A known industry "watermark" on the verified first pressing is a small typo. On the inlay card, Track 5 of CD 2 (Adam Beyer – Remain in Light) is accidentally printed as "Remain in Night." This error was corrected in later, unofficial represses. If your copy says "Light," it is likely a bootleg. If it says "Night," you have the verified rarity.

Before we dissect Volume 7007, we must understand its parent series. Launched in the mid-1990s by Vision Soundcarriers (and later Polystar in Germany), the Trancemaster series was a biannual institution. Unlike commercial "trance" compilations that focused on vocal anthems, Trancemaster dug deeper. It was the home of the 140 BPM, rolling bassline, hypnotic, psychedelic-tinged sound that ruled floors at clubs like Omen in Frankfurt and Tresor in Berlin.

Volumes were typically numbered sequentially (1 through 50+). So, the jump to "7007" was not a typo or a natural progression—it was a marketing pivot. In the early 2000s, the label experimented with "limited edition" sub-series, using four-digit numbers to differentiate special releases. Trancemaster 7007 was positioned as a "Millennium Edition" or "Gold Series" release, promising the darkest, most driving tracks of the era.

The TranceMaster 7007 is a high-performance DJ controller and live-performance system designed for trance and progressive electronic music. Built for precision and durability, it blends tactile control with advanced digital features to suit both club environments and studio workflows.

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