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'''Warp Brothers''' is the [[dance music]] [[musical ensemble|group]] moniker used by [[Germans|German]] [[Disc jockey|DJs]] Oliver Goedicke and Jürgen Dohr. Established in 1999, Their style includes [[techno]], [[hard acid]], [[House music|house]], [[trance music|trance]] and [[Electro music|electro]].
'''Warp Brothers''' is the [[electronic dance music|dance music]] [[musical ensemble|group]] moniker used by [[Germans|German]] [[Disc jockey|DJs]] Oliver Goedicke and Jürgen Dohr. Established in 1999, Their style includes [[techno]], [[hard acid]], [[House music|house]], [[trance music|trance]] and [[Electro music|electro]].


Their most successful [[hit record|hits]] include "Phatt Bass", "We Will Survive" and "Blast the Speakers" which found success in several countries including the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and [[Germany]].
Their most successful [[hit record|hits]] include "Phatt Bass", "We Will Survive" and "Blast the Speakers" which found success in several countries including the [[United Kingdom|UK]] and [[Germany]].

Revision as of 22:59, 30 December 2011

Warp Brothers is the dance music group moniker used by German DJs Oliver Goedicke and Jürgen Dohr. Established in 1999, Their style includes techno, hard acid, house, trance and electro.

Their most successful hits include "Phatt Bass", "We Will Survive" and "Blast the Speakers" which found success in several countries including the UK and Germany.

The original version of "Phatt Bass" was by Warp Brothers vs. Aquagen, based on New Order's "Confusion" (Pump Panel Reconstruction Mix), and should not be confused with Public Domain's "Operation Blade" which was based on the same song. "Blast the Speakers" was featured on the 2005 techno album, Radikal Techno 6.

Singles

[1]

Selected discography

  • Warp Factor (2003)
  • TranzWorld, Vol. 6.0 (2003)
  • TranzWorld, Vol. 7 (2004)
  • TranzWorld, Vol. 8 (2004)
  • TranzWorld, Vol. 9 (2005)
  • Live in Sydney (2005)
  • Big in Japan (2006)

References

  1. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 591. ISBN 1-904994-10-5.