NONONONONONONO Don't do that! Call it electroish dubstep or something.grow wrote:electo step?
WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
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I could care less either but some people are pretty intensely involved with labeling. Its unfortunate because people who listen to genre specific music only hold back the evolution of both the sound and the scene. I wouldn't put a label on my music at all if distributors weren't so adamant about it.
btw..I wanna hear some of your breakstep sounds interesting for sure. What tempo range are you working in?
			
			
									
									
						btw..I wanna hear some of your breakstep sounds interesting for sure. What tempo range are you working in?
Darcus wrote:Deadly Habit wrote:doubt you'll get the answer here since 90% of the threads are how do i wobble or how do i make my *insert sound here* to sound like *insert producers name here*
Yes.....its bin put elsewhere....'wobble' im sure will be a big factor in 5 years tho.....
A wiki entry's might read......
"yes around 2004 dj pooface invented the 'wobble' whilst messing with some beats and a lowpass filter...on something called reason v2.5....interslicing a dub reggae drop and some rnb beats....." blah blah
Dubstep has sub genre's huh? One the things that makes it so amazing to me is that it's all dubstep. You wanna know where it's going listen to Joe Nice's Gourmet beats and DUbsteo FM and keep producing boundary pushing tunes. With people as creative as Ooah and Flying Lotus and guys like Martyn and Rustie out there to habitually line-step genre boundaries and support our music the sky's the limit. I don't even know if wobble or not is gonna be an issue in two more years.
or maybe not.
Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
The future of Dubstep will be people flocking to silent dancefloor's with empty stages. Where artist after artist will appear on stage, press their index fingers to their temples, close their eyes and transmit their latest sounds directly into our brains.
 
			
			
									
									
						
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				caterkilla
- Posts: 10
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Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
it's gonna go back to tribe-called-quest hip hop with soul.
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nevermind, i like juke/footwork. that shit is still fun.
			
			
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nevermind, i like juke/footwork. that shit is still fun.
					Last edited by caterkilla on Thu May 30, 2013 4:46 pm, edited 1 time in total.
									
			
									
						- Aufnahmewindwuschel
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Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
dubstep is like a musical jellyfish eating itself over and over again
			
			
									
									
						Re: Re:
epochalypso wrote:TOLD YOUepochalypso wrote:gabba kicks and orchestral samples at 130
kinda
haha wow
Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
NOTHING according to Skream, apparently DIsco and Funk is the next dubstep. lol Drama queen much Skream.... same with Feed Me. Its kind of a dick move to succeed at something we all want to do and then just be "done with it" cause your bored? Take a vacation then lol dont have to turn into highschool kids breaking up with each other. my 2 cents lol.
Skream Bids Farewell to Dubstep
blogs.independent.co.uk
It’s hard to see people step away from something they loved. It’s even harder to see people leave something that they help give recognition to through hard work and dedication with a negative feeling of resentment. Dubstep music producer Oliver Dene Jones aka Skream has recently announced his departure from the music genre that he has help build into a global craze.
 
The British-native DJ went public with his decision just a few days after Johnathan Gooch aka Feed Me went viral on his Twitter with his retirement from DJing. Skream, who help made Dubstep into an international phenomenon, explains that his departure from the genre is wildly due to his lack of inspiration he has experienced from Dubstep in the past years. “I’ve done Dubstep since I was 14 but there’s no way I’m going to be dictated to. I stopped because I’m not inspired by it anymore,” he told U.K.’s Daily Star in an interview about his departure. Skream also went on to explain that Dubstep has just been reduced to a name and that the movement was over. He also stated in the same interview that his performance at the Red Bull Music Academy was his final Dubstep set that he would performing for the time being.
 
Although he is giving his final bow to the genre he has help build, this does not mean he is leaving the music industry all together. He has set his sights onto exploring the Funk and Disco genre due to the help of the French DJ Duo Daft Punk, who has recently released the chart topping album Random Access Memories. “They’ve put the craft back into producing records. There’s so much work gone into it.” Since he claimed that his last album Outside the Box was a classic, he says that it would be nearly impossible to make another one that would surpass its critical and commercial success. “This one is a whole new concept,” he explained about his predications and hopes for his new project. Although he is leaving the genre that he help build, it is nice to see that he will not be departing the industry for good. Nevertheless, his next album should be nothing-less than interesting as he leaves his famous achievements within Dubstep behind in the past to experiment with his new interest, the smooth and hypotonic sounds of Disco.
			
			
									
									Skream Bids Farewell to Dubstep
blogs.independent.co.uk
It’s hard to see people step away from something they loved. It’s even harder to see people leave something that they help give recognition to through hard work and dedication with a negative feeling of resentment. Dubstep music producer Oliver Dene Jones aka Skream has recently announced his departure from the music genre that he has help build into a global craze.
The British-native DJ went public with his decision just a few days after Johnathan Gooch aka Feed Me went viral on his Twitter with his retirement from DJing. Skream, who help made Dubstep into an international phenomenon, explains that his departure from the genre is wildly due to his lack of inspiration he has experienced from Dubstep in the past years. “I’ve done Dubstep since I was 14 but there’s no way I’m going to be dictated to. I stopped because I’m not inspired by it anymore,” he told U.K.’s Daily Star in an interview about his departure. Skream also went on to explain that Dubstep has just been reduced to a name and that the movement was over. He also stated in the same interview that his performance at the Red Bull Music Academy was his final Dubstep set that he would performing for the time being.
Although he is giving his final bow to the genre he has help build, this does not mean he is leaving the music industry all together. He has set his sights onto exploring the Funk and Disco genre due to the help of the French DJ Duo Daft Punk, who has recently released the chart topping album Random Access Memories. “They’ve put the craft back into producing records. There’s so much work gone into it.” Since he claimed that his last album Outside the Box was a classic, he says that it would be nearly impossible to make another one that would surpass its critical and commercial success. “This one is a whole new concept,” he explained about his predications and hopes for his new project. Although he is leaving the genre that he help build, it is nice to see that he will not be departing the industry for good. Nevertheless, his next album should be nothing-less than interesting as he leaves his famous achievements within Dubstep behind in the past to experiment with his new interest, the smooth and hypotonic sounds of Disco.
MasterBlinX - Durbin Master
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Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
I don't really see the drama queen thing going on. He said he was bored. Fair enough.
			
			
									
									SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
Fart & Breaks.
			
			
									
									
						- syrup
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Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
Lies 
Confusion
Government
Control
Crime
Money
Panic
Terror
London
NO FUTURE
			
			
									
									Confusion
Government
Control
Crime
Money
Panic
Terror
London
NO FUTURE
dubfordessert wrote:you can jizz on me if you want
Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
m8 dubsteps been dead 4 like 3 years. post dubstep died the other week, sort out your knowledge ur just embarassing urself.blinx wrote:NOTHING according to Skream, apparently DIsco and Funk is the next dubstep. lol Drama queen much Skream.... same with Feed Me. Its kind of a dick move to succeed at something we all want to do and then just be "done with it" cause your bored? Take a vacation then lol dont have to turn into highschool kids breaking up with each other. my 2 cents lol.
Skream Bids Farewell to Dubstep
blogs.independent.co.uk
It’s hard to see people step away from something they loved. It’s even harder to see people leave something that they help give recognition to through hard work and dedication with a negative feeling of resentment. Dubstep music producer Oliver Dene Jones aka Skream has recently announced his departure from the music genre that he has help build into a global craze.
The British-native DJ went public with his decision just a few days after Johnathan Gooch aka Feed Me went viral on his Twitter with his retirement from DJing. Skream, who help made Dubstep into an international phenomenon, explains that his departure from the genre is wildly due to his lack of inspiration he has experienced from Dubstep in the past years. “I’ve done Dubstep since I was 14 but there’s no way I’m going to be dictated to. I stopped because I’m not inspired by it anymore,” he told U.K.’s Daily Star in an interview about his departure. Skream also went on to explain that Dubstep has just been reduced to a name and that the movement was over. He also stated in the same interview that his performance at the Red Bull Music Academy was his final Dubstep set that he would performing for the time being.
Although he is giving his final bow to the genre he has help build, this does not mean he is leaving the music industry all together. He has set his sights onto exploring the Funk and Disco genre due to the help of the French DJ Duo Daft Punk, who has recently released the chart topping album Random Access Memories. “They’ve put the craft back into producing records. There’s so much work gone into it.” Since he claimed that his last album Outside the Box was a classic, he says that it would be nearly impossible to make another one that would surpass its critical and commercial success. “This one is a whole new concept,” he explained about his predications and hopes for his new project. Although he is leaving the genre that he help build, it is nice to see that he will not be departing the industry for good. Nevertheless, his next album should be nothing-less than interesting as he leaves his famous achievements within Dubstep behind in the past to experiment with his new interest, the smooth and hypotonic sounds of Disco.
Re: WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF DUBSTEP??
postmortem-stephutyluty wrote: post dubstep died the other week
SunkLo wrote: If ragging on the 'shortcut to the top' mentality makes me a hater then shower me in haterade.
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