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Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 3:13 am
by laurent__duval
for me this is real dubstep. simple, weighty, dirty without being abrasive, dark, real eyes down shit. still smashing dances too. classic!



Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 3:14 am
by laurent__duval
laurent__duval wrote:for me this is real dubstep. simple, weighty, dirty without being abrasive, dark, real eyes down shit. still smashing dances too. classic!



doesnt count though as i wasnt even a teenager when it came out... :(

Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 8:50 pm
by didi
dbald27 wrote:I'm 17 and living in the SF Bay Area. I started with "real" dubstep, old Skream was what really started me off, probly sometime around summer 2009. Went slowly more filthy until eventually one day I realized I hated it, and began listening to darker and deeper tracks. Nowadays here almost everyone my age is listening to brostep, mostly skrillex and other shit music, i can only think of about 10 people I know who listen to any good dubstep.
Dude, no-one I know listens to music I like. And I live in london. Brosteppers hate it, and everyone else thinks that when I say dubstep I mean brostep, and dont even give it a chance... its a hard life :i:

Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 10:00 pm
by DiegoSapiens
i am 17 but i listen to real dubstep since 4 years ago, i had the luck of seing mala and loefah here in seville (spain) in a festival, i didnt knew a shit about dubstep and i was the tipical jazz-reggae-rap freak who thought that electronic music was only about raves and that shit. Here in spain i know a lot of people who listen brostep but no one that listen to real dubstep exept a friend who came with me to the concert...

Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Thu Sep 01, 2011 10:13 pm
by didi
DiegoSapiens wrote:i am 17 but i listen to real dubstep since 4 years ago, i had the luck of seing mala and loefah here in seville (spain) in a festival, i didnt knew a shit about dubstep and i was the tipical jazz-reggae-rap freak who thought that electronic music was only about raves and that shit. Here in spain i know a lot of people who listen brostep but no one that listen to real dubstep exept a friend who came with me to the concert...
You can get rid of Brostep: http://www.dubstepforum.com/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=215318

#doyourbit

Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Fri Sep 02, 2011 6:19 am
by dopelabs

Re: There any "teens" in here that listen to real dubstep?

Posted: Sat Sep 03, 2011 3:26 am
by tkun
I'm 17 now, and I've been listening to dubstep since late 2007. So I guess I've been listening since I was 14. I started off with Burial, because I noticed he was topping the charts on Metacritic.com. Since listening to tracks from his Untrue album on Youtube, I've fallen in love with dubstep. I really dislike how dubstep suddenly became popular in early 2010. It's not because I dislike artists getting popular, but rather because the artists that that are becoming popular barely represent the genre at all, yet they're being categorized as dubstep, and thus is giving it a bad name. It's funny, because I remember many people saying that dubstep would never become popular, because even with songs featuring Snoop Dogg and the like, few people really knew about it. And then suddenly by mid 2010, every little teenybopper was listening to it. I knew the genre would get popular, if not just for the music alone, then by rappers using it as their beats, I just didn't think that the main people to become popular would be the brosteppers. I've sorta taken a step back from the scene, because it's almost embarrassing knowing that the same genre I associate with 2562, others associate with Mt. Eden. But I still listen to tons of dubstep, because there's still tons of quality music being produced, so I don't suspect I'll ever leave the scene entirely. On another note, I must admit, I am very impressed with how diverse dubstep is becoming. Comparing music from Joe to that of Digital Mystikz, for example, shows that there's plenty of artists pushing their own unique sound, and not relying solely on the wobble effect.