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Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Thu Feb 18, 2010 1:47 pm
by Xavy
Don Letts needs his head examined. DMZ murked Metalheadz.
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Sun Feb 21, 2010 7:44 pm
by wilson
Listening to the audio on RBMA, I think Pokes pissing him off definatly pushed his decision towards Metalheadz.
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Sun Feb 28, 2010 10:57 am
by cixxxj
Like Pokes said about Bailey, maybe Letts was there to read his newspaper!!
Ok, big fan here of DMZ, BUT !!!
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Sat Mar 06, 2010 12:12 pm
by cheeba
DMZ went in like it was a proper soundclash (which the night was based on) Goldie and the metalheadz camp did it cos they just wanted to showboat and thought tings be easy cos we got andy c. Goldie always goes in on the hype thing and to be honest them dont know about clashing and should keep to his acting in eastenders.
Baily and the rest are just goldies ass lickers and to think hes still on metalheadz after all the madness with goldie cousin running off with label money suprises me.LOL
Im a ruffage crew fan from day one but when i see goldie i cry cos he would sell his own gran just for the hype thing.
Trojan isnt a clash sound,its a record label (LOL) . dont get me wrong,well respected but not a clash sound !they just played the old back cat (hardly any specials) could of been trojans greatest hits compilation c.d. playing.
They should of had a proper sound system to represent reggae,Maybe rodigan or king jammys,even jah shaka would of been better,Even drag out the old saxon possee.
Soul to soul was the only other contender but had a terrible mc.
in my eyes Dmz won.
Also the people offended by pokes dont know how clash runs ...go check sounds like bass odyssey,Black kat,mighty crown,matterhorn,firelinx and then you will understand how the tings set.
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Sun Mar 07, 2010 4:26 pm
by Xavy
cheeba wrote:
Soul to soul was the only other contender but had a terrible mc.
I thought their MC was good!
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Mon Mar 08, 2010 12:38 am
by Cr0fty
From standing there, it was easy to tell who won! Boos 'mistaken' for cheers on the part of Metalheadz. DMZ definitely topped it, but I'd agree with cheeba that Soul to soul contested well! I didn't want to have to boo metalheadz either, but oh well

Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Mon Mar 08, 2010 1:33 pm
by iCaRnAgEx
Its shit
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Mon Mar 08, 2010 2:42 pm
by tr0tsky
What a stupid day of the week to hold the even tho.
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Sun May 09, 2010 4:01 am
by fatabangi007
Hosted by Don Letts, this once in a lifetime Culture Clash will see Jazzie B’s Soul II Soul, the mighty Trojan Sound System, Goldie’s Metalheadz, and dubstep pioneers Digital Mystikz also known as DMZ fight for the Roundhouse massive’s favour with nothing but big tunes from their respective scenes.
The funki dreds of Soul II Soul were at the forefront of UK club soul in the late 80’s, scoring big both sides of the Atlantic via ‘Back To Life’ and ‘Keep On Movin’. With their iconic robo-skull logo, genre-defining 12” releases, and legendary club night at Hoxton’s Blue Note Caf, Goldie and his Metalheadz label played a pivotal role in propelling the junglist movement to unknown heights.
Land Rover Discovery Parts
Re: Red Bull Culture Clash at The Roundhouse
Posted: Mon May 31, 2010 3:13 pm
by rainask
Ever since Notting Hill Carnival started in 1959, sound systems played a vital part in London's cultural psyche. To celebrate this tradition, four of the city’s most pioneering sounds will stand up to be counted in London’s first cross-genre clash ever.
Hosted by Don Letts, this once in a lifetime Culture Clash will see Jazzie B’s Soul II Soul, the mighty Trojan Sound System, Goldie’s Metalheadz, and dubstep pioneers Digital Mystikz fight for the Roundhouse massive’s favour with nothing but big tunes from their respective scenes. The funki dreds of Soul II Soul were at the forefront of UK club soul in the late 80’s, scoring big both sides of the Atlantic via Back To Life and Keep On Movin’. With their iconic robo-skull logo,