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We are happy to annunciate that today
we bring you all the biography
of one of the most important’s figures in trance music:
Armin Van Buuren.
He started one of the best trance radio programs:
A State Of Trance and
produced many quality tunes like Communication,
Sunburn or
Burned with Desire. Talking about Armin,
is the same as talking about one of the most important
figures in trance’s history.
Enjoy his biography!
Armin Van
Buuren Biography
Armin van Buuren
is a happy man, and with good reason. Holding firm
at Number 3 in the prestigious public-voted
DJ Top 100, he's making the transition
from talented young upstart to leading light in the
echelons of trance.
But it's not just Armin
who's growing. Like a fine wine,
trance is also aging nicely, leaving behind
the awkward uncertainty of its teens to become more
confident, self-assured and widely informed. Affronted
by the cheesy tag that dogged it for a brief time,
real trance has continued to grow unabated, and Armin's
output reflects the quality tracks on offer to those
looking further than the mainstream chart racks.
"I think trance is becoming a broader term for
a lot of different genres; it's no longer a specific
kind of music within the dance scene," says
Armin, widely
credited with creating the blueprint track for the
genre, Blue Fear,
at the tender age of 19,.
"Trance has elements of all
different types of music. I play a lot of tracks that
are labelled as progressive, tribal progressive, techno,
trance, euphoric trance, vocal trance, melodic progressive…
These days it's really hard to label a specific sound.
2004 especially has shown that a lot of styles are
mutating and evolving into this all-over new sound,
which is basically dance music going back to its roots.
There's so much good music out there and I don't want
to limit myself to just one style."
 
Born in Leiden, Holland (on December
25, 1976) to a musical family - his dad
had a serious penchant for a diverse range of genres
including punk and
electronica "to
get rid of the stress of everyday life",
whilst his brother is a prodigious
guitar player - Armin
indulged his passion for music from a young age, blowing
all the money from his paper round on records. His
mum won a computer when he was 10, "So as
a little nerdy kid I was writing my own Basic programmes,
and learnt about the technology from there."
He progressed from making the usual tapes for
his friends, put together on a cheap set of decks
that he wore out learning to mix, after discovering
his uncle experimenting with different sequences on
his computer. "I was so amazed at what he
was doing, since that moment I've been addicted to
creating music!"
In the early 90s,
Holland's upfront dance scene meant that although
Armin was too
young to go clubbing, he knew the music inside out
from listening to the radio. "I loved dance
music immediately - this great rebellious sound that
was so different to the 'beautiful' songs of the 80s".
Citing electro pioneer (famed for his awesome visuals
as well as his groundbreaking synth sounds)
Jean Michel Jarre as a major influence,
as well as Dutch producer Ben
Liebrand, who later mentored him in his
mixing and producing, Armin
was soon cracking out consistently stand-out
tunes that graced compilations across the globe, and
his DJ bookings were looking pretty healthy
to boot. But despite his music career taking off at
such an early age, Armin
thought it was wise to have something extra
in case the DJing didn't work out, and studied
for a law degree. He actually got a job offer with
a law firm but says it's not really his thing, though
he does acknowledge he'd look good in a suit…
The final year of
his course was inevitably stretched as he juggled
his studies with his increasingly hectic schedule;
his meteoric rise to fame included a slew of acclaimed
productions and remixes, as well as playing out to
packed clubs every weekend resonating with the vibe
of thousands of happy party people. He took three
years to graduate, but with typical determination
saw it out to the end.
 
Armin's Blue Fear, a Sasha
and Digweed staple,
previewed his signature style: divine layering of
sounds, lush chords and a continuous driving beat
with that intangible added extra, the unique essence
that sets quality tunes apart when you hear them in
a set. His subsequent productions and remixes (too
numerous to list here - chuck him into a google search
if you've got a day to read the resulting titles…),
include Communication,
Sound Of Goodbye,
Burned With Desire,
Touch Me, Free,
Wamdue Project's King Of
My Castle, Solid
Sessions' Janeiro, and Madison
Avenue's Don't Call Me Baby, as well as
high profile collaborations with his peers Tiesto,
Paul Van Dyk,
Ferry Corsten et al.
Whilst the remix offers now flood in, Armin
only takes on tunes that he really loves, and that
"I wish I'd made myself!" His compilations
strive to follow that precedent, always comprising
the cream of his current favourite tracks and mixes.
It's what keeps him one step ahead. Armin
already had a label Armind,
but his desire to showcase more of the wealth of good
music out there, along with the number of people sending
him tracks they wanted to release, led him to the
obvious step of starting his own label, Armada,
in 2003.
"Michael Piren was head of A&R for Warner
Music, and we always said we'd start a label together,
though there was always an element of bragging! I
took him to Ibiza for a weekend, and during the trip
we sat on the terrace and started talking. He felt
like he wanted a new challenge, and so did I".
Armin and co.
went the distance, teaming up with a third partner,
David Lewis,
who'd managed Armin,
Ferry Corsten
and Tiesto.
"The market's changed so much. What we wanted
was a company that could offer everything for an artist:
representation, a booking agency, and a record company.
Artists can choose full management; or to just release
a record or play out at gigs. Armada lets the artists
choose what they want without telling them what to
do".
Freedom is something that Armin
fully appreciates as an artist, and all the tracks
on his compilations are tried and tested. "Production
gives you more freedom 'cos you can experiment more,
it can be less obvious than DJing. Whatever - it's
the best life there is! It has to do with taste. I
don't often get to hear other DJs' sets, but I like
that I'm not particularly influenced by anyone else.
Some of my sets have influences of house or breaks,
but I still have a certain sound that's my own".
After four years of fronting his own weekly radio
show, A State Of Trance,
Armin is taking
a break from the airwaves with a view to doing something
more international. "I think trance is a universal
experience; it's one of the first musical genres that
really showed its power through the internet, and
I wouldn't be where I am now if it wasn't for downloads!"
Watch this space for news…
 
Add to that his current status as No. 3 in
DJ Mag's Top 100 Poll
- behind Paul Van Dyk and
Tiesto, with
whom he regularly shares the bill at clubnights around
the world - and it seems things couldn't be looking
rosier for the trance scene or its young protégée.
Armin refuses
to be constrained by the labels of genres, and says
the spirit behind his brand of trance has stayed true
to its origins - "I was playing proper trance
before it became diluted and commercialised, before
it became a dirty word! Trance for me as a genre refers
to the old Oakenfold sound, the warm melodic driving
music, not the euphoric cheese with vocals, predictable
breaks and drumrolls that you hear now in the charts.
There are a lot of different definitions of the genre,
but to me it's just warm electronic dance music, anything
from progressive to techno. Don't be a prisoner of
your own style, is what I always say; don't get caught
up in the bullshit of your own creativity!"
Armin honed his
sound on his debut artist album, 76,
for which he scored a prestigious Dancestar
Award 2004 nomination (Best
New Artist Album). "I'd always
wanted to do an album, but there'd never been the
time or the money. Scoring the number five position
in DJ's Top 100 poll the previous year helped to get
labels interested, and I finally got to go into the
studio. Now basically everything I've learned in the
past 10 years fiddling around in my bedroom with equipment
has culminated in this album - it's a great feeling!"
Undaunted by the stir that his first offering
caused, he's nearly finished the 'difficult' second
album, due to drop in summer
2005...
This nomination will do nothing to harm his already
huge following in the States, where he tours
regularly rocking sold out clubnights. Not that he's
likely to get intimidated or burnt out by his initial
success, mind.
"This is just what I want," says
Armin. "It's not love for music,
it's a passion, and it goes beyond liking, and beyond
a hobby, it's about a way of living. Music is essential
for my life".
All the information
has been taken from Armin's official website
Solotrance
Group
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