Between them, French electronic music icon Jean-Michel Jarre and the Crystal Method's Scott Kirkland have combined for more than 60 years of electronic music. Though they come from different eras -- ...
Get Access To Every Broadway Story Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. In the documentary film Hired Gun: Out of the ...
The Trip Out, released today, April 15 on Ultra Records, has pioneering American electronic act The Crystal Method (Scott Kirkland) looking to the future and embarking on collaborations with some of ...
They were the frontrunners of the ‘90s’ big beat genre, and their music subsequently found ubiquity on many an early 21st century action movie or high-octane video game soundtrack. The Crystal Method ...
The number of college-age kids in the audience grooving to the music to The Crystal Method (TCM) on Thursday proved the band's brand of electronic "club" music is alive and well, despite the fact that ...
Glendale isn’t normally considered the center of modern electronic music, but for one of the genre’s legendary acts, the Crystal Method, the area has been home for nearly two decades. When Scott ...
There are a handful of electronic artists that early consumers credit with taking the music out of the underground and into the mainstream. These movers and shakers include The Prodigy, The Chemical ...
Crystal Method formed in a grocery store. It was the early 1990s, and Ken Jordan and Scott Kirkland both had more than a casual interest in music. Kirkland’s interest stemmed from the music that had ...
For more than two decades, The Crystal Method has remained at the forefront of the worldwide dance music scene as pioneers of the big beat genre, innovators in '90s ...
In 1989, Ken Jordan and Scott Kirkland met while working at a Smith’s in southeast Las Vegas. The young men shared a passion for techno, and together they began playing DJ sets of those electronic ...
As I drove through downtown Burlington on my way to work and passed the latest generation of college students, I saw the signs: The pants are getting baggier again. There are knee socks and chokers.
An overabundance of collaborations can sometimes fracture the cohesion of a band’s sound. The base fissures, the framework wobbles, and before you know it the weight of all those competing voices ...