the middle of the road between techno and trance and serves as a perfect guide in order to understand the evolution from one genre to the other.
Café Del Mar by Energy 52
Has become one of the most well known trance tunes of all time. Remains one of the most popular and energetic trance records to this day sprouting off numerous remixes.
The First Rebirth by Jones & Stephenson
Perhaps the first hard trance track, at least the first well known one, with a very deep bassdrum and possibly one of the most recognisable melody lines in trance music. Also regarded as a classic in the hardcore techno scene.
Vernon's Wonderland by Vernon
While this track was merely another in a long string of trance hits during German trance's original heyday, it is notable because of the exposure it got in other parts of Europe, and particularly the UK. One of the first trance tracks to gain such popularity outside Germany, along with "Stella" by Jam & Spoon and "Hello San Francisco" by Dance 2 Trance.
1994
For an Angel by Paul van Dyk
An early trance classic it defined a style and a sound that continued for a decade. Paul van Dyk continues to play it.
The Orange Theme by Cygnus X
This Cygnus X (aka A.C.Boutsen) classic continues to be played even today and has been remixed countless times. It is notable for the number of scales the main theme is played.
1995
Blue Fear by Armin Van Buuren
Blue Fear by Armin Van Buuren was his first big success on Cyber Records. Along with 'Communication', this made it to the UK charts on its first day debut. Remixers include Solid Globe, Agnelli & Nelson and Scott Mac.
Oasis by Paragliders
One of the last major classic-style trance tracks before the progressive sound emerged.
Children by Robert Miles
A powerful dream trance/house hit that has received acclaim from critics both inside and outside trance. This is a song which has introduced many music lovers into the world of dream trance and is widely considered one of the greatest trance songs of all time.
1996
Flaming June by BT
A widely-accepted classic. Example of progressive trance. Composed in thirds, the structure of this tune represents the evolving, progressive structure of mid-1990s progressive trance.
1998
1998 by Binary Finary
An epic trance monster that took Binary Finary (producers Matt Laws and Stuart Matheson) worldwide within a year and became an all time classic overnight. Famously influenced by goa and psytrance.
Words (of Love) by Paul Van Dyk
Another widely accepted classic of Paul Van Dyk's. Considered by many to be a stronger track than even his ultimate classic "For an Angel."
Universal Nation by Push
Belgian immortal Uplifting trance and club classic by Push aka M.I.K.E.
Madagascar by Art of Trance
This track from the Platipus label was composed by Simon Berry and has been remixed several times since its first release.
1999
Better Off Alone by Alice DeeJay
A UK #2 and a debut hit by Dutch Trance act Alice DeeJay in July 1999. The track and the band are similar to Finnish act Darude. It was a big headline hit for Dance festivals that summer.
Another Way by Paul van Dyk
An amazing and awe-inspiring journey through the mind and beats by one of the true pioneers of the genre.
Carte Blanche by Veracocha
This driving epic trance track was produced by Vincent de Moor & Ferry Corsten and is regarded as one of the tracks that defines epic trance.
Out of the Blue by System F
This track has become a huge success, giving trance a big popularity boost.
Saltwater by Chicane
This uplifting, epic track was produced by the British DJ Nick Bracegirdle and is widely regarded as one of the greatest trance singles ever.
Ayla (Veracocha mix) by Ayla
A high energy trance classic remixed by Veracocha.
Barber's Adagio for Strings (Ferry Corsten Remix) by William Orbit
This Ferry Corsten treatment of William Orbit's rendition of the Adagio For Strings by Samuel Barber, has been one of the most successful marriages to date of classical music and trance.
Xpander by Sasha
This track is probably the highlight of Global Underground 13: Ibiza, arguably the best GU album that was released at the height of popularity of progressive trance. Probably heard mostly in Wipeout 3 by the mainstream gamers in US.
2001
Urban/Suburban Train by DJ Tiesto
This is a widely regarded classic released by Dutch DJ Tiesto at the height of his career.
2002
Ligaya by Gouryella
A relatively recent track that has been an important addition with its euphoric and emotional melody to any dj's sonic arsenal.
2003
Music/Next To You by Darude
Finnish trance artist Darude does it again with his new album Rush in which his two most popular singles, Music and Next To You brought about the same popularity of his 1999/2000 offerings Sandstorm, Feel The Beat and Out Of Control. It is widely stated that the Bostik Radio Edit version of Music from the Rush album is considered to be the best version, even over the original album version.
Burned With Desire by Armin Van Buuren
Trance superstar Armin Van Buuren's Burned With Desire took vocal trance to the next level with its uplifting beat and female vocals. Trance artists that remixed this song include Ronski Speed and Riley & Durrant.
2004
Cities of the Future by Infected Mushroom
Israeli trance duo Infected Mushroom produced this album on their CD IM the Supervisor, which was a hit at its debut release. It is a song with vocoded lyrics, spurring a few remixes
2005
L.E.F. (Loud, Electronic, and Ferocious) by Ferry Corsten
DJ Ferry Corsten released this album in 2005, which contains powerful and moving tracks like the critically acclaimed singles 'Fire' and 'Galaxia'.
blue_screen
07-11-2006, 18:35 PM
Thanks So much for all the info. This is perfect :)
JuyLe
07-11-2006, 20:45 PM
Amazing retrospective mate, you should put it on an encyclopedia !
blue_screen
07-11-2006, 21:07 PM
The strange thing is I like all of them :(
What I have noticed is that PvD produces uplifting trance but in his latest live sets he chooses to play a hard trance ….
Klaas
07-11-2006, 21:43 PM
OMG. You gave the right description about the genre. Perfect article.
But mate you forgot Silence which is a great track, El Nino and also Viola, Seven Cities, Gamemaster, Strange World and Greece 2000. All of them were released between 1997 - 1999
Puppetmaster
07-11-2006, 22:25 PM
The strange thing is I like all of them :(
Hehe well that's nothing bad... just means you like more then only the uplifting kinda trance..
What I have noticed is that PvD produces uplifting trance but in his latest live sets he chooses to play a hard trance ….
I agree, in my eyes he's playing a mixture of genre's in his sets, ofcourse not all the time but sometimes. That's the hard thing of putting a DJ in one genre... With many DJ's it's almost impossible.
The same with Tiesto, he can play dreamy, uplifting, techno etc.
Puppetmaster
07-11-2006, 22:27 PM
OMG. You gave the right description about the genre. Perfect article.
But mate you forgot Silence which is a great track, El Nino and also Viola, Seven Cities, Gamemaster, Strange World and Greece 2000. All of them were released between 1997 - 1999
I know i as you said "forgot" a lot of titles, but i didn't wanted to write all the great tunes produced in these years, as i said: i just named a few examples and description so he had an idea of what song belongs to which genre.
Alex E
07-12-2006, 10:20 AM
Addition to the first post: Electro Trance is (sort of) TechTrance!(?)
blue_screen
07-12-2006, 11:04 AM
Whats is German trance and UK trance?
Is there a diffrence? Are there other names for German Trance and UK Trance?
EmStar
07-12-2006, 17:26 PM
What's Orbital Tunnel Trance? Any idea?
showky
07-12-2006, 17:34 PM
TRANCE 4 LIFE !
THX 4 EXPLanations !
Puppetmaster
07-12-2006, 20:02 PM
Whats is German trance and UK trance?
Is there a diffrence? Are there other names for German Trance and UK Trance?
I don't think there are really genres named "German Trance" or "UK Trance". In the "old days" i do think that every country had it's own identity but specially the last couple years i think the differences got smaller and smaller.
I do think that in the UK DJ's are playing more Hardhouse while in Germany i think they're more playing Hardtrance, maybe more influenced by Hardcore.
Chris Jennions
07-17-2006, 21:06 PM
1 = TRANCE...
OR FAR TO MANY..
Why are people so obsessed with pigeon holing electronic music intro genres, what difference does it make!! A track is either good or shit??
Putting music into genres is one of the reasons why dance music has been dying a death. The ‘big names dj’s and producers’ have become so obsessed with making and playing music for specific ‘scenes’ they have forgot to just make good sounding music!
Ishkur's Guide to Electronic Music is a great reference which provides examples of each genre:
http://www.di.fm/edmguide/edmguide.html
Jivemaster
09-16-2006, 16:46 PM
The debate about how many different types of trance there are could go on forever. I mean Eddie Halliwell's scratching trance sound could be classified as a "type" of trance. It's all down to individual perception and really is impossible to categorise in my humble opinion.
abcdefgh
09-16-2006, 17:24 PM
and the newest and best of all !!!!!!!!!!!
TECHTRANCE!!!!!!!!!!1
PS. TRANCE SHOULD NOT BE SCRATCHED OVER, THIS IS NOT OLDSKOOL OR HOUSE!! WISE UP EDDIE!! YOUR £&$% !!
pairrett22
09-17-2006, 18:02 PM
ishkurs guide has always been a centerpiece for discussions on how we all interperet electronica as styles. alot of people swear by his list and a lot think its way off. i think the point is that we all have our own little ways of cataloging music. bottom line is to enjoy the good songs no matter what they are and avoid the junk!
juancho_0205
12-28-2006, 17:52 PM
i just want to say that in 2006 the release of rogue by re:locate shows the progression of the trance actually, i don't know really but i'm sure that some tracks of the cd would be classics, and i want to point that we must difference between classic and anthem of the trance music, one friend said me that closer cover by minimalistix is a classic of trance, maybe, i don't know really, but in fact is an anthem of the trance scene in 2003. just that :P
juancho_0205
12-28-2006, 18:07 PM
Downlow some different kinda genres and some info about them.
I think a lot of people put artits in different genres, as everyone "hears" it different.
Also some songs/artists are a mix of like acid or house etc, so it's almost impossible to mark them as one typical genre.
Acid trance: An early '90's style. Characterized by the use of a Roland TB-303 bass machine as the lead synth.
Artists: Hardfloor, Art of Trance, Eternal Basement, Solar Quest, Kai Tracid
Anthem trance (also known as uplifting trance): Style of trance that emerged in the wake of progressive trance in the late 90's. Characterized by extended chord progression in all elements (lead synth, bass chords, treble chords), extended breakdowns, and relegation of arpeggiation to the background while bringing wash effects to the fore.
Artists: Vincent de Moor, Ronski Speed, Tiësto, System F, 4 Strings, Super8, Ayla, Paul van Dyk, Armin van Buuren, ATB, Blank & Jones, Marco V, Matt Darey.
Classic trance: Original form of trance music, said to have originated in the very early 90's. Characterized by less percussion than techno, more melody, arpeggiated melody, and repetitive melodic chords/arpeggios.
Artists: Westbam, Dance 2 Trance, Jam and Spoon, Sven Väth, Oliver Lieb, Cosmic Baby, Union Jack.
Euro-Trance: Euro-Trance is a hybrid of hard trance and Eurodance music incorporating hardstyle bass drums and trance elements. The trance synths at times sound like techno hoovers with trancey effects and strings backing it up. The vocals are often pitched up for the most part, but sometimes they can be heard as in normal pitch range. This is often confused as vocal trance because of its use of vocals. The lyrical content is usually pretty simple, containing an introduction to the song with usually no or little drums, and often includes renderings of classic happy hardcore anthems or melodies.
Artists: Jan Wayne, Rob Mayth, Special D.
Goa trance: A complexly melodic form of trance named for Goa, India, and originating in the early 90's. Often uses the Raga.
Artists: Psygone, S.U.N. Project, Man With No Name, Astral Projection, Juno Reactor, Shpongle
Hard Trance: Aggressive and faster trance sounding, Originating in Frankfurt, includes influences from hardcore. The style has first's tracks in 1993 and decline in the late 90's.
Artists: Pascal F.E.O.S., Resistance D, Legend B, Nostrum, Gary D, Genetic Line, The Hooligan, Flutlicht, Trance[]Control.
Hardstyle: Closely related to nu style gabber and hard trance. Its sound is usually characterized by a mix of gabber and hardcore like kick/bass sounds, trance like synth stabs and sweeps and miscellaneous samples. However, Hardstyle usually has a lot slower BPM (between 140 and 150).
Artists: Lady Dana.
Progressive trance (aka Progressive House): Style of trance that originated in the early-mid 90's. Differentiated from the then "regular" trance by bass chord changes that gave the repeating lead synth a feeling of "progression".
Artists: BT, Cosmic Baby, Art of Trance, Sasha, John Digweed.
Psychedelic trance: Better known as psytrance; ambiguously synonymous with Goa trance, less melodic more abstract and futuristic.
Artists: Shiva Chandra, Etnica, Infected Mushroom, Astrix, Phacelift, Total Eclipse, Hallucinogen, Zombie Nation.
Progressive psytrance: Emerged from both progressive house and psytrance. Identified by slower BPM range (roughly between 125 and 138), deep, low bass line, similarities to house in percussion, track structure and other things as well as psychedelic trance depth and relative musical unpredictiveness.
Artists: Magnetrixx, Ticon, Phony Orphants.
Tribal: A trance derivative that took classic trance and overlaid it with polyrhythmic percussive beats, ethnic samples, bongo sounds. It emphasizes the rhythmic core of trance. It shares many things with early Goa trance and Balearic House. Tribal can also be understood not so much as a style in itself, but as a component of any other trance style that has a bongo polyrhythm to it.
Artists: Etnoscope, Tarentella
Vocal trance: Broad term referring to trance with a full set of lyrics, which may or may not be any of the above genres. Oftentimes an artist will borrow a singer's talents as opposed to the singer himself or herself (vocalists are typically female), or sample from/remix more traditional pop music. Note that there is some debate as to where the divide lies between vocal trance and Eurodance.
Artists: 4 Strings, Lange, Ian Van Dahl, Above & Beyond, Fragma, Tiësto, Lost Witness, Armin Van Buuren, Chicane, Lasgo.
Electro trance: This Trance style has influenced by electro and take some elements to Uplifting Trance. Originated around 2004.
Artists: Ferry Corsten, Elevation, Marcel Woods, Gabriel & Dresden.
-------------------------------------------
Here another description of the Trance genre which we like most over here:
Vocal trance
Vocal trance is a subgenre of trance music, and contains highly melodic sessions, intro/outros which are similar to those of hard trance and tracks of usually about 6 to 8 minutes long.
A typical track consists of three elements. At the beginning of the track there is an intro of progressive beats, which lasts about 1-3 minutes. The melodic part (2-5min) starts incrementally, combining vocals, usually female, and melodic sound (for the most part high pitched and fast) with the bass pattern to give a great melody cycle. Finally when the outro is approaching, the melody fades out and we get the same rhythm as the intro, usually with some minor changes.
The most important defining element of vocal trance is the vocals (as implied by the name). Most of the time the vocals are high pitched, usually from a female vocalist, and is intended to create a chilling sound. in some tracks there are male vocals, but are usually confined to speaking and responding to the female vocals. it is not uncommon for vocals to repeat themselves many times, to be constant with the "loop" idea present in most techno music.
Vocal trance is popular listening in Europe, notably Germany, Sweden and Great Britain. The term "vocal trance" is closely related to uplifting trance as opposed to Eurodance and it's sub-genre style Euro-Trance.
Examples:
Andrea Montorsi Black Door - Single (2003)
DJ Dean It's a Dream - Single (2004)
DJ Carlo Nautilus - Single (2003)
Beam Vs Cyrus Lifestyle - Album (2003)
Solar Stone - Seven Cities (Armin van Buuren Vocal Mix) - 12"/MP3 Download (2002)[1]
The Thrillseekers featuring Sheryl Deane - Synaesthesia (Fly Away) - Single (2000)
Andy Moor vs. Above & Beyond - Air For Life (Airwave Mix) (2005)
Lange featuring The Morrighan - Follow Me - Single (2003)
Lange featuring Sarah Dwyer - I Believe - Single (2003)
Lange feat Skye - Drifting Away - Single (2001)
Rising Star - Touch Me (Original Vocal Mix Part 1) - Single (2000)
Angelic - Can't Keep Me Silent (Original Mix) - Single (2000)
4 Strings - Let It Rain (Original Vocal Mix) - Single (2003)
4 Strings - Diving (Original Vocal Mix) - Single (2002)
Michael Woods - Solex (Close To The Edge) - Single (2004)
DJ Marc Aurel - Running (DJ Marc Aurel Club Mix) - Single (2002)
Paradise - See The Light (Original Mix) - Single (2005)[2]
Paradise - Wanna Be Free (Original Mix) - Single (2006)
Deestylistic - By My Side (Gerry Cueto Mix) - Single (2003)
Whiteroom (feat Amy Cooper) - Someday - Single (2005)
DT8 ft. Roxanne Wilde - Destination - Single (2002)
Corderoy - Deeper - Single (2004)
Sun Decade - Follow You - Single (2004)
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Clear Blue Water
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Satellite - Single (2004)
OceanLab (feat. Justine Suissa) - Sky Falls Down - Single (2002)
LeAnn Rimes - Suddenly (Riva Mix) - Single (2003)
[edit]
External links
Digitally Imported - vocal trance station. http://www.di.fm/vocaltrance/
lyrics.trancestation.nl - Site dedicated to vocal trance lyrics and more vocal trance related. :nuts:
mmm tribal isn't a type of trance, the tribal comes from the house adding some sounds of toms, african and australian percs, things like that and as you say have percussive beats, ethnic samples, bongo sounds too, overall i know that is very possible to mix different genres and create new sounds, tribal can mix trance sounds, the melodies ad the colorature of the trance but to be specific that would have a different name, you can't generalize, could be named tribal trance (i think that it exist) or something similar. even an amazing post :wors:
i want to read your description of some types of trance that you forget:
techtrance, dream trance, melodic trance (i think this is the same as uplifting trance), and makina, and if you can post something about the new trends in latinamerica please post it, much thanks tribalismo!:beer:
Alex E
12-28-2006, 18:36 PM
Yeah well actually, I don't know a lot about genres, but I DO know that L.E.F. was released in 2006, not 2005. And Blue Fear was 1996, not 1995 (Armin released his 10 years album in 2006, the ASOT Classics box says "original 1996 mix" etc)
Raneem
12-28-2006, 22:14 PM
imo, as much as you want..
you can even create more trance sub genres..noone knows, one day we'll c some more styles rising..
now we're facing the Electro Influenced Trance, maybe in the future the RnB or Rock influenced trance..lol..or Oriental Trance..or Jazz Trance..!
this is why Trance is Magic! can combine all other types of music! ;)
juancho_0205
12-29-2006, 16:19 PM
indeed:beer:
Drim3r
12-31-2006, 18:21 PM
Thanks for nice information. But... Exists NRG Trance???
What about Katana n Chochlow styles??? is it tribal trance?? euphoric trance??? or some harder uplifting trance????
Thanks for any additional info.
FLyGuYy03
12-31-2006, 18:29 PM
Wow, great writeup, clears some things up for some of us.
zucken
01-22-2007, 08:47 AM
uplifting trance is the best for me! but all trance are so cool!!
Carlos Magalhães
01-22-2007, 14:50 PM
No matter what type is it TRANCE is TRANCE;)
Luconia
01-22-2007, 15:29 PM
iElectro Influenced Trance, maybe in the future the RnB or Rock influenced trance..lol..or Oriental Trance..or Jazz Trance..!
this is why Trance is Magic! can combine all other types of music! ;)
bwahahaha!
even there will be also dangdut trance, trance hop, metal trance...u name it:ohmy:
Supra2061
01-22-2007, 22:23 PM
i couldnt explain it any better lol..
hollowman1
01-22-2007, 23:34 PM
wow thats a great discription, i guess in the end its just about what catches your ear and what you enjoy, whatever it is trance rules!!
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.2.0 Copyright © 2013 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.