Ravelex
General Hype => Main Talk => Yogyakarta => Topic started by: acid029 on 02/05/08, 13:58
(http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u247/ucoxzacid/flyer_ilove.jpg)
*bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
Gk ada matinya abang yg satu ini...
big support....
*tepuktangan* *tepuktangan*
@acid pasti rame deh......?suproooot.............lg deh
keren flayernya...di bikin kaos mantab tuh !!! duh pengen ke jogja !!!
support dulu deh dari jauh !!
techo rules !!
@ dedoSixteen yoiiii desainer nya edan emang karya2 nya..cek aja www.tragiklabs.com :P
*bgs* *bgs*
Support dari jauh ya guys ;)
Siippp two of Indonesian Techno heroes will be playing together!!! *bgs* *bgs*
Bakal melintir nihhh.... ;D ;D
*bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
duo techno dj fantastis *bgs* *bgs* *bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
Quote from: DJ Deny on 02/05/08, 19:00
*bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
ciiieh dj deny sampai kehabisan kata2...:)
i luv techno
*piss* *piss*
suksey yah ... *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan*
techno garis keras nih...bahaya...
Sadesss.....Mantaps....
Ni Dia Yg Ditunggu Tunggu....
Siap Hadir....!
Abang Remy...Koko Joevan... *bgs*
cheers from jakarta :)
Top Markotop.. *bgs* *bgs*
They're d best in here... *bgs* *bgs*
wuah passti guokilll nich...
pengen liat bgt tp jauh ajah dr sini..
jadi support aja dr sini..
go abang & bang jo... ;D
luar biasa......fantastis.....ciamik.......mak nyus.......bahaya !!!!
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
Beda generasi dikit,Two of best national techno Dj favorit gw....... *bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
*bgs* Kangen Techno! secara di Bali jarang bgt dengerin Techno set.... (?) (?)
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
head banging techno nya sudah DIMULLLAAAAIIIII...
hehehhehe...
suprot ya jo...
thank u all.. respect respect
Any given moment, countless people are listening to techno. It's hard to believe that a mere ten years ago electronic dance music was considered an underground movement. Techno has grown from virtual obscurity to a genre embraced by millions of listeners and musicians worldwide.
Why is techno so successful? Perhaps its recent popularity is due to the growing number of people who are accepting computer technology as an integral part of their lives. Because techno is created almost entirely with electronics, much of it has become an expression of the interface between humans and machines. This relationship developed quite recently.
In the early eighties a trio of pioneers in Detroit began merging the sounds of synthpop and Italo-disco with funk. Juan Atkins, Derrick May, and Kevin Saunderson were high school friends who went to dance parties where the music ranged from Kraftwerk to Parliament. They listened to an influential radio DJ, The Electrifying Mojo, who played European imports alongside Prince and the B-52's. In 1983 Atkins and Richard Davies, aka 3070, released the hit "Clear" under the name Cybotron. Techno was born.
Around the same time, the infant hip-hop community picked up elements of Kraftwerk's music, thanks to DJs like Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash, and created electro. Electro relied heavily on synthesized beats and computery vocoder voices. In 1982, Afrika Bambaataa took the melody from Kraftwerk's "Trans-Europe Express," combined it with the distinctive beat from Kraftwerk's "Numbers," and composed the anthem "Planet Rock." Electro spawned the idea of the funky computer. MCs rapped over its beats, and breakdancers formed a new culture in the cities where electro reigned.
In Chicago, house music was taking a similar path. Frankie Knuckles, Ron Hardy, and other DJs were playing a mixture of synthesizer-driven dance music and NYC disco. Hardy in particular would edit loops of the instrumental parts of tracks. Before long, local radio caught on with the Hot Mix 5 on WBMX, and locals began creating their own tracks to play.
Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard
Techno, electro, and house were made possible by new, inexpensive technology. The Roland TR-808, a programmable drum machine released in late 1980, formed the distinctive sound for the entire electro genre and was used in countless early techno and house tracks. 1981's Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard was used to create squelchy basslines once people discovered the weird sounds that emerged from a little knob twiddling. Samplers and sequencers also became commonplace.
In the early nineties, something odd happened. Techno, which had failed to gain mainstream success in the United States, became a huge phenomenon in Europe—especially in Great Britain. In fact, the term was popularized by Virgin Records' seminal UK compilation Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit.
Around 1990 raves began to appear near London. Most organizers of these large, illegal parties made their money dodging British licensing laws. The locations of many raves remained secret until the night of the event. Attendees had to call a special phone number or rendezvous at various meeting spots to learn the actual location. Hundreds of people descended on raves simultaneously, making them difficult to break up.
At these raves, a happy, simple style of techno called "hardcore" was born. DJs created tracks with drug-addled dancers in mind. Unrelenting bass and fast beats accompanied chipmunky vocals and jingly pop-hooks. By 1992 hardcore was mainstream in England and The Prodigy's "Charly" hit Number 3 on the pop charts. When the record industry realized techno could sell, the genre became much more commercialized.
Today the increased interest in techno allows more acts to see the light of day. A variety of record labels are cropping up with a new generation of artists. Currently, electronic musicians with names like Autechre (Sean Booth and Rob Brown), Aphex Twin (Richard D. James), µ-ziq (Mike Paradinas), and Squarepusher (Tom Jenkinson), are creating alien atmospheres which push the boundaries of musical conventions.
A small group of minimalists keep Detroit-style techno alive. Richie Hawtin, an English-born Canadian who DJed in Detroit in the eighties, produces music under the name Plastikman. Hawtin's hypnotic tracks involve subtle changes in repetitive, syncopated percussion. Other important figures in this second wave are Carl Craig, Jeff Mills, and Underground Resistance.
Where is techno headed? It's difficult to say. More and more electronic music is being released, and genres are becoming increasingly specialized. Styles like ambient and drum and bass are branching into new types of music that defy classification.
Techno has become the soundtrack for the wired world. Some of its original creators are approaching their forties, but many of its current listeners are in their twenties and early thirties—people who grew up with computers.
There is a certain sense of detachment that occasionally comes with encountering new technologies, but techno reminds us that humans control the machines, and electronics can be used to express funk and soul. Techno is as much a philosophy as a genre. It's about Postmodern sampling and pushing the boundaries of technology. Techno fills the space between humans and their computer monitors.
the higher level nichhh....:)....cihuyyyy
c u on friday yaw..
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
Quote from: Lncx on 13/05/08, 16:59
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
gayamuuu coxx....kowe yoo hu uh :P
^^^
^^
uuppzzz....pada ngomongin sapa siy benernya???
emang abang n joevan kalo maen suka ngumpet di bawah dj booth ya?? :P :P ;D *piss* *piss*
Quote from: Embassy on 06/05/08, 14:43
Any given moment, countless people are listening to techno. Its hard to believe that a mere ten years ago electronic dance music was considered an underground movement. Techno has grown from virtual obscurity to a genre embraced by millions of listeners and musicians worldwide.
Why is techno so successful? Perhaps its recent popularity is due to the growing number of people who are accepting computer technology as an integral part of their lives. Because techno is created almost entirely with electronics, much of it has become an expression of the interface between humans and machines. This relationship developed quite recently.
In the early eighties a trio of pioneers in Detroit began merging the sounds of synthpop and Italo-disco with funk. Juan Atkins, Derrick May, and Kevin Saunderson were high school friends who went to dance parties where the music ranged from Kraftwerk to Parliament. They listened to an influential radio DJ, The Electrifying Mojo, who played European imports alongside Prince and the B-52s. In 1983 Atkins and Richard Davies, aka 3070, released the hit Clear under the name Cybotron. Techno was born.
Around the same time, the infant hip-hop community picked up elements of Kraftwerks music, thanks to DJs like Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash, and created electro. Electro relied heavily on synthesized beats and computery vocoder voices. In 1982, Afrika Bambaataa took the melody from Kraftwerks Trans-Europe Express, combined it with the distinctive beat from Kraftwerks Numbers, and composed the anthem Planet Rock. Electro spawned the idea of the funky computer. MCs rapped over its beats, and breakdancers formed a new culture in the cities where electro reigned.
In Chicago, house music was taking a similar path. Frankie Knuckles, Ron Hardy, and other DJs were playing a mixture of synthesizer-driven dance music and NYC disco. Hardy in particular would edit loops of the instrumental parts of tracks. Before long, local radio caught on with the Hot Mix 5 on WBMX, and locals began creating their own tracks to play.
Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard
Techno, electro, and house were made possible by new, inexpensive technology. The Roland TR-808, a programmable drum machine released in late 1980, formed the distinctive sound for the entire electro genre and was used in countless early techno and house tracks. 1981s Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard was used to create squelchy basslines once people discovered the weird sounds that emerged from a little knob twiddling. Samplers and sequencers also became commonplace.
In the early nineties, something odd happened. Techno, which had failed to gain mainstream success in the United States, became a huge phenomenon in Europeespecially in Great Britain. In fact, the term was popularized by Virgin Records seminal UK compilation Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit.
Around 1990 raves began to appear near London. Most organizers of these large, illegal parties made their money dodging British licensing laws. The locations of many raves remained secret until the night of the event. Attendees had to call a special phone number or rendezvous at various meeting spots to learn the actual location. Hundreds of people descended on raves simultaneously, making them difficult to break up.
At these raves, a happy, simple style of techno called hardcore was born. DJs created tracks with drug-addled dancers in mind. Unrelenting bass and fast beats accompanied chipmunky vocals and jingly pop-hooks. By 1992 hardcore was mainstream in England and The Prodigys Charly hit Number 3 on the pop charts. When the record industry realized techno could sell, the genre became much more commercialized.
Today the increased interest in techno allows more acts to see the light of day. A variety of record labels are cropping up with a new generation of artists. Currently, electronic musicians with names like Autechre (Sean Booth and Rob Brown), Aphex Twin (Richard D. James), µ-ziq (Mike Paradinas), and Squarepusher (Tom Jenkinson), are creating alien atmospheres which push the boundaries of musical conventions.
A small group of minimalists keep Detroit-style techno alive. Richie Hawtin, an English-born Canadian who DJed in Detroit in the eighties, produces music under the name Plastikman. Hawtins hypnotic tracks involve subtle changes in repetitive, syncopated percussion. Other important figures in this second wave are Carl Craig, Jeff Mills, and Underground Resistance.
Where is techno headed? Its difficult to say. More and more electronic music is being released, and genres are becoming increasingly specialized. Styles like ambient and drum and bass are branching into new types of music that defy classification.
Techno has become the soundtrack for the wired world. Some of its original creators are approaching their forties, but many of its current listeners are in their twenties and early thirtiespeople who grew up with computers.
There is a certain sense of detachment that occasionally comes with encountering new technologies, but techno reminds us that humans control the machines, and electronics can be used to express funk and soul. Techno is as much a philosophy as a genre. Its about Postmodern sampling and pushing the boundaries of technology. Techno fills the space between humans and their computer monitors.
dibikin big festival juga dong bang, biar kaya I <3 TECHNO diluar :)
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 13/05/08, 17:14
Quote from: Lncx on 13/05/08, 16:59
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
gayamuuu coxx....kowe yoo hu uh :P
hhahahaahahaa,,,,sesama penghuni djbooth dilarang saling mencela... *piss* *piss* *piss*
Quote from: LosTSisKa on 15/05/08, 03:35
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 13/05/08, 17:14
Quote from: Lncx on 13/05/08, 16:59
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
gayamuuu coxx....kowe yoo hu uh :P
hhahahaahahaa,,,,sesama penghuni djbooth dilarang saling mencela... *piss* *piss* *piss*
wetz..klarifikasi yaa...sayaa maenannya Vjbooth,bkn Djbooth...hahahaha :P
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 15/05/08, 03:51
Quote from: LosTSisKa on 15/05/08, 03:35
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 13/05/08, 17:14
Quote from: Lncx on 13/05/08, 16:59
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
gayamuuu coxx....kowe yoo hu uh :P
hhahahaahahaa,,,,sesama penghuni djbooth dilarang saling mencela... *piss* *piss* *piss*
wetz..klarifikasi yaa...sayaa maenannya Vjbooth,bkn Djbooth...hahahaha :P
ah blek bukan kamu tapi 2 org yg laen dgn inisial admr & lncx *piss* *piss* *piss* *piss*
mantap !!!
huehuehe..
keren2 *bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
support for this big event :)
Quote from: dirtynumbangelboy on 15/05/08, 00:11
Quote from: Embassy on 06/05/08, 14:43
Any given moment, countless people are listening to techno. Its hard to believe that a mere ten years ago electronic dance music was considered an underground movement. Techno has grown from virtual obscurity to a genre embraced by millions of listeners and musicians worldwide.
Why is techno so successful? Perhaps its recent popularity is due to the growing number of people who are accepting computer technology as an integral part of their lives. Because techno is created almost entirely with electronics, much of it has become an expression of the interface between humans and machines. This relationship developed quite recently.
In the early eighties a trio of pioneers in Detroit began merging the sounds of synthpop and Italo-disco with funk. Juan Atkins, Derrick May, and Kevin Saunderson were high school friends who went to dance parties where the music ranged from Kraftwerk to Parliament. They listened to an influential radio DJ, The Electrifying Mojo, who played European imports alongside Prince and the B-52s. In 1983 Atkins and Richard Davies, aka 3070, released the hit Clear under the name Cybotron. Techno was born.
Around the same time, the infant hip-hop community picked up elements of Kraftwerks music, thanks to DJs like Afrika Bambaataa and Grandmaster Flash, and created electro. Electro relied heavily on synthesized beats and computery vocoder voices. In 1982, Afrika Bambaataa took the melody from Kraftwerks Trans-Europe Express, combined it with the distinctive beat from Kraftwerks Numbers, and composed the anthem Planet Rock. Electro spawned the idea of the funky computer. MCs rapped over its beats, and breakdancers formed a new culture in the cities where electro reigned.
In Chicago, house music was taking a similar path. Frankie Knuckles, Ron Hardy, and other DJs were playing a mixture of synthesizer-driven dance music and NYC disco. Hardy in particular would edit loops of the instrumental parts of tracks. Before long, local radio caught on with the Hot Mix 5 on WBMX, and locals began creating their own tracks to play.
Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard
Techno, electro, and house were made possible by new, inexpensive technology. The Roland TR-808, a programmable drum machine released in late 1980, formed the distinctive sound for the entire electro genre and was used in countless early techno and house tracks. 1981s Roland TB-303 mini-keyboard was used to create squelchy basslines once people discovered the weird sounds that emerged from a little knob twiddling. Samplers and sequencers also became commonplace.
In the early nineties, something odd happened. Techno, which had failed to gain mainstream success in the United States, became a huge phenomenon in Europeespecially in Great Britain. In fact, the term was popularized by Virgin Records seminal UK compilation Techno! The New Dance Sound Of Detroit.
Around 1990 raves began to appear near London. Most organizers of these large, illegal parties made their money dodging British licensing laws. The locations of many raves remained secret until the night of the event. Attendees had to call a special phone number or rendezvous at various meeting spots to learn the actual location. Hundreds of people descended on raves simultaneously, making them difficult to break up.
At these raves, a happy, simple style of techno called hardcore was born. DJs created tracks with drug-addled dancers in mind. Unrelenting bass and fast beats accompanied chipmunky vocals and jingly pop-hooks. By 1992 hardcore was mainstream in England and The Prodigys Charly hit Number 3 on the pop charts. When the record industry realized techno could sell, the genre became much more commercialized.
Today the increased interest in techno allows more acts to see the light of day. A variety of record labels are cropping up with a new generation of artists. Currently, electronic musicians with names like Autechre (Sean Booth and Rob Brown), Aphex Twin (Richard D. James), µ-ziq (Mike Paradinas), and Squarepusher (Tom Jenkinson), are creating alien atmospheres which push the boundaries of musical conventions.
A small group of minimalists keep Detroit-style techno alive. Richie Hawtin, an English-born Canadian who DJed in Detroit in the eighties, produces music under the name Plastikman. Hawtins hypnotic tracks involve subtle changes in repetitive, syncopated percussion. Other important figures in this second wave are Carl Craig, Jeff Mills, and Underground Resistance.
Where is techno headed? Its difficult to say. More and more electronic music is being released, and genres are becoming increasingly specialized. Styles like ambient and drum and bass are branching into new types of music that defy classification.
Techno has become the soundtrack for the wired world. Some of its original creators are approaching their forties, but many of its current listeners are in their twenties and early thirtiespeople who grew up with computers.
There is a certain sense of detachment that occasionally comes with encountering new technologies, but techno reminds us that humans control the machines, and electronics can be used to express funk and soul. Techno is as much a philosophy as a genre. Its about Postmodern sampling and pushing the boundaries of technology. Techno fills the space between humans and their computer monitors.
dibikin big festival juga dong bang, biar kaya I <3 TECHNO diluar :)
hehehehe...
mimpinya sih bgitu,
mdh2an bisa ya..secara festival mrk itu massive banget kan?
terakhir I <3 TECHNO sempet release cd compilation 3cd - single track dj friendly gitu..
wajib!! sdh dpt blum?
cheers,
;)
Quote from: A_Dmi_Rer on 14/05/08, 23:51
^^^
^^
uuppzzz....pada ngomongin sapa siy benernya???
emang abang n joevan kalo maen suka ngumpet di bawah dj booth ya?? :P :P ;D *piss* *piss*
huahahahhaaa...
bkn gw loh,
hayooo siapa tuh?
;)
@ discoterror : mau deh techno an lagi di bali.. :) racunnya dari abang niiihh :P
Quote from: LosTSisKa on 15/05/08, 06:00
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 15/05/08, 03:51
Quote from: LosTSisKa on 15/05/08, 03:35
Quote from: bLacK daMAN! on 13/05/08, 17:14
Quote from: Lncx on 13/05/08, 16:59
Quote from: iNsideR on 05/05/08, 22:10
Quote from: acid029 on 05/05/08, 13:14
Quote from: walasok on 05/05/08, 08:52
kalo ga salah dua2nya alumni best techno dj redma kan? :)
yang jelas dua dua nya nunggu walasok buat ikutan party di embassy jogja... ;D ;D
sekalian liat pasukan mu...hahahhaha..sssstttt ada yang selalu ngumpet dj dj booth lho *piss*
sopo pak sing sering ngumpet2 di bawah dj booth????
SI @dmirer gung ;D ;D
gayamuuu coxx....kowe yoo hu uh :P
hhahahaahahaa,,,,sesama penghuni djbooth dilarang saling mencela... *piss* *piss* *piss*
wetz..klarifikasi yaa...sayaa maenannya Vjbooth,bkn Djbooth...hahahaha :P
ah blek bukan kamu tapi 2 org yg laen dgn inisial admr & lncx *piss* *piss* *piss* *piss*
huhahhahahahahhah...itu udh bkn pake inisial lagee kaLeeee ::)
Quote from: titosimon on 15/05/08, 14:37
@ discoterror : mau deh techno an lagi di bali.. :) racunnya dari abang niiihh :P
bali & surabaya..
ketemu d jogja yeukk,
hahay!
;)
segera deh bang :p
Quote from: titosimon on 15/05/08, 15:47
segera deh bang :p
packing & berangkatzzzz..
maauuuuu.....hahay!
;)
*bgs* *bgs*
amppuunnnn.....
asik2 ..........!!!! ABANG kutunggu performance nya ya
Quote from: acid029 on 02/05/08, 13:58
(http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u247/ucoxzacid/flyer_ilove.jpg)
I LOVE TECHNO
I LOVE ABANG & I LOVE JOEVAN
*tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan*
sampe nanti malam ya guys...
;)
@ DJF : luv u too ah :-*
Quote from: Embassy on 16/05/08, 15:28
sampe nanti malam ya guys...
;)
@ DJF : luv u too ah :-*
SiapppBang,..
:) :) :)
....wedew slo uda hujan niy, jgj terangkah?...hmm moga2 aja ga lama,...
Quote from: LosTSisKa on 16/05/08, 18:04
....wedew slo uda hujan niy, jgj terangkah?...hmm moga2 aja ga lama,...
sejauh ini sih jogja terang benderang euy..
rombongan solo merapat barisan kan?
;)
@atas,,,,
....angin berhembus ke selatan niy bang, jd ya merapaaaaat...hahahahhaha...
malem ini ya,,,,,sukses ya guys
suksessssss ;) ;)
senam pagi2 ;D :D ;D
*bgs* *bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
@lostsiska
akhirnyaa ketemuu jg :P
pulang duluaan tp yaa *menghilaangg tiba2* :-\
Quote from: Bopal on 17/05/08, 06:24
senam pagi2 ;D :D ;D
*bgs* *bgs* *bgs* *bgs*
senam sajojo ya?? ;D ;D
what a night!!
maap masi belom bisa hadir....
di dukung 1000% dari surabaya aja...
*tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan*
Quote from: Bopal on 17/05/08, 06:30
@lostsiska
akhirnyaa ketemuu jg :P
pulang duluaan tp yaa *menghilaangg tiba2* :-\
hihiihihi,....
bopaallllllllllll abis ntar klo ga ngilang baliknya susaahhhhhhhhhhh,,,,,*tambah gedhut n' cepak aja duluuu......
luaarrrr biasaaaaaaa,,, *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan* *tepuktangan*
yuuhuuu..
thx bgt teman2 yg sdh meramaikan I LOVE TECHNO
seru loh, vibesnya keren...
ktemu session brkt ya?
cheers,
;)
@ lost siska : luar biasa!!
Quote from: Embassy on 20/05/08, 02:47
@ lost siska : luar biasa!!
...hihihi, biasa diluar kok 'bang... *piss*