Soundroom Podcast 009 - Revet aka Kenah (RO)

Vlad, also known as Revet or Kenah is a fellow DJ and producer from Bucharest, Romania. His strings of electronic music came from his early childhood but he started more seriously at the begining of highschool. At the age of 17 he bought a pair of CD-Players and mixer. After he realised that he is good at establishing sounds through other music he became more passionate about producing so at the age of 21 he put his hands on a MC505 and some speakers, but he also digged this so much, in fact he began buying so much synthesis equipment untill he fallen so much in love with it. Now he is focusing on producing electronic club music for people who love excentric and melancolic sound structures. Stay in tune, he also has lots of surprises! https://www.facebook.com/rorevet https://www.facebook.com/sndbucuresti

Om Podcasten

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/soundroompodcast ❖❖ Electronic music platform ❖❖ ▶ podcast ▶ livestream ▶ events ▶ rental ◆◆ "First of all, Romanian electronica is considered its own genre because of its very specific movements and ambient grooves which most other music doesn't have. No other genre of music that I've heard had such complex production methods where you can mix amazing bass grooves with minimalistic percussions/details, super organic sounds and elegant break-beat kicks which fit so perfectly together (and I've heard all from old school house to new deep techno and all in between). As far as Romania getting the title,it's mainly because they are the ones who took it to the next level,mind you this music is a form of micro-house/minimal that had been already in production for many years but on a very underground level - until Romania made it more popular (of course with the help of Ricardo Villalobos). The style of music really is something special,more intellectual in my opinion,because it takes a very trained ear to really understand it and enjoy it. For everyone whom is criticizing that it's only for druggies, this is very invalid information. Maybe the fact that it's so complex - it takes the average listener to take drugs in order to expand their mindset to listen and understand, but for those that get it, they do not need anything in order to enjoy such great abstract style of music." ◆◆