two oh one wrote:Too much emphasis on tight production, not enough emphasis on ideas.
Cheers.
oh yes
two oh one wrote:Too much emphasis on tight production, not enough emphasis on ideas.
Cheers.
Close The Door available here vvvvvvvvmagma wrote: I must fellate you instantly."?
Or maybe they might put more effort into working on grooves, melodies and songwriting. Think it's just a bugbear of mine at the moment because I can hear amazingly well crafted snares, kicks and basslines not doing anything interesting in most tunes - kick on the 1, snare on the 9, eighth note wobbles etc. I just kind of like the more quirky maverick stuff which isn't trying too hard to sound professional.Quark wrote:Shonky wrote: if they weren't that anal maybe everything would sound even deader and unoriginal than it already does?
i agree. there are many master engineers in million pound studios who don't have a musical ear but can mix a track down well and get a nice guitar sound. but thats a completly different domain to dubstep, dnb and electronic music, in which the producer is often the drummer, musician, mix engineer.Shonky wrote: Or maybe they might put more effort into working on grooves, melodies and songwriting. Think it's just a bugbear of mine at the moment because I can hear amazingly well crafted snares, kicks and basslines not doing anything interesting in most tunes - kick on the 1, snare on the 9, eighth note wobbles etc. I just kind of like the more quirky maverick stuff which isn't trying too hard to sound professional.
Just because someone is a good producer, does not necessarily mean that they will be a good musician (and vice versa).
Not so much the be all and end all but the first thing that springs to mind when i think of it, so for me in that respect, congo natty pretty much epitomises jungle.UmkhontoWeSizwe wrote:haha, beat me to it. in fact i'm struggling to think of one ragga-jungle track that used 'conscious' samples.Shonky wrote:Ragga wasn't the be-all and end-all of jungle, and conscious ragga certainly wasn't. Still intellectualize if you mustepithet wrote: I'd probably mention re-contextualising conscious ragga first over tearing cut up double time breaks.
this thread really is quite interesting.
It's up to DJs and producers to lead and not follow. That's what dubplate culture is all about. DJs who just give people what they already like should be playing Mika in Yate's Wine Lodges.Slothrop wrote:But, accepting your caveat, is there anything that you / we can or should do if a lot of people in the scene or getting into the scene - including punters and DJs and producers - decide that they actually quite like loud hard boshy fun anthems all night and aren't particularly interested in - or even actively dislike - being constantly surprised with rhythmic variation, changes of pace and so on? Come to that, can DJ's and producers even do much to stop the majority of the music going that way if that's what a lot of people want to hear and make and play? Does there come a point where it's better for them to say "that's what they're doing, and it's fine but it's no longer the same thing that we're doing."
It's not though, because the vast majority of the people who make the most popular records or get the biggest bookings in the scene read and/or post on this forum, even if they dont admit it!Slothrop wrote:Analyzing the ups and downs of a scene on a message board kind of feels like talking about the weaknesses of the England football squad - it's quite interesting, but it's maybe optimistic to expect the manager or the FA to take action based on what we say.
Yeah, exactly.Shonky wrote:I think the thing is that a lot of dubstep's new fans actually like the stuff coming out at the moment, even if it might be sneered at from this forum. Same thing with drum and bass to my mind, it still seems to be pretty popular even though creatively it's done little in the last ten years, and seems to be charmlessly moronic on the whole. Audiences mostly don't give a shit if they're dancing and enjoying themselves, and if they get bored they'll find something else to attach to.Slothrop wrote: is someone going to stop playing the tunes they like and putting on nights that lots of people enjoy because someone told them it's having a negative effect on the diversity of the scene? And even if they did, wouldn't there be half a dozen people queuing up to take their place?
which is a bit shit for the music's sake.Quark wrote: but thats a completly different domain to dubstep, dnb and electronic music, in which the producer is often the drummer, musician, mix engineer.
Yep, seems to me that the best electronic music crews have different people with different strengths. Pretty certain that this was what Goldie does (he definitely did around Timeless), even though a lot of his collaborators were actually good writers and producers (Rob Playford, Optical, etc)daddek wrote: Most of the really creative artist-producers in reggae, hip hop etc have some one else mix their shit. But in dnb & dubstep the artist does all that him/her self, and it takes up time that could be spend writing a decent tune.
Different camps is HEALTHY. It was "keep the scene together at all costs" talk that stifled D&B surely? As soon as the "committee" of the big boys was formally convened they kybosh was put on innovation.... If there was MORE of an 'anything goes' mentality then 'intelligent', 'liquid funk', 'jump up' and 'techstep' might have developed on into MORE variations instead of getting ossified into the forms that they got stuck in for ever onwards.Slothrop wrote: I don't think dubstep's at that point yet, but you can kind of see different camps and different sorts of night starting to emerge...
Yeah definitely, surely the best genre to be in is one of your own creation.Joe Muggs wrote:Different camps is HEALTHY. It was "keep the scene together at all costs" talk that stifled D&B surely? As soon as the "committee" of the big boys was formally convened they kybosh was put on innovation.... If there was MORE of an 'anything goes' mentality then 'intelligent', 'liquid funk', 'jump up' and 'techstep' might have developed on into MORE variations instead of getting ossified into the forms that they got stuck in for ever onwards.Slothrop wrote: I don't think dubstep's at that point yet, but you can kind of see different camps and different sorts of night starting to emerge...
But what about DJs and promoters and producers who actually like big wobbly anthems? Should they be playing tunes they actually like less because other people think they're more what the scene needs?Blackdown wrote:It's up to DJs and producers to lead and not follow. That's what dubplate culture is all about. DJs who just give people what they already like should be playing Mika in Yate's Wine Lodges.
Yeah, okay. I suspect that people would respond better to more positive ideas (ie supporting the people doing interesting stuff) than negative stuff (ie telling people what they shouldn't be doing) though...It's not though, because the vast majority of the people who make the most popular records or get the biggest bookings in the scene read and/or post on this forum, even if they dont admit it!Slothrop wrote:Analyzing the ups and downs of a scene on a message board kind of feels like talking about the weaknesses of the England football squad - it's quite interesting, but it's maybe optimistic to expect the manager or the FA to take action based on what we say.
And deeper than that, conveying new ideas is deeply powerful. If today's top guys dont absorb them, perhaps someone else will and go on to be tomorrow's top DJ/producer. It's all about finding your own sound. Everyone who's on top of their game now managed to at one point...
dude are you serious ?Shonky wrote:You don't know much jungle do you?epithet wrote: Not so much the be all and end all but the first thing that springs to mind when i think of it, so for me in that respect, congo natty pretty much epitomises jungle.
epithet wrote:I know that like Tarzan, one can get lost in it cos it's MASSIVE !Shonky wrote:You don't know much jungle do you?epithet wrote: Not so much the be all and end all but the first thing that springs to mind when i think of it, so for me in that respect, congo natty pretty much epitomises jungle.
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