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tv   Arts Unveiled  Deutsche Welle  March 24, 2024 8:30am-9:00am CET

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in the wing, use a story behind the news. we read about unbiased information. for 3 months. the electronic dance music is more popular than ever locked down social distance thing . anyone remember that? now, read news even faster than before the pandemic. the scene has grown bigger, stronger mode i thus at festivals, i'm going to love. every thing is full on again, including technology. i've been talking to have lots of paul out across. many things are possible. it's up to the teacher, what's the story or even today it's mainly men who are the full front of the tech they've seen. but there was some legendary female details as well.
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the brings between the, the magic and music at the end of the social media defend base is growing rapidly . and there is huge interest in the origins of technology below, like the silver mile generated stuff. and i had to wait 30 years in order for a whole new generation to kind of come to, you know, now, now they're finding it the roots of technical being re discovered how center braces . it shows that 1st of all, we were ahead of our time hours ahead of mind. to find out more about the history of the genre were in berlin, where else,
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but the capital of texas. since there is no closing time here, you can party all night long at clubs like twice or more than 30 years after its founding tissue is still considered the at the center and best place of protect them is meant when it comes to fix, know you come to this place, i think that the is one of the most the far sunset drive being viewed is global tech. i think that tech know what's the force that shape berlin into the image that we have of it today. so the image was in 1989 before the full of the will building was a divided city in the socialist east, the state controlled and regulated almost all aspects of life. in secrets, however,
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the use of the ddr stay tuned into what was going on in the capitalist west. here on the other side of the will and the inside of, of west berlin. people enjoyed a special status and much more freedom. and he had felt isolated and cut off it was actually very important that the wall came down that that was actually more space in town. you know, everybody's on the east came through the call us what's happening then everybody from the woods try to start. it's its own research and it was in that that's fine. in those tests to take the rudy. no one can the me take him on and others of the westman and underground scene explode abandoned places in the form of wooded area that had main center for decades. and we were really lucky to find the location that both very new located near the wall actually in the building. this building was in area where nobody could go even from the east side. it was like in this very
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close to the walls. so it was like, untouched over $45.00. you know, this really took place underground in the basement fault of a former department store was extremely loud music balls and how to do that when we opened it, it was the 1st day and it was really according to them, is usually close just as the top of the house didn't make it, but the tech no, that was things like that were also ready to dance for a long time. no one was really interested in with the music came from or who was playing it says or just moves and one atkins with the tang from the very beginning. many of them came from the declining industrial city of detroit and the us and they shaped what is now known as the sound of good and i, my name is blake rene,
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back in troy usa tech house, sol, capital of the united states. the detroit is known for its also industry and music scene. it's also considered the place where the 1st 10 of the tracks were created. this is often for glossing, you know, the to where it comes and goes and comes and goes like it's like, it's like a cycle. added the phone of the soul in the phone from detroit. the decline of industry in detroit and the doing of a new technological age inspired. juan atkins and other musicians in the early eighty's to experiment with futuristic sounds. they mixed europe and electro music
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with african american don speeds i guess the arrival of the technological revolution. so to speak, it was the industrial age kind of came to a close and by detroit be one of the major industrial hurts in america. the city was kind of like just to clean it because the robots took over. most of the manufacturing that they experimented with new electra sounds and was celebration as techno rebels, even just a kid and later some, some more kids just tinkering with, with this new technology. you know, a lot of this was kind of spontaneous. i mean, nobody had a blueprint or a plan. i mean, we had an idea of things. what we want us to do, sort of like an experiment and you mix a lot of different ingredients and the result came out 10 times better than we
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thought it would come out in a change of location. berlin, on an old hymns finish saw. he produced the music for the evening himself. oldham started out as a radio husband, the choice lay to illustrated for any labels and soon became a ha my or it has always been the way it is, but it just seem to, when tech know came along, it seemed to fit along with the actual futuristic or the science fiction elements from the beginning of the ninety's, ellen old him got involved. and the techno scene as a member of the d. j, connective underground resistance, known as you are know, one man was bigger than music. and the music, it was the message, not the person out there. and we all had co names and that i chose to 1000 for my
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he was the, the cutting edge nanotechnology terminate, superior to our new in every way. right? so that, that's the basis behind my d. j name the salvation in the disturb him weld was how i didn't all to him depicted techno in a comic book for the techno label plus age. in the early ninety's, they asked me to do a comic book for their label. is like, hey man, you know, just come up with something cool. you are is there the detroit police are robots, but you are, hates the robot costs. so you go the others and the resistance group. they're trying to restart this thing called the random noise generator, which creates music, creates taking a music, and they installed the device and then the,
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the random noise generator shakes to life. and then you see all the electricity and sound waves coming out of it. and here's all the sound waves tech now, and it's touching everywhere in the planet. that's basically what that was. this is how to check the real. absolutely. but from from detroit, the, the hype around detroit funding theme assume that it's way around the globe, pushed by music freaks promises and much owls until finding a 2nd home in berlin. days from the us. but plugging it in to get to cities don's close chinese still the us seeing we made fun the roots of india on the ground navigating traction in the main stream. so wanted to come up in europe. the white audience are, we're the ones who like techno,
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a lot of black people did not like it. they did not get it. there was no wrapping in it. there was no singing. it was all one thing. it was repetitive and repetitive proved to be the key to berlin. as hans technically became the new sam track of the city, when it became berlin, then it became centralized. and then more detroit guy started coming over, you know, which was, or was, it was crucial in this checking, it was undoubtedly a creation of african american communities across the atlantic. the fact that as launch the escaped public consciousness because it wasn't berlin, where techno found mainstream appeals i think it was the right for play the music and that helped
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a lot to build up the whole culture of the job and they won't be very good pulse on dick was born in 1971 in an industrial town in the ged, off and grew up in east and then like many young germans, he fell in love with the news phone from detroit. things and professionally. it's simple, really. i play the music because i love it. i'm a total fanatic of california. i think i really don't teach it because i can make any money when i tell me this money being too good for the income. the few years later, to pull from dick made his break through becoming one of the most successful the days in the world. and the money started flowing check know for the massive years before it was very slow. that was really not the real nice line. a happy night and when house came over as a talk and then technology was great. effect weekends with thing about 10000 people
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in building move from one of the of the clock. and the rest of the story is that if we came to know and we tried john, i just came and filled in on that too many people. they just want you from came to 6 months, but the 1st 6 months of visualize this female detail like and then on in also start taking off. she's one of the most important representative for the bad and take those same to this day. the and on in produce is electronic music and runs the label. the pitch control table is like a 2nd time to pull. the roots are in hip hop box. the elusive,
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underground scene of techno fascinated head from the stones via text to call far away from zip up seemed close to the book seen most of the rooms because i could then for whatever i'm checking, i didn't know which was the fax from the s as in papa as an officer, why are i honest? that's how it can split by the fall love parade. mock the status of a new era for this genre. what started with only a few 100 visits has seen through hundreds of thousands, many under the influence of the policy drug, ecstasy rate is from the world as it came to berlin to be part of the spectacle. 1999 to an incredible 1500000 attendance. you know, back in the rain times,
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it was just a lot of drugs. the people that did parties, you know, whatever, whatever. but now it's an emphasis on community is the emphasis on kind of leaving things better than when you found it. and i think that, that a lot of young people want to create their own spaces. and this is this, the soundtrack for the . so what does tech know actually mean? to find out, we don't into the archive of youth culture in buildings, clocks back, district kids, documents, findings, magazines, posters, and more compiled, keeping the history of youth and subculture in life this. yeah, this book on this come up here. i have the a total festival program from 1990. you could say that this was maybe the 1st tech no festival in germany to, for the,
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for the term techno occurs. but not so often how they taught mostly of house here. when i noticed that at one point they started speaking of the so called techno scene mostly and it was the word isn't quotation on. so it wasn't get really clear what they really meant by techno, who listed so i left them an instrument as it has a different meaning for everyone. i mean, you know, techno can also be melodic and it can also be chill. but for me, primarily tech no means more aggressive techno is everything you haven't imagined yet. that's according to jeff mills, legendary d j. m is the same color. so yes, i'm not quite answer. nice. so your husband's looking full, she works at berlin's university of the arts and has been researching techno for several years. in german techno with the capital t has a huge meaning to number the term which collects, let's say on the ground events and music related happenings. and also the music
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itself is part of food that has something you can identify as are. and you can explain is something that is underground, something that is locally organized, but this is a huge confusion specially an international circumstances because an english sectional with another capital t means simply a stronger music genre. one of the genres of electronic dance music take well, as i thought, i, as the media is on the hearts 1st and foremost and it's a be in tech. no, it's harder. they close at times most compared to how sites of tech know features less of the solely vocals and go and is generally faster, harder and darker. how to do stuff. for some of the techno also means excessive drug consumption are very low, is the, this simplification of the club culture that it's just about taking dogs that it's just about attending this i'm going to skip isn't, but i think now on the 21st century, we kind of say that anymore,
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most of the people that they go out because of the club, they go out because of the lineup, they go out because of the music, they go out because of the atmosphere. there was always this reading, this idea of which your think about what's going on here. you know, what's going on in the space and trying to connect with that and the way, trying to be not afraid of it. the music has something robot that kind of, you know, just thought to the type of machine. so i'm, it also has that kind of spaces. sounds. a lot of electronic music is based on the gear that you use through us. read a roland 9 o 9 process, then here's what's the v p m. and that's why it's called right now because it's technologically advanced. gear is on the growing. that's yet
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the one um cuz it all started in the underground where he began spinning records in the 1980s. he's long since become legendary in particular seen but status was never a big deal for him. my job is to entertain because, you know, i've come from it here where, you know, before the d, j was famous in this big days got on his out accolades. all your job was to do is to keep the floor busy the board to keep people smiling and happy and dancing. and a lot of that is do game made up from when i 1st started these days. one. adkins doesn't only feel down slowest,
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but also the foyer of berlin's venerable philharmonic. the actually, i had no idea that i would even be leaving detroit or going around the world not from the underground to the hallowed holes of classical music. this home festival brings together the entire spectrum of electronic music, turning technology into high culture. the, the time is come, that this music is being welcome here as well. that's quite a statement. the ticket old built its own institutions. and now with a level where one set of institutions noticed this, the other and see like, well maybe it's interesting what you're doing and we stood for the lights going
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it shows the 1st of all we were headed back house, i think, and it, and it shows the staying power because i had this vision of the future. dennis is kind of perpetuating itself now because that was kind of the idea the well, the choice african american communities are finding the receiving long overdue recognition for inventing text though the impulse control played by women artists and to create a scene is still under acknowledged and those who called tv show gave a feeling for what was going on in detroit at the time. it wasn't the b, james who with the stars, but the don't seems to go back and watch some of them and just see the outfits and
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see the dancing will always be extremely unique because that type of thing will never be repeated. it is. and the influence that, that hit on generations will always be. and so anyone to look at them even then if they look at it and see some of the move to some of that they were doing it. oh my god, the, the choice sound is funky. i don't care what they say. i notice is the home a techno and yes, techno was created there, but the house came 1st, then tech no only. now the question is, who did what? when and what did they bring to the scene? i got the biggest kick a flip with the record over but i thought how cool is that? because this is a real factory. now, this is not a fake factory. they were really working to unlike the d days after 10 tables.
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oh no, it wasn't, nothing plug, definitely. we looked like we were good when we looked like we would get i don't care what it is. every type of music happens because of some other type of music. film black to take no re examines the story. and also how nights the roll women played in detroit. it's never one history. we're talking about thousands of different histories and stories. and that's how we silence out. people like the fear come into or the females to chase and producers from that time because there's no books or sources like this thing for their stories. so this is why i think it's now we are in this moment that we have to push no further. their story is and not only who is asking the same people, what happened just some of the opportunities that were given to man,
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we're not given as well to women. and so we have to still kick down doors to make things happen. and we're just now in this last decade, getting the recognition that like we weren't, there can call it a choice top data. if the 19 seventy's and eighty's told stacy how everything she knows, she quickly made a name for himself as a house d j and became pulse of detroit is queer music scene. the fact that they also had a major influence on the development of techno as they need now, were you much i think what is happening that they're doing their homework, the 10 they're reaching out to, you know, says so thank god, here's social media because at the time that i was evolving, there was no social, it was a paper flyer, a tx on a page or, or in a phone call. stacy hail has been deja in producing teaching and doing radio shows for about 40 years. she's one of the few female teachers i've had
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generation to make a name for himself in detroit. and then, and people are now taking an interest in what those on the other side of the atlantic were up to so many years ago and not just anywhere but in the cities. most famous. and in some is techno, except that time i need a select few are allowed in here, and that goes for everyone. even the days i know that it had a history and is well respected. and, you know, that's, that's all i know. so my friends was, they found that i was going to be here. they just said it is the place of. i had no idea the dish these days, the bill in clubs seen aims for more diversity in lineups. to extract the real roots of techno and the whole spectrum of electronic music you know,
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i knew of many things going on. but most of the time, things like this, you know, was all screwed to the man. and so getting this opportunity to come here to represent i'm so excited been in the city with tech know made it big, has image as one of the most important music metropolises in the world. and stacy have now finally has the chance to contribute to is i want to tell a story to me, that's what the thing is about. and i think in any calls, sure that again, playing music, even if it's a set time happening in the world or within a city or even in your home. and you put on music to make the chaise your feeling inside. it's all about letting loose and feeding the moments wherever you are in berlin, the choice or anywhere else at the movement festival. the best place of techno is
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we discovering its rates and celebrates electronic music, the,
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the big games through next door teen life. and the lyla in will visioneer. was there any truth to the stereotypes about these mixture? and how do residents survive? is there a reason to discuss exactly that life in? we'll be here in 15 minutes on the w. hello. and welcome back to the 77 percent. this week we are in like julia and my question is, how are the governments made us decisions affecting people?
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we've looked into the shop prices of everything skyrocketed. when are the economies in a bad state, like the one i dress in, it will need to take some hard hard decisions on the sand out parts. but then how do we get those money from the idea of a 77 percent and 90 minutes? dw, the sometimes a seed is all you need to allows big ideas to grow or bring an environmental conservation to life. with learning facts like global ideas, we will show you how climate change and environmental conservation is taking shape around the world and how we can make a difference. knowledge grows through sharing, download it now for the old
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friends mean friends and nature defend itself in case of an emergency. we cannot guarantee that we could protect munich frankfurt. berlin sandwich faced with rushes for or against ukraine. the roads. grace's ministry lines shows weakness. can nato offer its members sufficient protection and security basic kinds depends on 90 percent on the us faces were attacked. alliance really close, rang out to pot document, nation thoughts, april fools. on dw, the
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business. the news lived from berlin. russell upsets the national day of mourning after the concept default masika. presidents put in vows to punish those responsible for the events of more than $130.00 people. the claims that the tech has tried to feed to ukraine. keep the nice any development. also in the program, the united nations chief antonio gutierrez again, calls for you seems 5, gaza and ones. people will starve to death with altamont lights out for our cities around.

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