Skream on Ammunition 31 January
- stormfield
- Posts: 854
- Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: babylondon
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Skream on Ammunition 31 January
Hi guys, am new here. Just thought you might be interested in this...
[advance warning]
Still buzzing from the excellent [dubstep warz] on Breezeblock...
31st January sees an exclusive guest mix from [Skream] on
[ammunition], with Stormfield (Combat) on resident duties.
http://www.pulseradio.net/dj/ammunition
The webcast runs from 2000 - 2200.
safe
[advance warning]
Still buzzing from the excellent [dubstep warz] on Breezeblock...
31st January sees an exclusive guest mix from [Skream] on
[ammunition], with Stormfield (Combat) on resident duties.
http://www.pulseradio.net/dj/ammunition
The webcast runs from 2000 - 2200.
safe
- stormfield
- Posts: 854
- Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: babylondon
- Contact:
- stormfield
- Posts: 854
- Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: babylondon
- Contact:
here's the full blah...
this tuesday!
[AMMUNITION] :: Combat Recordings Transmission

Skream [Tempa / Ital]
vs
Stormfield [Combat Recordings]
[TUESDAY : 31 Jan : 2000 - 2200 GMT]
tune in http://www.pulseradiogroup.com/dj/ammunition
Skream Biog:
Meet Skream: Croydon's musical wonderkid. At 15 he discovered making
music. Five years later he's changed the course of UK urban music,
having helped build the foundations of London's most exciting new
musical style, dubstep. But he's barely started yet: because right
now, Skream is an artist on fire. After meeting Dubstep mainstays
Benga nad Hatcha, Skream set about building on the early dark garage
flavours that were to be found on the pirate airwaves around Croydon.
Through Hatcha's sets at club Forward» and releases on the seminal Big
Apple label, they were about to create a new phase of dubstep.
At first Skream specialised in one flavour of dubstep: dark. His
clipped, techy minimal style became a trademark sound. Long before
grime existed, it reflected dark murky streets and sinister nights,
the sound of decaying London and its frustrated communities, stuck out
in satellite towns and sink estates with nothing but a PC and freely
available software to channel their frustration into. Stuck in front
of a PC for days on end, that's exactly what Skream did.
Then two years ago Digital Mystikz burst onto the dubstep scene,
expanding the sound with new flavours and vivid colours. Skream became
even more inspired. It not like he wasn't prolific already - rumour
has it he's made over 1500 tracks - but out poured a host of bright
new tracks from the wonderkid. "Indian remix" took him into trippy
Asian territories, "Cheeky..." into Arabia, his unreleased mixes of
Sunship fused Jamaican dancehall smut with hooky Kraftwerk melodies.
"Smiling Face" broke out cheerful reggae skanks on dancefloors.
But his biggest tune was yet to come. Enter Midnight Request Line -
on Tempa records - an anthemic explosion of electro arpeggios and dub
sub-bass. It's a tune you can sing along to: Skream has it as his own
ringtone. When it got dropped by DJ Youngsta at club Forward»
grime dons Wiley, Jammer and the rest of Roll Deep began to shock out,
flashing their lighters out of hard earned respect. The flip of this
mighty release is bassline boomer "I," an excursion into deep dub
basslines and shifting cinematic textures.
It shouldn't come as any surprise he likes sub-bass, Skream has grown
up around it. His older brother was a member of Croydon's notorious
jungle hell-raising raving outfit Intanatty Crew, which featured Radio
1's Grooverider and Bailey's 1Xtra as members.
Combat Recording's Stormfield will be on resident duties with a slew
of forthcoming Combat electro-tinged halfstep tracks and other fierce
new subsonic weapons.
[forthcoming Skream releases]
Following from the release on Tempa of Skream's anthem "Midnight
Request Line," look out for the Skreamizm series. This will be a
sequence of doublepacks showcasing the depth and breadth of Skream's
current production work. The first will drop in the beginning of 2006
and will feature "Glamma," "Smiley Face," "Rottan," "Lightning Dub"
and "Hag." Following a recent online mix, these tunes are much in
demand, with "Rottan" a catchy anthem, "Smiley Face" a dubwise vocal
gem and "Lightning Dub" an explosive Amen rinse out.
artist info taken from tempa.co.uk
On rotation every tuesday:
stormfield / damo / shelley parker / cybank
Tuesday times in GMT:
2000 - 2200 :: London / Peckham / Brixton / Grimsby
2100 - 2300 ::Belgium / Paris / Berlin / Amsterdam
1600 - 1800 :: New York / Detroit / Toronto / Miarse
1300 - 1500 :: San Francisco / Los Angeles/ Tijuana
0900 - 1100 :: Sydney (wednesday)
forthcoming COMBAT release:
COMBAT06 :: ScanOne :: Skip [& Cursor Miner VIP mix] :: out 3rd March klaart
forthcoming nightstrikes:
03 Feb :: Stormfield / Blackmass Plastics :: No Fixed Abode :: Camberwell, London
08 Feb :: ScanOne :: Bedroom Research :: Lille, France
18 Feb :: ScanOne / Cursor Miner / Stormfield :: UK Fresh, Shoreditch, London
25 Feb :: Stormfield :: Alt Ctrl :: Brixton, London
http://www.combatrecordings.com for details

[AMMUNITION] :: Combat Recordings Transmission

Skream [Tempa / Ital]
vs
Stormfield [Combat Recordings]
[TUESDAY : 31 Jan : 2000 - 2200 GMT]
tune in http://www.pulseradiogroup.com/dj/ammunition
Skream Biog:
Meet Skream: Croydon's musical wonderkid. At 15 he discovered making
music. Five years later he's changed the course of UK urban music,
having helped build the foundations of London's most exciting new
musical style, dubstep. But he's barely started yet: because right
now, Skream is an artist on fire. After meeting Dubstep mainstays
Benga nad Hatcha, Skream set about building on the early dark garage
flavours that were to be found on the pirate airwaves around Croydon.
Through Hatcha's sets at club Forward» and releases on the seminal Big
Apple label, they were about to create a new phase of dubstep.
At first Skream specialised in one flavour of dubstep: dark. His
clipped, techy minimal style became a trademark sound. Long before
grime existed, it reflected dark murky streets and sinister nights,
the sound of decaying London and its frustrated communities, stuck out
in satellite towns and sink estates with nothing but a PC and freely
available software to channel their frustration into. Stuck in front
of a PC for days on end, that's exactly what Skream did.
Then two years ago Digital Mystikz burst onto the dubstep scene,
expanding the sound with new flavours and vivid colours. Skream became
even more inspired. It not like he wasn't prolific already - rumour
has it he's made over 1500 tracks - but out poured a host of bright
new tracks from the wonderkid. "Indian remix" took him into trippy
Asian territories, "Cheeky..." into Arabia, his unreleased mixes of
Sunship fused Jamaican dancehall smut with hooky Kraftwerk melodies.
"Smiling Face" broke out cheerful reggae skanks on dancefloors.
But his biggest tune was yet to come. Enter Midnight Request Line -
on Tempa records - an anthemic explosion of electro arpeggios and dub
sub-bass. It's a tune you can sing along to: Skream has it as his own
ringtone. When it got dropped by DJ Youngsta at club Forward»
grime dons Wiley, Jammer and the rest of Roll Deep began to shock out,
flashing their lighters out of hard earned respect. The flip of this
mighty release is bassline boomer "I," an excursion into deep dub
basslines and shifting cinematic textures.
It shouldn't come as any surprise he likes sub-bass, Skream has grown
up around it. His older brother was a member of Croydon's notorious
jungle hell-raising raving outfit Intanatty Crew, which featured Radio
1's Grooverider and Bailey's 1Xtra as members.
Combat Recording's Stormfield will be on resident duties with a slew
of forthcoming Combat electro-tinged halfstep tracks and other fierce
new subsonic weapons.
[forthcoming Skream releases]
Following from the release on Tempa of Skream's anthem "Midnight
Request Line," look out for the Skreamizm series. This will be a
sequence of doublepacks showcasing the depth and breadth of Skream's
current production work. The first will drop in the beginning of 2006
and will feature "Glamma," "Smiley Face," "Rottan," "Lightning Dub"
and "Hag." Following a recent online mix, these tunes are much in
demand, with "Rottan" a catchy anthem, "Smiley Face" a dubwise vocal
gem and "Lightning Dub" an explosive Amen rinse out.
artist info taken from tempa.co.uk
On rotation every tuesday:
stormfield / damo / shelley parker / cybank
Tuesday times in GMT:
2000 - 2200 :: London / Peckham / Brixton / Grimsby
2100 - 2300 ::Belgium / Paris / Berlin / Amsterdam
1600 - 1800 :: New York / Detroit / Toronto / Miarse
1300 - 1500 :: San Francisco / Los Angeles/ Tijuana
0900 - 1100 :: Sydney (wednesday)
forthcoming COMBAT release:
COMBAT06 :: ScanOne :: Skip [& Cursor Miner VIP mix] :: out 3rd March klaart
forthcoming nightstrikes:
03 Feb :: Stormfield / Blackmass Plastics :: No Fixed Abode :: Camberwell, London
08 Feb :: ScanOne :: Bedroom Research :: Lille, France
18 Feb :: ScanOne / Cursor Miner / Stormfield :: UK Fresh, Shoreditch, London
25 Feb :: Stormfield :: Alt Ctrl :: Brixton, London
http://www.combatrecordings.com for details
Last edited by stormfield on Mon Jan 30, 2006 12:32 am, edited 1 time in total.
- stormfield
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- Joined: Sat Jan 14, 2006 5:29 pm
- Location: babylondon
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