favorite bad company tune is bullet time.unwind wrote:
also, dillinja's remix of nitrous is fierce
favorite bad company tune is bullet time.unwind wrote:
SoundcloudAntlionUK wrote:fuck you SNH
Yeah man, a lot of my mates who in the clubs same time as me could never stand Bad Company, they were similar to you in that once Techstep had started emerging it was the sound that really turned them off D&B. For me it's the sound that defined the differences between Jungle and D&B, the move away from being break dependant and shaking off the last remnants of the heritage of producers like Adam F, LTJ Bukem, Mask/Full Cycle. Personally I think few compilations really nailed like the Quantum Mechanics comp on Renegade Hardware. The ironic thing is modern producers who took this sound further like Noisia, Phace and the Neurofunk lot, I find stale and boring as piss, which I think is quite the minority view, especially from those that liked the original Techstep phase of D&B.fractal wrote:@ pete - it's funny how different we see things. In my mind, DnB peaked long before BC. By 99/00 it was so formulaic... Bad company was one of the crews I just couldn't get into. the bastardization of the sound imo
boom chick, boom chick, boom boom chick etc
to each their own tho
P Daley wrote:Ended up at a party last night with a bunch of people I don't know and blacked out,
Woke up this morning with an email about ordering a $70 pair of UFO pants.
yep, you hit the nail on the head. i guess what had always interested me in jungle, besides the bass of course, was the wide range of beat patterns and tempos so I saw techstep as a deliberate move away from that. interesting that you didn't get into neuro, as it seems like a logical conclusion to the cold, techy soundpete bubonic wrote:Yeah man, a lot of my mates who in the clubs same time as me could never stand Bad Company, they were similar to you in that once Techstep had started emerging it was the sound that really turned them off D&B. For me it's the sound that defined the differences between Jungle and D&B, the move away from being break dependant and shaking off the last remnants of the heritage of producers like Adam F, LTJ Bukem, Mask/Full Cycle. Personally I think few compilations really nailed like the Quantum Mechanics comp on Renegade Hardware. The ironic thing is modern producers who took this sound further like Noisia, Phace and the Neurofunk lot, I find stale and boring as piss, which I think is quite the minority view, especially from those that liked the original Techstep phase of D&B.fractal wrote:@ pete - it's funny how different we see things. In my mind, DnB peaked long before BC. By 99/00 it was so formulaic... Bad company was one of the crews I just couldn't get into. the bastardization of the sound imo
boom chick, boom chick, boom boom chick etc
to each their own tho
epochalypso wrote:man dun no bout da 'nuum
I can understand it - I loved (and love) the early techstep sound, and although I don't mind the neurofunk thing, I don't really put it on the same level. I guess because the early techstep still has some of that glinting-eyed rave madness I've always loved, whereas neurofunk has always sounded kinda flat in comparisonfractal wrote:yep, you hit the nail on the head. i guess what had always interested me in jungle, besides the bass of course, was the wide range of beat patterns and tempos so I saw techstep as a deliberate move away from that. interesting that you didn't get into neuro, as it seems like a logical conclusion to the cold, techy soundpete bubonic wrote:Yeah man, a lot of my mates who in the clubs same time as me could never stand Bad Company, they were similar to you in that once Techstep had started emerging it was the sound that really turned them off D&B. For me it's the sound that defined the differences between Jungle and D&B, the move away from being break dependant and shaking off the last remnants of the heritage of producers like Adam F, LTJ Bukem, Mask/Full Cycle. Personally I think few compilations really nailed like the Quantum Mechanics comp on Renegade Hardware. The ironic thing is modern producers who took this sound further like Noisia, Phace and the Neurofunk lot, I find stale and boring as piss, which I think is quite the minority view, especially from those that liked the original Techstep phase of D&B.fractal wrote:@ pete - it's funny how different we see things. In my mind, DnB peaked long before BC. By 99/00 it was so formulaic... Bad company was one of the crews I just couldn't get into. the bastardization of the sound imo
boom chick, boom chick, boom boom chick etc
to each their own tho
pearsall wrote:I can understand it - I loved (and love) the early techstep sound, and although I don't mind the neurofunk thing, I don't really put it on the same level. I guess because the early techstep still some of that glinting-eyed rave madness I've always loved, whereas neurofunk has always sounded kinda flat in comparisonfractal wrote:yep, you hit the nail on the head. i guess what had always interested me in jungle, besides the bass of course, was the wide range of beat patterns and tempos so I saw techstep as a deliberate move away from that. interesting that you didn't get into neuro, as it seems like a logical conclusion to the cold, techy soundpete bubonic wrote:Yeah man, a lot of my mates who in the clubs same time as me could never stand Bad Company, they were similar to you in that once Techstep had started emerging it was the sound that really turned them off D&B. For me it's the sound that defined the differences between Jungle and D&B, the move away from being break dependant and shaking off the last remnants of the heritage of producers like Adam F, LTJ Bukem, Mask/Full Cycle. Personally I think few compilations really nailed like the Quantum Mechanics comp on Renegade Hardware. The ironic thing is modern producers who took this sound further like Noisia, Phace and the Neurofunk lot, I find stale and boring as piss, which I think is quite the minority view, especially from those that liked the original Techstep phase of D&B.fractal wrote:@ pete - it's funny how different we see things. In my mind, DnB peaked long before BC. By 99/00 it was so formulaic... Bad company was one of the crews I just couldn't get into. the bastardization of the sound imo
boom chick, boom chick, boom boom chick etc
to each their own tho
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