Behind pearlcoder youll find two extraordinary electronic music producers J… Read Full Bio ↴Behind pearlcoder youll find two extraordinary electronic music producers Jörg Friedrich and Christoph Berlinski from Frankfurt Germany. Both are well experienced artist with tons of releases under numerous projects. They ought to continue the high quality blackfish-production ep series on the Issue 6. Oyster ep is just a little suggestion on the hudge repertoire they provide. This time youll going to listen a round trip to mysterious soundscapes and distinctive electronic beats. Jörg and Christoph will show you synthetic spaces, you had never heard before. A perfect beat with empathetic arrangement will definitely take you on a trip thru space and time. Jörg and Christoph kicked off their musical work in the early days of techno music. The music scene of Frankfurt in early 90ies was the playground - Roland TB 303 and Akai Sampler the toys to put in a good use. It was a glorious time to remember - admitted Christoph always with a smile. Jörg had his first appearance as a local DJ at Radio Stations and they had been spending hours and hours at clubs like Omen or the legendary Music-Hall for musical research. The first come out happened 1993 with release of the project Angel Dust on Liquid Records. The music scene was growing so fast and both kept up the view on the horizon. Jörg and Christoph got around Germany and played numerous live sets at Clubs from Hamburg to Munich. In the late nineties, they realised a passion for chilled moods and atmospheric sounds. There were a reformation needed and everything ready for set up a new course. The foundation of pearlcoder was done with the release of Avenue 7 on the compilation Chillinin Ibiza. Releases by pearlcoder followed up by well known compilations Ayia Napa (ZYX Music), Silk Pearls (Cocoon Records) and many more. For the upcoming pearlcoder Album, they start up collaboration with the well known and international accepted DJ Stefan X. Keep track on the upcoming Longplayer and check out a beautiful piece in DJ-mixsessions by strictly pearlcoder vibes. Jörg and Christoph got even more styles to show. Recently they finished work with musicians like Doug Laurent (Culture Beat), Larry London (Supermax), Ozcylofi Beat, Walick and many many more. Currently they work out a strictly Hip Hop and RnB project with Shenisa Lavon. We are pretty sure, there will be more to come in the future. ..
Falling Hard
Pearlcoder Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Falling Hard' by these artists:
Danny Valen Take it or leave it, take my heart Baby i need…
DXRKNOVA I've got all these feelings can't ignore You the only one…
Kyles Tolone Falling hard everytime I lift my spirits up guess I'm drunk …
Meiko The Crystal Method I am running, I will meet you halfway. When I get there…
Mi Sandi I′m falling falling falling hard for you baby... ဘယ္လိုေျပာျ…
Poster Paints Kiss the dice, roll me a seven You’re my ladder up…
The Crystal Method I am running, I will meet you halfway. When I get there…
The Crystal Method f/Meiko I am running, I will meet you halfway. When I get there…
The Crystal Method feat. Meiko I am running, I will meet you halfway. When I get there…
The Crystal Method featuring Meiko I am running, I will meet you halfway. When I get there…
The George Twins You got a smile that could light up a room but…
The lyrics are frequently found in the comments by searching or by filtering for lyric videos
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@texasbeast239
¡Hola, René! Mucho gusto a encontrar tu canál.
Your passion and attention to detail for these pieces of pop culture tech comes through loudly and clearly in your videos, just like a high-output set of speakers with amplifiers! 😂
My main interest that brought me here to your channel is the 1980s Nihhon/Japanese fictional transforming toy robots that converted into simulated stereo radio microcassette players, with simulated metal microcassettes that also transformed into robots.
I am mainly trying to identify the type of real world MC players that those toys were probably inspired by, but I understand if they were completely pretend and not directly based on any real model of device.
Are you familiar with the toy Takara Micro-Change and Hasbro Transformers MC players? In America, they were called Soundwave, Soundblaster, Blaster, and Twincast. They all appeared to have a distinctive symmetrical design so they could make a well proportioned robot form. This symmetrical design placed the tape door in the center of the face of the player, and also placed the tape manipulation buttons centered on the face under the tape door too. But my understanding is that in real MC players, the buttons were usually placed on the long side, so they were easier to press with a thumb.
This blue and silver Olympus really looks a lot like the Soundwave toy, at first glance. It's very nostalgic!
Blaster was supposed to be a MC boombox. I know nothing about those kinds of MC players, but I would love to learn about those too.
I came here for all of that info about toys, but I subscribed because your info about the real world devices is fascinating too. It is true that everyone was even more curious about video players of any type, but I guess I'm weird, because I'm more into the audio players.
Thank for this long-play video. I want you to know that some of us YT users really do pay attention to what you have learned about these devices and this technology, and we value your generosity in sharing so much of your knowledge and experience. I see that I have a lot of hours of other video to watch here on your channel. That's awesome!
@zhaohaigaogu7821
It's great to have a microcassette recorder!
There are few microcassettes in Japan today.
@texasbeast239
¡Hola, René! Mucho gusto a encontrar tu canál.
Your passion and attention to detail for these pieces of pop culture tech comes through loudly and clearly in your videos, just like a high-output set of speakers with amplifiers! 😂
My main interest that brought me here to your channel is the 1980s Nihhon/Japanese fictional transforming toy robots that converted into simulated stereo radio microcassette players, with simulated metal microcassettes that also transformed into robots.
I am mainly trying to identify the type of real world MC players that those toys were probably inspired by, but I understand if they were completely pretend and not directly based on any real model of device.
Are you familiar with the toy Takara Micro-Change and Hasbro Transformers MC players? In America, they were called Soundwave, Soundblaster, Blaster, and Twincast. They all appeared to have a distinctive symmetrical design so they could make a well proportioned robot form. This symmetrical design placed the tape door in the center of the face of the player, and also placed the tape manipulation buttons centered on the face under the tape door too. But my understanding is that in real MC players, the buttons were usually placed on the long side, so they were easier to press with a thumb.
This blue and silver Olympus really looks a lot like the Soundwave toy, at first glance. It's very nostalgic!
Blaster was supposed to be a MC boombox. I know nothing about those kinds of MC players, but I would love to learn about those too.
I came here for all of that info about toys, but I subscribed because your info about the real world devices is fascinating too. It is true that everyone was even more curious about video players of any type, but I guess I'm weird, because I'm more into the audio players.
Thank for this long-play video. I want you to know that some of us YT users really do pay attention to what you have learned about these devices and this technology, and we value your generosity in sharing so much of your knowledge and experience. I see that I have a lot of hours of other video to watch here on your channel. That's awesome!
@renegonzalez6755
Gracias. You are correct, the Takara micro cassette based robots were based on machines that never existed. In my opinion the 1982 Sony M-80 FM/AM micro cassette recorder is the closest machine to Soundwave because it has one built-in speaker and there was a blue version made.
I absolutely watched The original Generation 1 Transformers animated show when I was a kid back in the 1980s. It was a show with good stories and good values regarding family and appreciating the planet in which we live.
I remember when The Beast Wars prehistoric animal themed transformers met the original Generation 1 Transformers. It was back in the year 1999 and it was awesome. I was a Sophomore in Highschool back then. It was a long time ago. 😃
@texasbeast239
@@renegonzalez6755 I'm watching your Angrom cassette video right now. But I will definitely check out the one on the M-80 too. It's all fascinating!
@renegonzalez6755
@@texasbeast239 I don't know your age but I suspect that you were born after these devices were manufactured and sold. There is a certain pride in owning vintage technology weather it is computer, audio, video or video game based. The physical format is something that is dissapearing at an accelerated rate.
Regarding magnetic based recording i was there. I lived through it. It has a very special place in my heart. I know that my smartphone outperforms every single videotape based device ever made. Video game emulators, 4K smartphone camera lenses and the digital FLAC audio formats are amazing. Absolutely amazing. It is not the same. The mechanical buttons, switches, spinning hard drives, concept of rewinding are not there.
I have seen YouTube videos where young children are shown a VHS video cassette and they are simply fascinated. These old items are part of history as well as part of humanities ongoing quest to perfect the art of capturing and archiving information. It has been a long journey since our cave painting days. It is a never-ending quest.
@bobsbits5357
C E D disc i have a working one still
@vauzz66
I need to repair my roadrunner - the tape part is not working. I think it’s the belt.
@bruhpog429
SOUNDWAVE?
@renegonzalez6755
SOUNDWAVE from the Transformers universe was not designed around a specific audio cassette machine brand or model. I think this is a wonderful thing. This allows each individual person to decide which audio cassette machine they believe SOUNDWAVE is based on.
If you believe that SOUNDWAVE was based on the Olympus SR11 that is wonderful and nobody can convince you otherwise. I love the fact that the modern day Transformers G1 comics still portray SOOUNDWAVE as a cassette based character. Having him be anything else including a hard drive, memory card or digital wireless streaming besed character would not be the same. Nostalgia is something very special. I was a teenager in the 90s and SOUNDWAVE is an incredibly nostalgic character.
@ianeestil5158
What is the model of the olympus headphones?