miendo  Add Friend
Home Page: http://www.miendo.be
Member Since: Nov 17, 2003
Rank: 790
Average Vote Received: Correct (3.80, 10 votes)
Location: Brussels, Belgium
Profile: Electronic moderator.
Music is my life...

Style: Progressive, tech-house, house
Favourite labels: Border Community, Bedrock, Precinct Recordings, Drop Music
Notes:
- Some of my records are for sale
- My collection is NOT complete
- Don't send me eBay links

Thank you!


Seller Rating: 100.0% positive (4 ratings)

Buyer Rating: 100.0% positive (2 ratings)

miendo's groups (2)

Reviews:

Kings Of Convenience - I Don't Know What I Can Save You From - 11-Jan-05 01:57 PM
The soft voice of Erlend Øye merges very well into the melancholic sounds of the guitar. The combination of the two produce a beautiful and strangely quite uplifting track. Röyksopp's trademark is there too, they did a very good work remixing this track. Simply beautiful...

Moogwai - The Labyrinth - 05-Jan-05 01:08 PM
The B-side (Part 2) is what makes this record's value. It's a darkly melodic trance track that litterally takes you elsewhere. While it takes more than one listening to completely "understand" the complex melodic part that repeats itself though the whole track, it's clear that when you have it in your head you're already hypnotised.
As good on a loud club PA as in headphones at home.

Pole Folder & CP - Apollo Vibes - 23-Aug-04 07:20 AM
Apollo Vibes is a true classic, and is considered by many as a milestone in progressive music.

The idea of Apollo Vibes came to Pole Folder after listening to "The Best Of INXS". The only samples he used in this track are the voices (taken from the Apollo 11 mission) and one rhythm. He composed all the other elements himself.

Pole Folder and CP started their collaboration with this track.

Dave Clarke - 01-Jun-04 04:20 AM
Dave is talented, yes.
But with the time he has become lazy and bored behind the decks as his superstar DJ status grew to nonsense.
I have seen him play 6 or 7 times (in few years intervals) and I have witnessed the difference.
The very first time I saw him play was at Fuse about 8 years ago. I was amazed at his talent behind the decks.
The last time I saw him play was at I Love Techno, and he was playing with all knobs and buttons, doing awful things, stopping and scratching his records like a 2 year-old-child could do. Maybe 2 or 3 records were well mixed on his whole set, the rest was crap. But the crowd was mad, because even if it was really ugly, that was Dave Clarke playing.
I recently read an interview of him in OutSoon (a free clubbing-oriented Belgian magazine) where he stated that he is bored of touring in the whole world, he has seen everything a man can see, played in almost every big club on earth, and he can play absolutely anything he wants (really anything), people will just love it because it's Dave Clarke playing.
In short, this man is bored of what he does and communicates it very well.
Oh, and I have NEVER seen him smile.

Liquid - Culture - 03-Feb-04 04:26 AM
Bought it in 1996 and still one of the very best albums I have in my entire records collection. I have never felt more emotion in a "dance" music album. Rhythms are particularly well done (between binary and breakbeats) and synths are often melancholic. The whole is very coherent and simply beautiful.
This is a masterpiece.