Schöneberg 2010 the complete mixes
One of Germany's most important producers during the '90s, Mijk Van Dijk recorded an abundance of early techno/trance classics under the aliases Microglobe, Mindgear, and Marmion. A bassist for several funk bands during the early '80s, Van Dijk moved to Berlin later in the decade to work as a journalist and began producing house tracks in 1988. Two years later, he issued the Hate single, recorded for Low Spirit as LoopZone. An alliance with fellow Berlin producer/DJ Tanith resulted in a 1991 LoopZone EP (What Is Noise?) as well as singles under Tanith's name and as 9-10-Boy. By 1992, the release of two solo singles -- High on Hope as Microglobe and Don't Panic as Mindgear -- pushed Van Dijk's name into the global realm, and he collaborated with fellow German up-and-comer Cosmic Baby to produce a seminal compilation on MFS, Trance: Formed From Beyond. In 1993, Mijk Van Dijk's third major project, Marmion (a co-production act with Marcos Lopez), debuted with the Berlin EP, a release on Superstition that hit the world's dancefloors after the track Schönberg became a big mover in DJ circles. His first full-length, Microglobe's Afreuropamericasiaaustralica, followed in 1994 and Van Dijk developed his DJing and remixing skills with dates all over Europe and reworkings of tracks by Denki Groove and Parts of Console. Later releases under his own name began to cultivate a more melodic brand of trance that fit in well with the growing Hi-NRG/progressive trance scene in Europe. The 1997 Glow LP under his own name presaged his first mix album, Multi-Mijk, consisting mostly of his own tracks and remixes. In 1999, he released Teamwork, a full album of collaborations with producers including Tanith, Claude Young, Thomas Schumacher, and Quazar. In addition to production, remixing, and DJing, Van Dijk also moved into the soundtrack realm with scores for two movies as well as the video game soundtrack Ghost in the Shell. He also developed a music-making game for Sony's Playstation named Depth. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
One of Germany's most important producers during the '90s, Mijk Van Dijk recorded an abundance of early techno/trance classics under the aliases Microglobe, Mindgear, and Marmion. A bassist for several funk bands during the early '80s, Van Dijk moved to Berlin later in the decade to work as a journalist and began producing house tracks in 1988. Two years later, he issued the Hate single, recorded for Low Spirit as LoopZone. An alliance with fellow Berlin producer/DJ Tanith resulted in a 1991 LoopZone EP (What Is Noise?) as well as singles under Tanith's name and as 9-10-Boy. By 1992, the release of two solo singles -- High on Hope as Microglobe and Don't Panic as Mindgear -- pushed Van Dijk's name into the global realm, and he collaborated with fellow German up-and-comer Cosmic Baby to produce a seminal compilation on MFS, Trance: Formed From Beyond. In 1993, Mijk Van Dijk's third major project, Marmion (a co-production act with Marcos Lopez), debuted with the Berlin EP, a release on Superstition that hit the world's dancefloors after the track Schönberg became a big mover in DJ circles. His first full-length, Microglobe's Afreuropamericasiaaustralica, followed in 1994 and Van Dijk developed his DJing and remixing skills with dates all over Europe and reworkings of tracks by Denki Groove and Parts of Console. Later releases under his own name began to cultivate a more melodic brand of trance that fit in well with the growing Hi-NRG/progressive trance scene in Europe. The 1997 Glow LP under his own name presaged his first mix album, Multi-Mijk, consisting mostly of his own tracks and remixes. In 1999, he released Teamwork, a full album of collaborations with producers including Tanith, Claude Young, Thomas Schumacher, and Quazar. In addition to production, remixing, and DJing, Van Dijk also moved into the soundtrack realm with scores for two movies as well as the video game soundtrack Ghost in the Shell. He also developed a music-making game for Sony's Playstation named Depth. ~ John Bush, All Music Guide Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Schöneberg
Schöneberg - Marmion Remix
Schoneberg
Schonerberg (Original Marmion Remix)
Schöneberg (Marmion Remix)
Schoneberg (Marmion remix)
Schöneberg - Original Mix
The Spark, The Flame & The Fire - The Moon & The Sun Remix
Schöneberg - Sean Tyas Remix
Schoeneberg
Shoneberg
Schöneberg (Thomas Schumacher’s Rumpshakers Galore Mix)
Schoneberg (Moonmen Over Marmion Mix)
Five Years & Tomorrow [Genuine Remix Edit]
Schoneberg (Man With No Name remix)
Schöneberg (ASOT 798) - PureNRG Remix
Schoneberg (Man With No Name mix)
Schöneberg (ASOT 797) - Neodyne Remix
Schöneberg - Donnacha Costello Remix
Schöneberg (ASOT 798) [Armin's OLDSKOOL Classic]
Fire Child
Schöneberg - Man With No Name Remix
Schöneberg (Original Mix)
Schöneberg (Kid Paul Remix)
Schöneberg (ASOT 790) [Armin's OLD SKOOL Classic]
Best Regards (Non Eric remix radio edit)
Schöneberg (Marmion Mix)
The Secret Plant
Schöneberg (Man With No Name Remix)
Schonenberg
Schöneberg (Original)
Shoeneberg
Schöneberg - Roberto Rodriguez Piano Edit
T-Dancer
Five Years & Tomorrow
Schöneberg - DJ T. From Mitte To Schöneberg Remix
Schöneberg (ASOT 797) - Sean Tyas Remix
Schöneberg (Original Marmion Remix)
Firechild
First Contact
Best Regards
Schonenberg (Tony de Vit mix)
Schöneberg - Abe Duque Remix
Schöneberg - Kid Paul Remix
Schöneberg (Man With No Name Mix)
Schonenberg (Marmion Remix)
Schöneberg (PureNRG Remix)
Schoenberg
Five Years And Tomorrow
Firechild - Video Version
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