Cleopatra: 1994
I’ve mentioned this CD in passing before, how it was a transformative disc in the development of my musical tastes. Why, you might even say it was… trance-
morphing! Or even- no, that’s all I got. Obviously timing was a critical factor,
Trance Europe 2.0 finding its way to my ears just as I grew bored of generic euro dance of the day. Here was something a bit similar (all those hard German beats!), but with an edge to it; trippier, energetic, delicious acid sounds and galloping choir pads. The general lack of vocals didn’t hurt either,
Teenage Sykonee having grown quite tired of trite pop lyrics.
Still, plenty CDs of the mid-‘90s could have given me a similar knowledge drop; heck, this wasn’t even my first collection of trance. What
Trance Europe 2.0 did, however, was convince my impressionable young mind of what trance
could be, what sort of scene the genre was cultivating across the Atlantic. You mean to say this spacey, hypnotic dance music is enjoyed by bizarre, hedonistic individuals painting themselves in elaborate costumes while consuming mind-bending love drugs? Holy shit, screw the guido clubs ‘techno’ was catering to, sign me up for
that! While Sven Väth’s parties at Omen were reportedly of similar stock, I doubt Cleopatra had that in mind, rather going with the ‘techno-goth’ theme many of their early CDs ran with. You do you, Cleo’.
All of which has little bearing on whether
Trance Europe 2.0 is worth your time here in the dire year of 2016 (God, just end it already). Probably not, most of the memorable tunes easily found elsewhere. Komakino’s big breakout hit
Outface (G60 Mix) kicks things off, but the exact same track kicked off their album
Energy Trancemission too.
Beyond Your Dreams is also on here, another track from the
Outface single. Their Final Fantasy alias also crops up with the track
Sometimes, a blistering slice of German acid. And in case that wasn’t enough Fritsch and Hastik action, they also get a producer’s credit on the Shorty Bone cut
Trancemission. Oh man, this track’s bonkers, hard trance with a clunky, tribal techno rhythm; sounds like an early Influid tune.
A few tracks on the obscure side round things out. Tranceformer was more known for cheese-ball vocal tunes, but their instrumental b-sides were surprisingly decent in their simplicity, two of which grace
Trance Europe 2.0 (
Hypnotized and
Magic Mushrooms). Morpheus 7 had but one single, the fluffy, happy cut
Follow Me Into My World (Orgy-Nal) receiving the nod here.
Ravesign by Vector was also a one-off, yet got a little more compilation duty than others (including an appearance on a
Techno Trax, apparently). Sweep! was more of a rave-house guy, but
Glowflow is trancey enough for this CD. And Norman Feller makes a requisite appearance with old-timey track
Drift Away from his
Trance-House single. And yes, I adore
all these tunes! It wouldn’t be such a seminal, taste-changing CD for yours truly if I didn't, yo’.