Page 6 of 6
					
				
				Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2006 3:54 pm
				by Jubz
				flipw wrote:Wicked Sway wrote:Jubscarz wrote:flipw wrote:hope dubstep stays guitar free 

 
yo, dude, that is like, TOTALLY stuuuupid.
 
Agreed.
 
Oh dear.....looks like there are a few guitar fans here already 

 
i'm a fan of music, I just dont like to discount any influences,especially blanketly being opposed to an instrument. Highly irrational.
 
			
					
				
				Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2006 4:04 pm
				by flipw
				Jubscarz wrote:flipw wrote:Wicked Sway wrote:Jubscarz wrote:flipw wrote:hope dubstep stays guitar free 

 
yo, dude, that is like, TOTALLY stuuuupid.
 
Agreed.
 
Oh dear.....looks like there are a few guitar fans here already 

 
i'm a fan of music, I just dont like to discount any influences,especially blanketly being opposed to an instrument. Highly irrational.
 
can you please post links to any of the guitar dubstep you would recommend?. I probably just haven't heard enough
have HF 013 but I'll be honest I never play the one with the electric guitar. Sorry but I find the sounds of some instruments appealing than others.
 
			
					
				
				Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2006 4:10 pm
				by Jubz
				yeah I can understand you not liking that, the point I'm trying to make is that that particular sound is only a fraction of the tones/frequencies/sounds/etc that you can get from the guitar, and its use within tunes shouldn't be denied because of this. Quest-Hardfood is a tune that sounds like it uses the guitar init.
			 
			
					
				
				Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2006 4:45 pm
				by little boh peep
				flipw wrote:Oh dear.....looks like there are a few guitar fans here already 

 
Probably dating myself here, but I remember there being a similar reaction when Skinny Puppy - "The Process" came out. And it's hailed as one of their best now.
Jubscarz wrote:yeah I can understand you not liking that, the point I'm trying to make is that that particular sound is only a fraction of the tones/frequencies/sounds/etc that you can get from the guitar, and its use within tunes shouldn't be denied because of this.
Exactly. It's the sound itself that matters, not what instrument it came from.
 
			
					
				
				Posted: Mon Dec 11, 2006 4:45 pm
				by flipw
				Quest-Hardfood is a wicked tune (and near the front of my box).
traditional reggae samples/noises sit well in dubstep.
it's hard to explain but for me with reggae the vibe feels right,
but dub with (recognisable) rock/indie/country guitar on the other hand....it upsets me......like you say irrational 

 
			
					
				
				Posted: Wed Dec 13, 2006 9:53 am
				by prisoner
				Furiouz wrote:
Armand van Helden did that too. Crazy jump up biz.
i love that tune!
"ain't armand"
 

 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 3:19 pm
				by alan
				alan wrote:phurious wrote:I can't see what the problem is.
People want to make music and create, big deal.  
There is no point getting all political and precious about a 'scene'.  Everyone has influences and these are always going to surface in their creativity (nothing is original blah, blah, blah).
Dubstep isn't owned by anyone..it's free and open to interpretation.
if people interpretated a sound and add to it creativly, that all cool. 
its people who copy the sound (i.e. how do you make dubstep wabble bass? whats a normal dstep drum pattern, what tempo should dstep be at etc etc), then  they go away and produce a dubstep 101 tune
 
it happen to punk, mersey beat, new wave, and a thousand more and it will happen here too, minus the creative orignal producers.
sorry, hissy fit over.
 
 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 4:03 pm
				by h*product
				parson wrote:the people have ears let em judge
it'll just make the good tunes that much more valuable
+1
 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 4:56 pm
				by laurent__duval
				parson wrote:fuck the talk of bandwagon
everybody wants the scene to grow but when it grows its all bandwagon
fucking nonsense is what that is
 
			
					
				Re: dnb jumping on dubstep
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:37 pm
				by tacospheros
				3 years later , and this thread is still gay 
moldy was one of the first stateside dudes repping dubstep  .
			 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:41 pm
				by milksnake
				parson wrote:its truly fascinating how people who are into something new used to be into something that is similar
what else needs to be said? dnb heads getting into dubstep. so wha?
 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sat Dec 26, 2009 11:49 pm
				by mikey_g
				corpsey wrote:
Although I do wonder if this infectious enthusaism about dubstep might result in mediocre tunes getting stupid reactions at nights.
it is now time to reveal corpsey's true name

 
			
					
				Re:
				Posted: Sun Dec 27, 2009 1:55 am
				by laurent__duval
				boomting wrote:i'm not trying to offend anyone but i think you are all being far too precious. i thought the whole ethos of dubstep was that it is an amalgamation of elements from different styles of music. Too be honest i couldn't give a fuck who's listening, djing or producing. i'm just in it for the music. Who want's dubstep to be some kind of eliteist (masons style) club. . . ? Stop being a bunch of old women!
slightly tenuous link to the mason i have to say. but your point is sound enough.