Home › Forums › Message From One Forum › 09. Creative Expression & Obsessions › Gloomer ft. Jay30K “Slave New World” – no dystopian playlist required
Tagged: #2point0, #ArtificialIntelligence, #awareness, #consciousness, #CreativeExpression, #CreativeJourney, #Decentralization, #ElectronicMusic, #EvolutionOfConsciousness, #FLStudio, #Freedom, #FutureThinking, #Gloomer, #HumanPotential, #IndependentArtist, #Individuality, #Innovation, #Jan, #Jay30k, #MessageFromOne, #MessageFromOneForum, #musicproducer, #MusicWithMeaning, #OpenMind, #PersonalGrowth, #philosophy, #selfmastery, #SlaveNewWorld, #ThinkDifferent, #transformation
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1 July 2026 at 21:42 #8144
Jan
Keymaster“Slave New World” reflects the concerns of its time, using electronic music to explore themes of freedom, conformity, and individual choice. Looking back through the lens of the 2.0 philosophy, the focus shifts from fear and resistance toward awareness, personal responsibility, and conscious creation. This track serves as a snapshot of an evolving journey, where questioning the world becomes the first step toward building a better one.
1 mrt 2013 – (Rating : 8/10) This deserves an 8 and applause.
In the early 2010s, tracks like “Slave New World” by Gloomer ft. Jay30K captured a raw unease about control and conformity.
This haunting electronic piece, built in FL Studio, painted a dystopian soundscape. Its minimal lyrics and atmospheric beats evoked Aldous Huxley’s Brave New World, a society drugged into happiness, stripped of freedom, and ruled by subtle manipulation. Back then, it felt like a wake-up call against emerging surveillance and loss of individuality.
From today’s vantage point in the 2.0 era, this track marks an important early signal. It highlighted real fears of top-down control, but those old ideas were limited by a victim mindset.
People sensed the “New World Order” shadows yet stayed trapped in resistance and paranoia. The music resonated because it mirrored the old 1.0 human experience: reactive, divided, and powered by fear rather than creation.
The 2.0 revolution upgrades this completely. Instead of fighting external “slave systems,” we upgrade consciousness itself. Technology now serves human potential, decentralized tools, AI that amplifies awareness, and societies built on voluntary cooperation and abundance.
Where “Slave New World” warned of conformity through pleasure and distraction, 2.0 builds conscious choice, inner sovereignty, and creative freedom. The track contributes as a historical mirror: it helped awaken people to the problems, but 2.0 surpasses it by turning awareness into empowered action. We don’t just critique the machine; we redesign reality from the inside out, blending advanced tech with deeper humanity.
This evolution shows how old dystopian art fueled the shift. What once felt oppressive now reminds us how far we’ve come toward a world of awakened individuals shaping their destinies.
These early warnings will feel like ancient artifacts, valuable for context, yet quaint compared to thriving, conscious civilizations. The real power lies in choosing upgrade over endless critique.
And hey, if the old world tried to make us slaves to the beat, at least in 2.0 we get to dance as the DJs of our own future, no dystopian playlist required. 😊
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