boomnoise wrote:well, let's just call it a rather brave plunge into the deep end!
ahh, those were fine internet moments i tell thee. i really let them have it.
boomnoise wrote:well, let's just call it a rather brave plunge into the deep end!
lol, if it is, thats one hot potato!seckle wrote:crazy d?KION wrote:wo.... wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-wowowo-wo-wo-wo
pure & simple.tronman wrote:its dance music init.have you ever been to fwd or dmz or any dubstep dance with a bangin system before? cos thats where its at mate. it aint all about your myspace beats or dubstep cds for the comfort of your own home. its about goin to a dance lettin off. dubstep is the music of now its always gonna change just let mandem do their thing init.
i really don't think it's the case that producers only listen to dubstep at the expense of other musics. far from it.Mico Viejo wrote:" think the real debate, and hopefully the one to come here, is regarding rigidity of frameworks, archetypes, a lack of openess in form (i.e. too many producers listening to too much dubstep, not enough other music)"
Some intelligence at last.
And yo, all those getting uptight; don't take me too seriously.
2 things please.Mico Viejo wrote:I'm playing devil's advocate a bit, but heres something to think about:
We're starting to see Dubstep's influence spreading to other areas of music now, with people outside the scene mixing the sound with other genres, what might be considered the second stage of a scene, for example check:
www.myspace.com/spuek
www.various.co.uk
This aint neccesarily a bad thing (I'm personally feeling some of this), but stage 3 can't be far off: a David Bowie dubstep LP or some shit.
Secondly, I'm starting to wonder if Dubstep didn't die already the moment the name was coined. There's a lot of talk about how exciting the scene is cos it hasnt been locked down to any one thing yet, hasnt become formulaic. And yeah, maybe that was the case in the beginning. I bought some of the early Horsepower, Darqwan, Zed Bias stuff when it came out and din't really know what music it was, and I get the impression that they dint either. They just did it. And that stuff was exciting.
I'm rambling here, but what I wanted to say was that if u just check the first dubstep allstars LP it was diverse, exciting, more of a dark 2-step sound, but check allstars no.4 and 90% of it is pretty weak and samey. Kind of a wak white-man's reggae; hardly fukcing groundbreaking.
Its like once the name dubstep stuck everyone went "oh yeah, gots to stick some stupid skanking sounds and echoing vocals in now or it isnt dubstep".
Apart from that, I'm a little dubious as to whether its a real scene like grime is. Seems a little artificial to me, like its all just a fuss created on the internet. But maybe thats how all new forms are gonna develop now?
So, anyway, dubstep's dead, yeah: debate....
worries again!! (...about dub step!)KION wrote:wo.... wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-wo-wowowo-wo-wo-wo
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