• Music
  • Dance Music Artist You Own The Most Music From

Doing a bunch of organizing and holy moly do I own a ton of KiNK tracks and remixes. Which is a bit of a waste given it all sounds the same. Should’ve just bought one and called it a day.

Lots of Leon Vynehall, Lauer. Trevino (RIP), Tornado Wallace…

What about you lot. Pretty sure I know Zackter’s answer already.

    Judging buy the amount of Circulation records I’ve found recently. It must be them. Unless I find someone else.

    without actually looking, i’d say circulation for me too.

    Oliver Lieb is another artist. He’s got so many different guises.

    Digital, I can’t remember, lol. Physical, probably Blue Amazon and BT.

    1. Pete Namlook - I think I have over 48 hours of tunes without a single repeat.
    2. Jeff Mills
    3. Rob Hood

      zackster
      A lot of peoples bets just gone up in smoke.

      The namlook collection sounds boss 🔥

      Another one for me is probably Trisco.

      And Zack, Hood was my guess for you.

        jonattonyeah And Zack, Hood was my guess for you.

        Lol I assumed. I have a load of Rob stuff but nothing comes close to the namlook shit. After thinking about it I bet it’s closer to 72 hours of no repeat chewnage.

        Forgot about Speedy J and Luke Slater too. They’d be up there.

        Oh and Richard D James. I have a crazy amount of his shit. Probs second to Namlook honestly.

        jonattonyeah Lemme guess your favorite labels are “White” and “CDR”

        I like the exclusivity 😂

        Zack, point me in the direction of a Pete Namlook starter pack. Colour me intrigued!

          Amps Thats a tuff one. Let me give it some thought. There is just so much and its so diverse. He did everything from Psy Trance to traditional jazz.

          jonattonyeah Trevino (RIP)

          Do you have any of his drum and bass stuff? I’ve always said I would check it out, but never actually got around to doing so.

            zackster

            I did, yeah. His stuff as Marcus Intalex was very good, but definitely in LTJ-style of things; albeit a bit later than that style’s peak popularity. Soul:R was a good label. But the thing is, what made DnB so fun was how all over the place and unformulaic it was. By 2000 that was all out the window.

              jonattonyeah I gotta get on that. His RA Exchange discussion was one of my absolute favorites. He was so inspiring. I remember listening to it at work, then riding my bike home on my lunch break just to program shitty drum loops :because he got me so excited and motivated.