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Scott Bond Live Classics & Trance DJ-Sets SPECIAL Compilation (1996 - 2023)

Scott Bond Live Classics & Trance DJ-Sets SPECIAL Compilation (1996 - 2023)

Scott Bond Live Classics & Trance DJ-Sets SPECIAL Compilation (1996 - 2023)

Regular price £14.99

Scott Bond (1996 - 2023)
Live Classics & Trance DJ Sets Special

61 Live DJ-Sets + 77 Hours of Music 

 

We have put together this Quality Collection of Classic Trance DJ-Sets which offers the buyer a great chance to purchase this fantastic series of DJ Sets from one of the original Trance DJ's all in one Convenient Affordable DJ-Sets Compilation 

The DJ-Sets can easily be used on your Home Entertainment System, In-Car MP3 Player, Home PC / Apple Mac, Apple iPod / iPhone / iPad, Portable Music Player or Tablet and through your Smart TV or DJ Equipment using the USB Drive option, so you have a huge variety of different devices in which you can play our DJ-Set Compilations, regardless of whether you are at home, in the car, or the train or on the move. 

 

Compilation Listing

1996 - 1997 SCOTT BOND CLASSIC TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Bakers Republica in Birmingham (1996) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Bakers Republica in Birmingham (1997) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Sheffield (02.08.97) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Sheffield (25.05.97) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond & Tom Bouthier - Live @ Jailhouse in Elgin (13.04.97) - 90 Mins

1998 SCOTT BOND CLASSIC TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live on Radio 1 Essential Mix (24.05.98) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Studio Promo Mix (1998) - 75 Mins

1999 SCOTT BOND CLASSIC TRANCE DJ-SETS

Matt Hardwick & Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher (27.03.99) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Bakers Republica in Birmingham (1998) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Studio Promo Mix (1999) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live Bootleg - Sex Mixtape (1999) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live on Radio 1 Essential Mix (03.01.99) - 90 Mins

2000 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Echo Promo (Jul 2000) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Sheffield (05.02.00) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ GCSSS 2000 in Sydney (13.05.00) - 3 Hours
Scott Bond - Live @ Homelands 2000 in Ireland (29.04.00) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Ministry of Sound in London (2000) - 30 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Network in Belfast (2000) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live on Dance Department (12.02.00) - 30 Mins
Scott Bond - Live on Dance Department (20.05.00) - 45 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Mets 10th Birthday (2000) - 75 Mins

2001 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Dublin (03.02.01) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Sheffield (04.07.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher NEC in Birmingham (13.04.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Massive 2001 in Germany (2001) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live on Radio 1 Essential Mix (09.01.00) - 2 Hours
Scott Bond - Live @ Baia Beach in Norway (16.05.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Escape Club in Swansea (22.04.01) - 30 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher in Sheffield (04.07.01) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher SSS 2001 in Sydney (01.12.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Gatecrasher The Resurrection Party (07.04.01) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Late Night Sessions on 2FM (07.07.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Trance Energy 2001 in Holland (21.10.01) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live on Radio 1 Essential Mix (18.02.01) - 2 Hours
Scott Bond - Live @ Homelands 2001 in Winchester (26.05.01) - 75 Mins

2002 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Late Night Sessions on 2FM (11.12.02) - 30 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Recorded Live Vol 1 (2002) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Sugarshack in Middleborough (2002) - 75 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ The Matrix in Reading (28.09.02) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live on Kuci 88.9 FM (23.11.02) - 45 Mins
Scott Bond - Live on Dance Department (2002) - 1 Hour

2003 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Club Glow in Washington (24.05.03) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Exposure Festival 2003 (06.09.03) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Global DJ Broadcast (28.06.04) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Made In England (12.12.03) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Recorded Live Vol 2 (2003) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ The Moon Club (15.03.03) - 2 Hours
Scott Bond - Live on ID&T Radio (15.05.03) - 2 Hours

2004 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Astra on Fresh FM (24.01.04) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Exposure Festival 2004 (10.09.04) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Made In England (11.01.04) - 2 Hours
Scott Bond - Live @ Made In England (11.06.04) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ VOX, The Dome in Tel-Aviv (27.02.04) - 210 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ The Met Arena in Armagh (Nov 2004) - 1 Hour
Scott Bond - Live @ Music For A Harder Generation (26.09.04) - 45 Mins

2007 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS

Scott Bond - Live @ Fantasyland Winter Event (24.11.07) - 90 Mins
Scott Bond - Live @ Echo Adelaide (12.02.07) - 2 Hours



2023 SCOTT BOND TRANCE DJ-SETS


Scott Bond - Live @ Manor Reunion in Bournemouth (25.11.23) - 90 Mins



Artists Profile

 

Current Location :: Birmingham, UK 

Music Genres :: Hard DanceTrance

 

 

The name is Bond, Scott Bond, license to DJ, spin records and thrill crowds. Surely he can’t be serious with a name like that? Quite the contrary, he’s deadly serious, so much so that the company which manages his DJing affairs – Serious Artists Management – is also the same company which manages Radio 1 DJ Judge Jules and a stable of other DJ superstars including John Kelly, Sonique, Norman Jay and Luke Neville. But Bond is not just simply a DJ, he has another secret line to his career in that he is also resident DJ and co-promoter of the Sheffield based superclub GATECRASHER. He has also written his own material as an artist under the pseudonym of Q:Dos with a string of remixes to his credit including Shimmon & Wolfson’s Top 40 hit “Sundance” for React and Karmasutra’s “Storm In My Soul” , all of this and he is not a day over 25!

Scott’s DJing career and dalliance with the disco decks first began back in 1989 in and around Birmingham’s very colourful night life with his first gig at the legendary Hummingbird club. As Scott recalls, “playing the Hummingbird was a baptism of fire, it was a case of being thrown in at the deep end and just getting on with it. If the crowd didn’t like what you were playing they would throw glass at you, if you were lucky a bottle, they tended to bounce rather than break! I managed to stay there in one piece and figure that if I could deal with this then I could deal with anything.” After Scott’s apprenticeship at the Humming bird he began to branch out playing at various one-off parties for friends around the city which were not exactly legitimate.

By now the young Bond had begun to make a name for himself and it was not long before Karl and Barney – promoters of the C.R.E.A.M. all-nighters in Birmingham had begun to notice the talents of this rising star. Always sure to back a winner Karl and Barney gave his first residency at their all-night parties which had become renowned for their mad-cap antics.

Around 1992 Scott met up with Simon Raine, the then manger of a club called Bakers. Raine had heard much about this talented young DJ who was making a name for himself on the Birmingham club scene. An ambitious individual, Raine had begun building the basis for a new breed of dance club at Bakers, Scott was the missing piece of that jigsaw.

That night after many double brandies, Simon and Scott struck a deal, albeit on the back of a beer mat, Scott agreed to become the new resident DJ at Bakers with Simon promoting the new night call “Absolutely Ridiculous”. Little did Raine and Bond know at the time, that five years later on they would both be running one of the biggest superclubs in the country.

By now Scott had further plans deciding to embark upon a recording career making his own records and why not? Many dance music records at the time were being churned out of the bedroom and it had spawned a new dimension to club culture in that dance music was being created both in the studio and in the bedroom. Scott released his first record “Dap Do Dah” on independent dance label Global Grooves which received rave reviews and respectable ‘Club’ and ‘Buzz ‘ chart placing.

Later that year he set up his own label with a rather apt title of “ABSOLUTELY RIDICULOUS RECORDINGS”. Recording under the guise of The Scott Bond project, he released two records “While your feet are stomping” which featured on Fantazia’s very first House Collection album mixed by Boy George – and the follow up, “The Underground”, both of which were critically acclaimed and supported by none other than the dance father himself Pete Tong.

By now Scott had earned his apprenticeship and in 1993 he started his own night Republica at Bakers DJing alongside other luminaries such as Boy George, Tall Paul, Seb Fontaine and Judge Jules. Scott had become involved in DJing as an interest outside of work as a shipping clerk, “I just knew that my day job was just a way of making ends meet, I loved DJing, it was the whole excitement of playing records that had such an effect on people. I would long for each day to go by so that I could go out at night and spin my records, in the end it got the better of me”. Scott's interest in DJing became more and more involved and it was not long before he was forced to make a decision of DJing on a full-time basis and leaving his job or carrying on being a shipping clerk for the rest of his days.

The encounter with Simon Raine was to prove more fruitful than even Scott could imagine. In August 1994 Scott joined Simon Raine to promote some one off parties under the name of Gatecrasher, after all Simon had gained a reputation as being a party animal and had often “gate crashed” numerous parties, so the name for a club night was quite apt. They both set about promoting their first night at the Archers in Sheffield, a city which Raine had shrewdly picked for its cosmopolitan night life. Sheffield had become the birthright of the romantic era in the 80’s breeding bands such as The Human League, ABC and Heaven 17. It was right at the heart of industrial Britain where people were not afraid to try something new, be it heterosexual boys wearing make-up or a new club that offered a bit more of a night-out than the local Ritzy. Located under some railway arches, the Gatecrasher club nights became a huge success with all of the top DJs demanding to play at the club. Both Oakenfold and Healy were typically two of those big supporters of Gatecrasher.




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