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Pearsall presents 30×3.2: Into the Dreamstate (Old Skool Acid Trance Mix)

Acid trance is the music of the Gods! And here Pearsall takes you on a journey into the euphoric sounds of old skool acid trance, from 140 to 180 bpm over 30 magical, powerful, life-affirming tracks

Pearsall presents Pearsall presents 30×3.2: Into the Dreamstate

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Mixed in Berlin, November 2019
100% Vinyl
(112:47, 258 MB, 320 kbps mp3)

Cue file
Larger Cover

Cover by Alex Mapar

Direct link to the mix:
http://sonicrampage.org/mixes/30×3/Pearsall-30×3.2-IntoTheDreamstate.mp3

Tracklisting:

  1. Man with No Name – Sugar Rush (Refined Mix) (Perfecto Fluoro)
  2. BBE – Flash (UK Mix) (Triangle)
  3. Pablo Gargano – Mountain Bike (Eve Records)
  4. Union Jack – Yeti (Platipus)
  5. Formic Acid – Dreams of Fantasy (Acid Dreams) (ZYX)
  6. Transa – Prophase (Hook)
  7. Hal Stucker – Lansing (Telica)
  8. Special Force – The Hype (Gang Go)
  9. DJ Scot Project – O (Arome Mix) (Overdose)
  10. DJ Randy – Overmodulate (Prolekult)
  11. R-Damski – Acoustic Nature (Overdrive)
  12. Cores – Matabu Part One (Noom)
  13. Ironik – Slave (TeC)
  14. Legacy – All Out of Bubble Gum (Reef)
  15. X-Ite – Cyberworld (Spaceflower)
  16. Karim – Wet n’ Wild (Do Not Bend)
  17. DJ Misjah & DJ Tim – Access (KY Jellybabies Remix) (Tripoli Trax)
  18. Jon Doe – Future (Honey Pot Hard)
  19. Blu Peter – The Pictures In Your Mind (Arabesque Mix) (React)
  20. Lab 4 – Close Encounter (Choci & Mark Sinclair Remix) (Choci’s Chewns)
  21. Chris Liberator & D.A.V.E The Drummer – Renegades of Acid Trance (Amnesia)
  22. Rob Vanden & Tailbone – Berlin Skyline (Submerged)
  23. Nature Party – Stoned Nation (Corrosive)
  24. Abet – The Sweetest Song (Remix) (Tunnel)
  25. Hard Trance – Last Project (Evolution)
  26. DJ Energy – Acid Dawn (Nu Energy)
  27. Supreme & UFO – Paradise (Man From Uncle)
  28. Tazz & Element – Shape Shifter (Digital Beats)
  29. Beyonder – The Wish (Cenobite)
  30. Carbon Based – Cyclone (Electronic)

Note from Pearsall:

This is the second mix in the 30×3 series – the first came out last Monday and was called Your Mind on 303s and the third and last one will be out next Monday.

30×3 is a series of three mixes dedicated to the Roland TB-303 synth, each with 30 tracks (the 30×3 makes sense now, right?), each with a different theme. What can I say – I’m a sucker for concept mixes!

This particular mix is dedicated to the euphoric sounds of old skool acid trance, which I have interpreted super widely here to cover anything trancey and featuring a 303 synth. So that means everything from 140 bpm acidic Goa trance from Man with No Name to 180 bpm acid gabba trancecore from Beyonder, with all kinds of styles and flavors in-between. Each mix in the series, given 30 tracks to play with, is expressly designed to be a real ‘journey’, and this is no exception, as it starts off relatively slow, restrained and hypnotic – with what I consider to be the ‘real’ trance sound – and then ends in frantic freeform territory with my single favorite ever freeform track (praise be to Finland!)

Conceptually, this is an ‘old skool’ mix, which I guess would normally mean all 90’s stuff, but I did include a few bits from the early 2000’s – probably the latest track is the last one, ‘Cyclone’ by Carbon Based, which came out in 2003. I guess that’s breaking my (totally arbitrary) rules about tune selection, but 2003 is already sixteen years ago!

This music has always had a special place in my heart, ever since I first encountered it as a teenager, so to accompany it I am reposting in a slightly altered form an essay about the music and scene that I originally wrote to accompany my mix There Must Be A Future in 2011 – actually that was the first mix I made after I became a father.

Me, raving at Atomic Energy, London, 1999

Acid Trance Memories

Pearsall, Edinburgh, April 2011

I remember reading once that the music that really stays with you through life is the music you love when you are 17/18.

I can believe it.

Take the music featured on this mix – these UK acid trance records hold a very special place in my heart, having soundtracked my first nights out raving at London parties like Escape From Samsara, Pendragon, and Techtonic. Not that it was necessarily my favorite music right away – those of you who have read my other essays here at Sonicrampage will know that when I was 15-17 I was a full-scale junglist, or at least as much of one as an upper-middle class white American expat could be!

My friends, however, were not, so given that I was always outvoted, if I wanted to go out and party with them, I had to accept we’d be hearing something besides jungle.

Which in our case meant that we ended up going out to trance events, since that’s what the older brothers of my group of friends liked to rave to. Like a lot of other teenage boys, we were very heavily influenced by these older brothers, since they were older, more confident, and just generally seemed a lot cooler and more mature than us. Unsurprisingly, this influence led to us picking up a number of their habits and tastes, both good and bad.

  • Smoking = bad
  • Banging hard trance = very good!

Admittedly, the hard trance thing was not so good right at the beginning. I was a junglist after all (“that shit’s not from the streets, maaaaan” … as if I was from the fucking streets!), but since I didn’t want to sit around at home on my own, I had to learn to tolerate that hippy nonsense.

As you might have guessed, in the end I learned not just to tolerate it, but to love it with a fearsome passion!

Vicious Circle
Dan Durnin and I at Vicious Circle, Sheffield, 2002

But I’m getting a bit ahead of myself. The story of me and this music really started with the first club night I ever went to, which was an Escape From Samsara event at the Fridge in Brixton back in September 1996, not long before my 16th birthday. If you remember Samsara from when it was a weekly event, just think how long ago it was that it was a monthly … just thinking about it makes me feel totally prehistoric (although not as bad as seeing teenagers on the streets and thinking “why did their parents let them out dressed like that!”)

As you can see from the photo above of me at 18, I always had a very, um, ‘youthful’ appearance, so frankly it was no surprise when I got knocked back at the door! In the end, I hung around long enough looking pathetic and complaining that my friends were all inside that the bouncer took pity on me and let me in.

Wow!

I’m not too sure I was actually ready for the full power of the experience … it’s one thing to hear trance on a tinny boombox in a hotboxed bedroom, cherry holes on the floor, stupid posters on the wall, ears pricked for the tell-tale sound of parents coming in the door, but really truly another thing to hear it on a big system in a heaving club, with hands in the air, smiles on faces, and lasers strafing. Fuelled by nothing more than a few sodas, I hit the floor and just went for it.

That, properly, was the start of my love affair with hard trance’s magical combination of relentless 4/4 kickdrums, sizzling 303 lines, and intense melodies.

Milk, Brixton
Playing at Milk, Brixton, Summer 2002 … not sure about the goggles!

Every now and then people ask me how I find the time/energy to do so many mixes.

Which is flattering, but actually the wrong question, because the trickiest part of the whole process is writing the accompanying blog post.

Why?

Typically it is because I write for several different reasons which can be tricky to balance.

On the most basic level, I take a certain amount of pride in providing a full package – not just a single mp3 mix bunged up on Mediafire or wherever, but both whole and split versions of the mix, with a cover, a cue file, the tracklist, and a (hopefully interesting) essay. Usually (but not always!), I like to explain the thinking behind the mix, since there is a thought process behind each mix – I never just randomly pull out tracks and bang them together, but instead I’m trying to tell a kind of sonic story (and if you’re interested in a more in-depth exploration of this theme, read the essay I wrote to accompany my Rampage Audio 6 mix).

On another level I’m also writing for the pure selfish pleasure of writing. I’ve always loved to write, but I have found that it can sometimes be difficult to do so regularly, through a combination of procrastination and the difficulty of picking the right topics. Therefore, writing for this blog has been a good way to force a little discipline on me as a writer. Also, in a funny way I feel that the pressure is off me to write amazing incredible essays because to be completely honest most of the visitors to this site are here strictly for the music. Someone writing for a text-focused publication doesn’t have that luxury.

The third reason why I write is that, especially with the mixes of older material, I want to catalogue my memories of the British underground dance scene as it existed in the late 90’s/early 00’s, especially for the scene surrounding the kind of acid techno/trance that I’ve featured on this mix, which was both too underground for the world of superclubs (and just think … all those Crasher Kids in uv gear with Mitsi symbols on their faces are probably married with kids by now!) and yet not cool or progressive enough to be of interest to serious music critics in the same way that the London hardcore continuum is. I think that scene was pretty interesting as a socio-cultural phenomenon, and also because I think it’s kind of disappeared from cultural memory, and I want to make sure that at least some knowledge of it survives.

Dancevalley
The Twatted Tour hits Dancevalley, Holland, 2001

In a way, it’s funny, because it’s only now that I’m in my 30’s, married, and a father, and now no longer clubbing that I realize how big a role the scene actually played in my life, and how so many of my fondest memories were from the whole hard dance scene.

A few things that make me smile to think back to:

  • Frantically dialling United Systems at 10 o’clock on a Saturday night to find out where the night’s squat parties were going down
  • Whiling away a lazy Saturday afternoon at a record store listening to tunes and chatting to the guys (always guys) behind the counter. A partial list of some of my fave stores from back in the day: Kinetec (Central London), Dragon Discs (Camden), Elite Records (Victoria), Basement Vinyl (Kilburn), Mad Records (Soho) and Pendragon Records (Brixton)
  • Being in a heaving club and seeing everyone everywhere dancing
  • The pure rush of a snareroll crescendoing and the beat kicking back in full force … cliche or not, you can’t ignore that power
  • Meeting people and becoming inseperable best mates for the night; of course, you’d never see them again
  • The friendliness and camaraderie that you would never experience in more fashion-conscious circles

Hell, even a lot of the things that sucked at the time have become amusing in retrospect – like trying to dance in clubs so hot that sweat was running down the walls and raining from the ceilings, or standing outside clubs flyering in arctic conditions to saucer-eyed loons.

Even though those days are well in the past now, I still have the records, and I still have the memories, and since I consider myself very fortunate to have experienced those times, nothing makes me happier than sharing that feeling with you.

Calton Studios
Raving at Studio 24, Edinburgh, 2000