"This Is Electro" combines the most essential tracks of the last eight years produced in the studio by Anthony Rother, the best-selling producer from Offenbach. Like no other, Rother shaped the aesthetics of the electro-music genre for years and years with his international ground-breaking releases, precisely because he never stood still; instead he was the pioneer of stylish motorbeats. This landmark development of electro-music will be obvious in the two CD versions of the DVD sets "This Is Electro", which, with 28 tracks and over two hours playtime, combine the most important points of Rother's career in completely remixed and digitally remastered versions…
On the hunt for a killer sound that will captivate the crowds and gain you sum dope praise? Set your trap with ELECTRO TRAP, the brand new trap sample pack fresh off the production line at the Prime Loops sample factory! This one's got some serious voltage running through it too. ELECTRO TRAP is wired with some explosive Electro elements to give your Trap the true shock factor.
Holy cow ! This is a funky piece of wax we’ve got here ! Eight mad Japanese keyboard players join to form the funkiest / weirdest combo : Yuji Ohno, Hiromasa Suzuki, Masao Yagi, Masahiko Sato, Kentaro Haneda, Hideo Ichikawa, Shigeto o’Hara and Sadayasu Fujii…
Nu Electro proves is that electro is still beating strong thanks to both old school originators like Egyptian Lover and Newcleus, and a new generation such as Invisible Rockers Crew and Dark Vektor. Not to mention the fact that it s now spread far beyond its American strongholds in New York and Detroit, with the latter two producers hailing from Athens and Barcelona respectively. Covering 2 CDs mixed by Freddy Fresh and Diplomat, it also represents electro in its most purist form with almost every track from The B Boys You Know We Rock to Supreme.Ja s Freak constructed from the same core elements of 808s, brittle beats and robotic voices and a complete disregard for any electroclash or electro-house affectations that have subsequently diluted the sound. True, electro no longer sounds as shockingly futuristic as it once did, but nor is it as creaky as an old breakdancer s joints when they try their knee drops again.