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Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 2:20 am
by Dystinkt
not gonna lie, the first dubstep tune i ever heard get played all over the place round where i live was the cragga remix of mr postman it overtook most bassline as the popular dickhead at the back of the bus tune of choice for a while, a feat unheard of over here in Bradford

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 9:47 am
by OllieScott
would pick footcrab over ramadanman as the juke/footwork push

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 12:22 pm
by garethom
OllieScott wrote:would pick footcrab over ramadanman as the juke/footwork push
That's a fair shout.

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 12:54 pm
by lylo
QuestionableCause wrote:as much as I dislike the tune, I think TC - Where's My Money (Caspa remix) has a fair shout of being in there. seemed to get a lot of people into the sound where I live, for better or worse.

edit: especially jump-up dnb "heads", one imagines.
yeah id agree with this, this tune got alot of mobile phone play where i was living a few years ago.
cant see how that makes it important though, same goes for that vile skrillex track, just coz its popular dont make it important in my book.

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sat Nov 03, 2012 2:28 pm
by garethom
lylo wrote:
QuestionableCause wrote:as much as I dislike the tune, I think TC - Where's My Money (Caspa remix) has a fair shout of being in there. seemed to get a lot of people into the sound where I live, for better or worse.

edit: especially jump-up dnb "heads", one imagines.
yeah id agree with this, this tune got alot of mobile phone play where i was living a few years ago.
cant see how that makes it important though, same goes for that vile skrillex track, just coz its popular dont make it important in my book.
Perhaps we have different definitions of important then. This isn't the best 20 dubstep tracks. The skrillex track has millions of views, the guy won grammy awards off the back of it, probably 99.9% of people that listen to dubstep (no matter how shit) in the world today got into it after that track, that's why I'd say it's important.

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 6:29 am
by Terpit
Cheeky wrote:not gonna lie, the first dubstep tune i ever heard get played all over the place round where i live was the cragga remix of mr postman it overtook most bassline as the popular dickhead at the back of the bus tune of choice for a while, a feat unheard of over here in Bradford
Used to love this, never ever saw it for sale anywhere

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 7:05 am
by Sexual_Chocolate
it was a booty thats why

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 7:14 am
by Terpit

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 7:16 am
by Sexual_Chocolate
oh god, it has that pony remix

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 7:41 am
by Terpit
yuk

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 7:57 am
by Sexual_Chocolate
wtf is terror danjah doing on there?

Re: 20 most important dubstep vinyls in history

Posted: Sun Nov 04, 2012 1:17 pm
by lylo
garethom wrote:
lylo wrote:
QuestionableCause wrote:as much as I dislike the tune, I think TC - Where's My Money (Caspa remix) has a fair shout of being in there. seemed to get a lot of people into the sound where I live, for better or worse.

edit: especially jump-up dnb "heads", one imagines.
yeah id agree with this, this tune got alot of mobile phone play where i was living a few years ago.
cant see how that makes it important though, same goes for that vile skrillex track, just coz its popular dont make it important in my book.
Perhaps we have different definitions of important then. This isn't the best 20 dubstep tracks. The skrillex track has millions of views, the guy won grammy awards off the back of it, probably 99.9% of people that listen to dubstep (no matter how shit) in the world today got into it after that track, that's why I'd say it's important.
yeah fair enough then bruv suppose you're right