Hong Kong Beat mobile disco wishes all its Dutch friends and followers a great Koningsdag!

In recent years, dance music has almost been driven along solely by a regiment of top Dutch DJs, who even invented a highly influential genre of EDM, Dutch house.

But music from Holland is about more than house and trance, having many eclectic influences from surrounding countries and its history in trading with the World, shaping a wide range of hard rock, alternative rock, Nederpop, Nederhop, Europop, deep house, and disco tunes.

So, to celebrate the Koningsdag – Kings Day – holiday and wish all my Dutch friends and followers a great day – while avoiding the host of great Dutch EDM DJs (a blogcast for another day perhaps) – Hong Kong Beat presents a set of music from Dutch artists from over the past 50 years.

Proost!

https://www.mixcloud.com/hkbeat/wishing-all-my-dutch-friends-and-followers-a-great-koningsdag/

Hong Kong Beat Mobile Disco’s celebration of things English for St. George’s Day

Wishing a great St George’s Day to all my English friends and followers. Now go slay some dragons!

Hong Kong Beat

Celebrating St. George’s Day with a selection of tunes about Merrie Olde Englande, and things English, like football, reggae and curry…

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For no reason other than I like them, Hong Kong Beat mobile disco brings you Brit crime caper movie music!

Tarantino is maybe the King of picking great music for the soundtracks of his movies, but with a smaller list of directorial credits, Guy Ritchie is maybe the Crown Prince, with his trio of Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels, Snatch, and RocknRolla, providing enough tuneage for a great night out on a caper…

Then it got me thinking, The Italian Job (no not the awful remake, the original with minis, Cockney rhyming slang and Benny Hill), Sexy Beast, Layer Cake, Buster, The Krays…  can all claim a good line in British tuneage to go along with a cheeky caper.

Iconic cars, antique shotguns, diamonds, gypsy camp sites, drug heists, hungry pigs, improbably named hard men, and laconic one-liners… the movie genre of British gangster movies has them all, as well as underlying black humour laced with matter-of-fact violence.

It was while watching RocknRolla (and wondering when the sequel is likely to come out) that made me realise the list of great tunes that Brit crime capers have brought to the silver screen, and decided it was time for Hong Kong Beat to cut the pony and let the dog see the rabbit. So, for no other reason than I like them, I present Hong Kong Beat’s tribute to Brit crime capers.

See if you can spot the films from the tunes (answers in the Mixcloud track list)