Post
by dj snipaz » Mon Feb 02, 2009 9:17 pm
OK
as someone who has been involved in the bassline scene before (for about 6 years) i have seen it rise and fall.
It is true, that not a lot of money is made in the scene as the vinyls do not sell anymore due to leaks ect.
If you really want someone to blame though, the best option is to look at the dj's making monthly mix CD's with the latest tunes on monthes (sometimes years) before they become available to buy legitimately.
owning the cd, gives the user the option to listen to a tune over and over until they are bored of it. and by the time it is released, it has been overplayed.
How can someone expect a record to sell, when the tune leaked literally years ago?
Working in a record shop at the time, i noticed that people would be asking for the tunes on vinyl monthes before they were released which is not possible, and once the tune is released, people say "ahh its old, it was on jamie duggans cd 3 years ago".
There is a big "hype" in bassline at the moment about how much money u can make off it (boasting about ya "p's") which shows that a lot of producers are in it for the money so if this means the scene is "dead" then fair enough, but there is still a massive amount of producers, making good tunes & there probably always will be.
In order to avoid, this kind of thing happening to any scene, you have to think long and hard, about how to promote your music. and also who you'r giving it to. For instance, Rusko Or Coki tunes always sell well, maybe it is a coincidence that not many people get passed the tunes prior to the release hence the reason why they dont leak. If u get a DJ of high caliber playing your music in their sets, 9 times out of ten it'll get signed anyway. so theres no need to pass the tune out much further. I know as a producer that sometimes it can be hard to keep the tunes to yourself (especially if you'v made a banger and you wanna show it off) but it is sometimes in your own interest.
another point maybe worth bringing up, is that now, in the bassline scene 0% of dj's use vinyl. So why are the aspiring dj's that watch their favourite dj play in clubs, totally of CD's going to go buy vinyl?
If N-type or any other big DJ used only CD's most of their fans would be enclined to copy them. And a lot of younger/Less clued up DJ's don't understand about the so called "Dubplate Code Of Conduct" If they can download a tune for free they will play it off CD and this likens them to their favourite DJ's
This is also why DnB still has a big market for vinyl, compared to genres like bassline & electro. Simply because the big DJ's cut dubplates which play on vinyl decks. Its basicly just setting an example for any aspiring DJ
So if u ask me. The best way to keep a scene full of life is to keep the vinyl alive. That way producers have incentive to work hard on their tunes and they can also make a living off it.
Maybe you noticed, i have strong feelings about this subject which is why this post is so long
Who knows, maybe i shud become a novelist.
** Dj SnipaZ ** (Bassclash/BUN/ResoFantoms/Bass Punch/Rottun)
BASSCLASH DIGITAL DOWNLOADS
