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Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Tue Jan 11, 2011 11:42 pm
by serox
wow these tracks suck. Its sounds like people trying to make 2step with random vst plugins and terrible basslines. Where is the groove/swing? the drums are terrible.

the Sully track is ok but kinda boring and still sounding like someone giving garage a go. Not saying I can do better but its not any good really.

When I reach 2step this is where I go.

check the drums, serious riddum








Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 3:52 am
by makemerich
that alpha pup nosaj thing/ daedelus style? great sound but definitely takes getting used to . very jazzy

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 12:25 pm
by Sinisterbeats
not listened to a lot of future garage stuff but I really love these 2 tunes

Soundcloud
Soundcloud

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 9:08 pm
by -[2]DAY_-
bookmarking to check these tunes out after work

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 10:57 pm
by honey-d
makemerich wrote:that alpha pup nosaj thing/ daedelus style? great sound but definitely takes getting used to . very jazzy
not what they're talking about, but that shit is even cooler.

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 11:08 pm
by gravity
wow these tunes are almost as shit as the old uk garage stuff.

theres something intrinsically offensive about the silly skippy beats and overuse of vocal samples.

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 11:16 pm
by glottis5
gravity wrote:wow these tunes are almost as shit as the old uk garage stuff.

theres something intrinsically offensive about the silly skippy beats and overuse of vocal samples.
:middlefinger:

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Wed Jan 12, 2011 11:33 pm
by zonetrooper5
Its all Garage to me, don't need all these random sub genres.

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2011 12:00 am
by WIFE
I dont know what this is but its damn good.


Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2011 12:02 am
by sixth sense
future garage you say? I really enjoy this

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2011 4:12 am
by MikkiFunk
I think that because the sounds and production of FG borrow much more from "post-oldskool-garage" - dubstep basses, DnB atmospherics, glitchy stuff - people feel compelled to differentiate it from the original sound.
Yes! Thats it, you kinda hit the nail on the head. FG is very reminiscent of the older 2Step stuff from the likes of Groove Chronicles and El-b's solo stuff, they made use of a lot of breaks sounds, filtered square wave basses (the ravey type of bass), ambient and atmospheric sounds and textures. But its also taking elements from newer things like Dubstep, ambient and acoustic music, dnb etc.

I think the 'Future' part is not meant in the way that its 'progressing' from Garage at its present state, or more advanced than it in any way, its more a way of creating a new evolution of that sound that can move away from the very tight knit and 'niche' 'UK Garage' way of thinking e.g. it can move away from being strictly from the UK. Future Garage is getting really popular in places like America and Russia etc so already its branching out from where UK Garage was, and will stay, until the followers let go of the 'UK' part.

I'm very much a UK Garage, I grew up listening to stuff like Bump n Flex, Groove Chronicles, K Warren etc, music passed down from my older sisters. I love UK Garage but I am just getting sick of the way so many UKG heads are so single-minded about the genre, as if some of the people don't know about any other music than UK Garage. It winds me up, people just need to move on a bit from Garage, or just accept that UK Garage is never going to be popular or mainstream again like it was in the 90's. Why do you think people like MJ Cole and Todd Edwards have started getting sets at things like Hospitality nights or nights at Fabric?! Because they've stopped branding themselves as strictly 'UK Garage' producers or dj's, and have started to branch out with the styles or music they produce and play in their sets.

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Thu Jan 13, 2011 5:34 am
by Assassin
MikkiFunk wrote:
I think that because the sounds and production of FG borrow much more from "post-oldskool-garage" - dubstep basses, DnB atmospherics, glitchy stuff - people feel compelled to differentiate it from the original sound.
Yes! Thats it, you kinda hit the nail on the head. FG is very reminiscent of the older 2Step stuff from the likes of Groove Chronicles and El-b's solo stuff, they made use of a lot of breaks sounds, filtered square wave basses (the ravey type of bass), ambient and atmospheric sounds and textures. But its also taking elements from newer things like Dubstep, ambient and acoustic music, dnb etc.

I think the 'Future' part is not meant in the way that its 'progressing' from Garage at its present state, or more advanced than it in any way, its more a way of creating a new evolution of that sound that can move away from the very tight knit and 'niche' 'UK Garage' way of thinking e.g. it can move away from being strictly from the UK. Future Garage is getting really popular in places like America and Russia etc so already its branching out from where UK Garage was, and will stay, until the followers let go of the 'UK' part.

I'm very much a UK Garage, I grew up listening to stuff like Bump n Flex, Groove Chronicles, K Warren etc, music passed down from my older sisters. I love UK Garage but I am just getting sick of the way so many UKG heads are so single-minded about the genre, as if some of the people don't know about any other music than UK Garage. It winds me up, people just need to move on a bit from Garage, or just accept that UK Garage is never going to be popular or mainstream again like it was in the 90's. Why do you think people like MJ Cole and Todd Edwards have started getting sets at things like Hospitality nights or nights at Fabric?! Because they've stopped branding themselves as strictly 'UK Garage' producers or dj's, and have started to branch out with the styles or music they produce and play in their sets.
Boom! Headshot!

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 9:22 pm
by Leo Marcus
I've been working on more Post-Dubstep stuff recently, moving on from my more electronica-based DnB

Check out some tracks, they've been getting some quite good reception.

Soundcloud

Soundcloud

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 10:44 pm
by Dub_freak
Leo Marcus wrote: Post-Dubstep
:a: Stupid name

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 11:04 pm
by Medik
Not really listened to that much of this 'future' sound tbh but these three? :?
Soundcloud
Soundcloud
Soundcloud

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 11:15 pm
by 3za
Yeah it's what I am sort of making atm (check the sig).

A few of my fav's;


[/video]

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 11:32 pm
by paravrais
Here's some forward thinking stuff;

Soundcloud

Soundcloud

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Mon Apr 04, 2011 11:43 pm
by Fbac
Neuro-garage XD

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2011 3:13 am
by kaiori breathe
What is going on with this forum tonight? Is it just rampant trolling tiem? Anyway, I wish I was more familiar with some of the future garage that's about, I keep hearing bits and pieces that are really out of this world gorgeous but it always comes in drips and drabs from only a few artists. Maybe I'm not looking hard enough. Hopefully there'll be more awesome in this thread to feed my desires for moar future garage.

Re: Post-Dubstep and Future Garage

Posted: Tue Apr 05, 2011 8:08 am
by jaydot
On a massive garage hype atm- not really feeling the El-B/Burial stuff that much nowadays, too dark. More on the upbeat stuff. "Liquid garage" IF you will. I'll get round to some youtube links later, but atm feeling:

Synkro, Phaeleh, Kaiori Breathe's garagey stuff, Roof Light, Sentinels, Ghostek, Tanka, Submerse, (pretty much a lot of stuff coming from L2S/Night Audio record labels... and then certain youtube channels.) Solitude's soundcloud mixes are also a goldmine, I could go on and on but I won't.