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Wednesday 25 March 2009

DUB BE GOOD TO ME


Dubsteppin



I first came across this musical phenomenon on Queen's day in Amsterdam April 



2007. After a day of open air orange coated hedonism, we headed down the 



Marnixstraat to the Heineken factory where, next door is ‘Twstd’ Queens days 



premier underground party, as the word on the street was that Dave Clarke was to put 



in an appearance and electronic legend Billy Nasty also planning to rock the decks.



When we got into the place we sat in the outside area, and I got chatting to a guy 



called ‘Art’ and we shot the breeze about the current state of the dance scene in 



Holland, and what was up and coming. It was then when he told me about a club he 



promoted called ‘Lockdown” on the ‘Dubstep’ scene and tonight Billy Nasty would 



be playing a ‘Dubstep’ set.



 Now I’d heard the phrase banded around before and turns out I’d heard a few tracks, 



just not aware of putting all together under one scene.



And what a bizarre scene it was, for all of you who have not come across ‘Dubstep’ 



before it is a sound that originates from the UK garage scene in the late nineties, for 




all you jungle heads out there it will sound like a slowed version of drum and bass, 


the ‘dubstep’ scene pretty much runs concurrently with the grime scene, it’s a sound 



that champions UK hip hop style and is truly a sonic experience.



Bass is the defining characteristic to this sound, so heavy, deep and brash that you 



should feel it reverberate around your chest cavity if its been listened to correctly. The 



top range should appear sporadic highlighting the bass and with no real trace of any 



mid range. The combination of these two sounds will give the illusion of some mid 



action.



The one requirement with this genre is the demand for it to be played through a great 



system and speakers set up for the bass crispness to otherwise it sounds distorted. 



When listened to at home, it is at first hard to figure out how this sound could be 



given a social outing but “ dubstep raves” are a completely unique experience.



Always dark and moody, just like the sound. Watching people sway to the bass and 



invent smart moves to cope with the lack of pace is something else. The odd thing is 



most modern day dance phenomena are base around the faster pace music with 



repetitive paced beats, but 'dubstep' is not any of those things, it is moody and slow 



almost fragmented in its approach, it has a hollowness that is completely filled with 




the bass, people can be very inventive when showing their interpretation of how to 



express themselves to what ever they are listening to.  The bass dictates the BPM and 



the beats are usually half time, whilst repeating bars and doubling up on the snare and 



the kick drum, and skipping beats that drag the rhythm around the speakers.



So you can imagine the first time I was presented with this, in its entirety that night at 



‘Twstd.’ apart from the sounds.



 The whole feel of the vibe felt very drum and bass, that wasn’t the only thing, the 



presence of an MC and the bass drops throughout the set also showed you that this 



movement takes its root from the UK garage and jungle scene, and using the dirty 



surliness of the London Grime scene but with out the ‘chavs.’



The ‘dubstep’ scene can draw its comparisons to the old Kingston dub sound systems 



where Lee ‘ scratch’ Perrin’s Arc studio reggae sounds rained supreme and early hip 



hop legends like ‘ Kool Herc’ cut there teeth before bringing that style to the Bronx in 



New York and the rest as they say is history.



This scene has its home in London but taken off big time in the Netherlands and 



Belgium where there are many regular nights such as Audio Culture and Lockdown.



Back in London Brixton as ever is at the for front of this scene with monthly and 


weekly nights getting down and dirty, the biggest of these is the monthly night called 



DMZ bought to you by the Dubstep label of the same name, with DJs such as the 



pioneering Kode9, plasticman and Digital mystikz.



The best thing about this low frequency sound is its ability to be mixed comfortably 



with other types of electronic music such as electro, techno and drum and bass. 



Minimal but still achieving fullness, it gives a wall of sound but with very little 



components,



Dubstep is now getting the recognition it deserves with Burials debut album 



collecting ‘The wire’ album of the year accolade.



Another off spin to this genre is the 'No school' breaks scene championed by the likes 



of Dj's Deekline and Wizard, which is something like Dubstep meets Notting hill 



carnival. Other prevalent figures to rise out of this early Grime / Dubstep scene are 



Dizzee Rascal and early streets material are both cousins to this scene.



But if you want to get down then check out Dub scouts and the smog sessions, or my 



favourite Amsterdam’s Mike Engine and Styx.



So if you feel like taking a chance and giving something new a try check out this 



scene, if you don’t have the energy to get down to some banging techno or rocking 


jungle then its is time to “Dubstep” 



Rugged and underground but relaxing and when listened too can give an intellectual 



account for its self as thinking music.


1 comment:

  1. Had my first Dubstep outing a few weeks ago when DJ Marky came to Bournemouth 2020 Rocks. DJ Marky was awesome but the Dubstep just made me pissed off and bored. Perhaps in a different setting it might have been different... Not a fan.

    ReplyDelete

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