Post by sks2002 on May 14, 2024 14:52:43 GMT
I’ve found the supposed tracklist that was used in the documentary via the prodigy Russian forums.
3 Phase - Klang der Familie
808 State - Cubik
Acen - Close Your Eyes
Acid Junkies - Sector 9
Aquastep - Oempa Loempa
Beltram - Energy Flash
C'hantal - The Realm
Carl Cox - I Want You (Forever)
Channel X - Rave The Rhythm
CJ BOLLAND - Mindwar
D-Shake - My Heart The Beat
DHS - House Of God
Digital Domain - I Need Relief (SF Acid Mix)
Dr. Baker - Kaos
Edge Of Motion - Set Up 707
Euromasters - Amsterdam Waar Lech Dat Dan?
Fade II Black - In-Sync
Farley Jackmaster Funk - Love Can't Turn Around
Farley Jackmaster Funk - The Acid Life
Fierce Ruling Diva - Rubb It In
1st Prodject - Right Before
Frequency - Kiss The Sky
The Mover - Nightflight
Hardfloor - Acperience 1
Hithouse - Jack To The Sound of The Underground
Human Resource - Dominator
Human Resource - Dominator (Frank De Wulf Remix)
Inner City - Big Fun
Inner City - Good Life
Interactive - The Techno Wave
Interactive - Who Is Elvis
Jah Screechy - Walk & Skank
James Brown - Super Bad
Sweet Tee & Jazzy Joyce - It's My Beat
L.A. STYLE - James Brown Is Dead
Liquid - Sweet Harmony
LNR - Work It To The Bone
Lords of Acid - Let's Get High
Marshall Jefferson - Move Your Body
Mescalinum United - We Have Arrived
M.N.O. - God of Abraham
Moby - Go
Musto & Bones - Dangerous On The Dancefloor
N-Joi - Malfunction
Phantasia - Inner Light
Plexus - Cactus Rhythm
Praga Khan - Injected With A Poison
Public Energy - Three O' Three
Quadrophonia - Quadrophonia
Ramirez - La Musica Tremenda (DJ Ricci Remix)
Rhythm Device - Acid Rock
Rotterdam Termination Source - Poing (Phenomenia Remix)
Royal House - Can You Party
Rum & Black - Wicked
Second Phase - Mentasm
The Shamen - South of Detroit
Shut Up & Dance - 5,6,7,8
Shut Up & Dance - 10 Pounds To Get In
Shut Up & Dance feat. Erin - The Art of Moving Butts
Shut Up & Dance feat. Peter Bouncer - Raving I'm Raving
SL2 - On A Ragga Tip
Snap - The Power
The Sound Of Rotterdam - Cucify Him (Destroy Him)
Speedy J - Pull Over
Rotterdam Termination Source - Poing
Steve "Silk" Hurley - Jack Your Body
T99 - Anasthasia
Technotronic - Pump Up The Jam
The Break Boys - My House Is Your House
The Doors - Celebration Of The Lizard
The Minutemen feat. Norty Cotto - Bingo Bongo
The Prodigy - Everybody In The Place
The Prodigy - What Evil Lurks
The Prodigy - Android
The Prodigy - Charly
The Prodigy - Everybody in the Place (Fairground Remix)
The Prodigy - Jericho
Outlander – Vamp
Todd Terry - A Day In The Life
WestBam - Alarm Clock
WestBam - The Mayday Dub
Zero B - Lock Up
Theres also a fan Russian translation video posted onto YouTube recently for some reason: youtu.be/tfHfU55mJMM?si=VrVE_aTZ_yPWW3zo
In the comments section on the Russian translation, there was some info as to why it was never released:
“In 2009, I had the idea to make a documentary about the early years of rave and house music. I wanted to tell how electronic music developed. From Chicago house, through rough Detroit techno to the hardcore we created here in Rotterdam. It seemed to me that the best solution was to ask all the characters in the scene to talk about it themselves. I made a list of musicians who had a huge impact on the scene and asked them for an on-camera interview,” recalls Maurice Steenbergen. In '91, he noticed that people in clubs did not dance, but jumped. A friend suggested that this could be used. After months of casual music-making, 19-year-old Maurice samples the cartoon sound of a bouncing ball and puts a fast, smooth beat underneath it. This was enough to become a hit for centuries in '92, and thus the future director acquired connections not only with local but also foreign musicians. It was this past that helped Maurice to shoot an hour and a half film Oldschool Renegades in two and a half years, in which the heroes of the Belgian (R&S Records, CJ Bolland, Frank De Wulf, Technotronic, T99/Quadrophonia, Nikkie van Lierop), Dutch (Miss Djax, Paul Elstak, Orlando Voorn, Human Resource, Jeroen Flamman), partly British (808 State, The Prodigy, Shut Up and Dance, XL Recorginds, SL2, Liquid, Acen Razvi, Kutski, Cisco Ferreira), German (Hardfloor, Jens Lissat, Sven Röhrig) and the American rave scene (Moby, Lenny Dee, Joey Beltram, DHS, Frankie Bones).
The film was planned to be shown in theaters and released on disc in September 2013. But already in October it became clear: the film would not be released. Maurice made a mistake - during the filming stage, he made a deal with one of the subsidiaries of the giant Universal to help distribute the film on DVD and obtain permission to use more than a hundred tracks in the film. “But they didn’t even try,” the director replies. — The label thought that clearing the rights would cost them a pretty penny. As a result, I was left alone and without a film. Although I am convinced that we could have avoided the problems with most tracks by resorting to the fair use clause.” Maurice could not break the contract - this threatened him with a lost trial and a huge fine in addition. Although people from Universal did not take part in the creative process, did not approve the characters and did not edit the film, the rights to release the documentary belong to the recording giant. According to his contract, Maurice could only travel around the world and present his Oldschool Renegades at film festivals. Publishing a video online is also a release, so we don’t see the feed on YouTube. “Next time I will work with Vice, Netflix or Amazon Prime,” says Steenbergen. But so far there is no new film in sight: “If at the beginning of Oldschool Renegades I would have known how difficult it was to put together a film on my own, I would not have even started the project.”
Update: I found the quote from this blog post made by Maurice Steenbergen himself: steenb73.medium.com/what-i-learned-from-creating-an-independent-music-documentary-68e45065c99f
this got a lot more info about the movie behind the scenes like how Joey Beltram got Maurice to get into contact with Moby and The Prodigy and it has some images from the documentary.
3 Phase - Klang der Familie
808 State - Cubik
Acen - Close Your Eyes
Acid Junkies - Sector 9
Aquastep - Oempa Loempa
Beltram - Energy Flash
C'hantal - The Realm
Carl Cox - I Want You (Forever)
Channel X - Rave The Rhythm
CJ BOLLAND - Mindwar
D-Shake - My Heart The Beat
DHS - House Of God
Digital Domain - I Need Relief (SF Acid Mix)
Dr. Baker - Kaos
Edge Of Motion - Set Up 707
Euromasters - Amsterdam Waar Lech Dat Dan?
Fade II Black - In-Sync
Farley Jackmaster Funk - Love Can't Turn Around
Farley Jackmaster Funk - The Acid Life
Fierce Ruling Diva - Rubb It In
1st Prodject - Right Before
Frequency - Kiss The Sky
The Mover - Nightflight
Hardfloor - Acperience 1
Hithouse - Jack To The Sound of The Underground
Human Resource - Dominator
Human Resource - Dominator (Frank De Wulf Remix)
Inner City - Big Fun
Inner City - Good Life
Interactive - The Techno Wave
Interactive - Who Is Elvis
Jah Screechy - Walk & Skank
James Brown - Super Bad
Sweet Tee & Jazzy Joyce - It's My Beat
L.A. STYLE - James Brown Is Dead
Liquid - Sweet Harmony
LNR - Work It To The Bone
Lords of Acid - Let's Get High
Marshall Jefferson - Move Your Body
Mescalinum United - We Have Arrived
M.N.O. - God of Abraham
Moby - Go
Musto & Bones - Dangerous On The Dancefloor
N-Joi - Malfunction
Phantasia - Inner Light
Plexus - Cactus Rhythm
Praga Khan - Injected With A Poison
Public Energy - Three O' Three
Quadrophonia - Quadrophonia
Ramirez - La Musica Tremenda (DJ Ricci Remix)
Rhythm Device - Acid Rock
Rotterdam Termination Source - Poing (Phenomenia Remix)
Royal House - Can You Party
Rum & Black - Wicked
Second Phase - Mentasm
The Shamen - South of Detroit
Shut Up & Dance - 5,6,7,8
Shut Up & Dance - 10 Pounds To Get In
Shut Up & Dance feat. Erin - The Art of Moving Butts
Shut Up & Dance feat. Peter Bouncer - Raving I'm Raving
SL2 - On A Ragga Tip
Snap - The Power
The Sound Of Rotterdam - Cucify Him (Destroy Him)
Speedy J - Pull Over
Rotterdam Termination Source - Poing
Steve "Silk" Hurley - Jack Your Body
T99 - Anasthasia
Technotronic - Pump Up The Jam
The Break Boys - My House Is Your House
The Doors - Celebration Of The Lizard
The Minutemen feat. Norty Cotto - Bingo Bongo
The Prodigy - Everybody In The Place
The Prodigy - What Evil Lurks
The Prodigy - Android
The Prodigy - Charly
The Prodigy - Everybody in the Place (Fairground Remix)
The Prodigy - Jericho
Outlander – Vamp
Todd Terry - A Day In The Life
WestBam - Alarm Clock
WestBam - The Mayday Dub
Zero B - Lock Up
Theres also a fan Russian translation video posted onto YouTube recently for some reason: youtu.be/tfHfU55mJMM?si=VrVE_aTZ_yPWW3zo
In the comments section on the Russian translation, there was some info as to why it was never released:
“In 2009, I had the idea to make a documentary about the early years of rave and house music. I wanted to tell how electronic music developed. From Chicago house, through rough Detroit techno to the hardcore we created here in Rotterdam. It seemed to me that the best solution was to ask all the characters in the scene to talk about it themselves. I made a list of musicians who had a huge impact on the scene and asked them for an on-camera interview,” recalls Maurice Steenbergen. In '91, he noticed that people in clubs did not dance, but jumped. A friend suggested that this could be used. After months of casual music-making, 19-year-old Maurice samples the cartoon sound of a bouncing ball and puts a fast, smooth beat underneath it. This was enough to become a hit for centuries in '92, and thus the future director acquired connections not only with local but also foreign musicians. It was this past that helped Maurice to shoot an hour and a half film Oldschool Renegades in two and a half years, in which the heroes of the Belgian (R&S Records, CJ Bolland, Frank De Wulf, Technotronic, T99/Quadrophonia, Nikkie van Lierop), Dutch (Miss Djax, Paul Elstak, Orlando Voorn, Human Resource, Jeroen Flamman), partly British (808 State, The Prodigy, Shut Up and Dance, XL Recorginds, SL2, Liquid, Acen Razvi, Kutski, Cisco Ferreira), German (Hardfloor, Jens Lissat, Sven Röhrig) and the American rave scene (Moby, Lenny Dee, Joey Beltram, DHS, Frankie Bones).
The film was planned to be shown in theaters and released on disc in September 2013. But already in October it became clear: the film would not be released. Maurice made a mistake - during the filming stage, he made a deal with one of the subsidiaries of the giant Universal to help distribute the film on DVD and obtain permission to use more than a hundred tracks in the film. “But they didn’t even try,” the director replies. — The label thought that clearing the rights would cost them a pretty penny. As a result, I was left alone and without a film. Although I am convinced that we could have avoided the problems with most tracks by resorting to the fair use clause.” Maurice could not break the contract - this threatened him with a lost trial and a huge fine in addition. Although people from Universal did not take part in the creative process, did not approve the characters and did not edit the film, the rights to release the documentary belong to the recording giant. According to his contract, Maurice could only travel around the world and present his Oldschool Renegades at film festivals. Publishing a video online is also a release, so we don’t see the feed on YouTube. “Next time I will work with Vice, Netflix or Amazon Prime,” says Steenbergen. But so far there is no new film in sight: “If at the beginning of Oldschool Renegades I would have known how difficult it was to put together a film on my own, I would not have even started the project.”
Update: I found the quote from this blog post made by Maurice Steenbergen himself: steenb73.medium.com/what-i-learned-from-creating-an-independent-music-documentary-68e45065c99f
this got a lot more info about the movie behind the scenes like how Joey Beltram got Maurice to get into contact with Moby and The Prodigy and it has some images from the documentary.