Label: Different Is Different Records
5 October, 2011 | Digital | DIDREC011
Style: Techno
Total Tracks: 03
01. Perron Nul (Original Mix)
02. Perron Nul (Tom Hades Remix)
03. Perron Nul (Drumcomplex Remix)
Our 11th installment is presented by Switch Music and Different is Different Records. Folker Zwart is an up and coming techno Dj from Amsterdam, and this is his debut as a producer. Tom Hades and Drumcomplex made two remixes to welcome Folker into the production field. Thanks a lot for your support. About the Rhino: When European settlers first began moving into east and southern Africa in the 19th century, the savannas had an abundance of wildlife. Even black rhinos, largely solitary animals, were so plentiful that it was not unusual to encounter dozens of them in a single day. However, due to relentless poaching by settlers, the numbers and distribution of black rhinos quickly declined in Central, West and East Africa. Poaching pressure escalated during the 1970s and 1980s as a result of the rising demand for rhino horn in Asia and the Middle East and between 1970 and 1992, the black rhino suffered a 96 percent decline in numbers. The good news is that most black rhino populations are steadily increasing. However, total numbers are still only a fraction of what they were fifty years ago.
© beatport
5 October, 2011 | Digital | DIDREC011
Style: Techno
Total Tracks: 03
01. Perron Nul (Original Mix)
02. Perron Nul (Tom Hades Remix)
03. Perron Nul (Drumcomplex Remix)
Our 11th installment is presented by Switch Music and Different is Different Records. Folker Zwart is an up and coming techno Dj from Amsterdam, and this is his debut as a producer. Tom Hades and Drumcomplex made two remixes to welcome Folker into the production field. Thanks a lot for your support. About the Rhino: When European settlers first began moving into east and southern Africa in the 19th century, the savannas had an abundance of wildlife. Even black rhinos, largely solitary animals, were so plentiful that it was not unusual to encounter dozens of them in a single day. However, due to relentless poaching by settlers, the numbers and distribution of black rhinos quickly declined in Central, West and East Africa. Poaching pressure escalated during the 1970s and 1980s as a result of the rising demand for rhino horn in Asia and the Middle East and between 1970 and 1992, the black rhino suffered a 96 percent decline in numbers. The good news is that most black rhino populations are steadily increasing. However, total numbers are still only a fraction of what they were fifty years ago.
© beatport
beatport : Folker Zwart Different Is Different
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