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Re: Press Articles about dubstep

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2007 11:50 am
by bunzer0
technosnob wrote:Aw cheers dude, these are mine! :D Doing what I can to promote Dubstep in Glasgow by supporting Oscillate and The Electric Eliminators. These also appear in the same publication -

thanx for those links man.
The thread has been edited in order to inlcude them
big up !

Re: Press Articles about dubstep

Posted: Fri Sep 28, 2007 6:38 pm
by blackdown
I first wrote about El-B in 2000, I really should dig it out :wink:

Re: Press Articles about dubstep

Posted: Sat Sep 29, 2007 6:55 am
by bunzer0
Blackdown wrote:I first wrote about El-B in 2000, I really should dig it out :wink:

yes yes yes :wink:

Re: Press Articles about dubstep

Posted: Thu Oct 04, 2007 10:33 am
by dj $hy
Blackdown wrote:
I first wrote about El-B in 2000, I really should dig it out :wink:
I'd love to read the interview you did with him n J Da Black! Any chance you could dig that out? It would be a rare read and an interesting look at 7years ago.

Posted: Fri Oct 05, 2007 1:03 pm
by dipswitch1
here's a new one:

Gleb Albert: "Der große Kompromiss. Dubstep vereint die weltweite Bass-Gemeinde." In: <i>versa. Zeitschrift für Politik und Kunst</i> 7 (2007), p. 80-82.

it's not online, but you can order the papermag at www.versaonline.de for 3,20€ + postage.

Posted: Sun Oct 07, 2007 10:02 am
by nesslei
thankyou so much for this - what a fantastic reference and source of so much history, all in one place.

have just had a good read through many of the pieces linked. i hadn't come across the nz article before - that publication is one of the country's most respected and quality current affairs magazines.

this really puts the global influence of sub bass in perspective.

i feel well fed!

:K:

Posted: Tue Oct 09, 2007 11:54 pm
by casino addict
here's a few more for the list...

kode9 interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1113/

bass clef interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1107/

goth trad interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1252/

Posted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 10:56 pm
by pure
dubstep going on BIGGLES

Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2007 11:58 pm
by bunzer0
casino addict wrote:here's a few more for the list...

kode9 interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1113/

bass clef interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1107/

goth trad interview:

http://www.spannered.org/music/1252/

:J:
:W:

Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2007 2:00 pm
by laurent
nice one bun.

Couple of tings though: the Skream piece I did for ATM was published in June /July 06, and the Dubstep feature for Serie B was published in April/May 06 (had pictures from Infinite as well btw).
The dates on my blog aren't those of publication, just when i created the blog and uploaded the stuff I'd done which has been published but never been available online.
It's no biggie tho but seeing as you're all being incredibly thorough on this :D

Also the Goth Trad piece on spannered is the one on my blog, which is the unedited version of the q&a I did for the feature version that was published in Japanzine in July 07.
Goth Trad feature (published in Japanzine) - http://www.lo-la.co.uk/2007/07/26/goth- ... zine-2007/
Goth Trad unedited q&a (online only - my blog and spannered) - http://www.lo-la.co.uk/2007/06/17/goth- ... ation-man/

Oh yeah and there's an unedited version of the full Skream q&a on the blog, which was used for the ATM piece. that's here (never published) and dates from May 06 i think it was.
http://www.lo-la.co.uk/2006/12/28/skrea ... interview/

sorry if it's confusing, im confusing myself as well :S

big up though, some good shit!

Posted: Sat Oct 27, 2007 2:02 pm
by laurent
PS: didn't someone archive a bunch of interviews and features that were on the original hyperdub site? i seem to remember seeing them again somewhere. there's definitely some relevant stuff there.

Posted: Sun Oct 28, 2007 2:43 pm
by david_m
Laurent wrote:PS: didn't someone archive a bunch of interviews and features that were on the original hyperdub site? i seem to remember seeing them again somewhere. there's definitely some relevant stuff there.
They're up on riddim.ca and yeah, absolutely worth checking out :)

http://www.riddim.ca/index.php?option=c ... &Itemid=37

Posted: Tue Oct 30, 2007 2:07 pm
by bunzer0
ok guys as soon as i have internet at home (moving up) i'll update this thread
thanx for the input !

Posted: Thu Nov 08, 2007 11:53 pm
by alphacat
Little something I wrote at the end of last year for Remix Magazine... I knew this sh*t was gonna blow up large but had no idea *how* large!

http://remixmag.com/artists/remix_go_fo ... index.html

GENRE WATCH: DUBSTEP (Jan 1, 2007)

Although the term has been around for a while now, dubstep is now poised for its big takeover: The mutant South London sound that fuses 2-step, grime, dub and other influences has become the premier playground for some of the UK's most innovative new producers.

If drum 'n' bass is a supersonic fighter jet, then dubstep is the armored-tank division. Originally centered in garage's 138-bpm mark, the possibilities exploded when the tempo halved — providing room to play with cavernous dubbed-out sounds, breakbeats stripped and clipped into half-tempo heaviness and the signature bass sculptures that pick up where jungle left off. This heaviest of low-end sounds is massive and articulate, and it makes the bass bin bounce off the dancefloor if not bolted down.

Yet despite simple shared elements, which loosely define the current style, the real appeal lies in the differences among the main players making dubstep. Each has its own distinct feel, and influences run the gamut, from Indian and industrial to crunk and heavy metal, but all are infused with dub's core ethic of studio as both instrument and imaginary space. “At the moment, dubstep has no boundaries, no set formulas or clichés,” says H.E.N.C.H. crew's Komonazmuk.

Some acts to watch for include Kode9, founder of the seminal Hyperdub label. With a sound equal parts collage, atmospherics and abstraction, alongside MC (something rare in dubstep) Spaceape, Kode9's tunes are often downright cinematic in scale. Meanwhile, young heavyweight Skream produces irresistibly catchy head-nodders, including the first UK-charting dubstep song, “Midnight Request Line.” Another serious contender, Loefah, offers tunes that seem simple initially but offer something new with each listen — and all produced impeccably. Digital Mystikz, the collective behind London's successful DMZ club nights, offers minimalist dub that's equally dark and eerie. Then there's Shackleton (half of the Skull Disco imprint with Appleblim), who could be easily and seamlessly played back-to-back in a set including traditional Middle Eastern music, French avant-garde and uptempo club beats. Vex'd, on the other hand, is like some unimaginably perfect mash-up of hip-hop and industrial and Edgard Varèse.

And there are many more up-and-comers out there, such as the two-man act Cloaks, which has a sound like rust: the organic decay of man-made metals. “We like the idea that our tunes can destroy a sound system as well as satisfy the ears of an experienced producer,” says Cloaks member Carl J. “The emphasis being that we produce music; we don't make beats.”

For now, dubstep is safe from being pillaged by the mainstream, at least according to Hyperdub's experimental artist, Burial. “The music is in good shape because everyone's in splinter cells,” he says. “They're in the ditch — there's no highway to attract the rubbish producers. The lights of the highway, that's when it goes wrong. But right now it's just darkness; everyone's just off wandering.”

Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2008 12:42 am
by d_three
METRO @ 18/01/2008

Image

Posted: Sat Jan 19, 2008 12:58 pm
by deamonds
Thanks for this thread!

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 7:02 am
by seckle
update time!

anybody that has any new links to add, list them here!


8)

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 7:07 am
by laurent
here's a Scuba feature I did last month

English version on Spannered

http://www.spannered.org/music/1403/

Spanish (slightly shorter) version out in Serie B Issue 21, alongside features on The Bug, Ghislain Poirier and Buraka Son Systema (as well as Sinden I think). Those aren't online but out in shops now. www.sbum.com for details of where to cop worldwide.

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 8:04 am
by laurent
PS: date wise the Serie B feature is May-June 08 edition, and the spannered version went up in May too.

Posted: Sun May 11, 2008 10:07 pm
by markle
I have interviews with 2562, Benga, Caspa and Rusko and Plastician on me blog http://markleman.blogspot.com/ (all of these were also printed in ATM Magazine)