Monday, August 04, 2008

Never look a gift horse in the mouth

Soul Motive 002: Forsaken and Ben Blackmore

When I saw the above photo, for Forsaken and Ben Blackmore ft Joker's "Last Saloon Swagger" [SoulMotive] only one thing came to mind. How the hell did they get hold of a horse? Turns out, not in the way you might imagine. Forsaken explains...

Forsaken on how to aquire some horsepower...

"When we decided we were going to release the two wild west tracks, we knew we had to draw for the big pictures for the sleeve. We sat down chatted about it individually, two mates and I thought it's gotta have a horse really. And we need to look like two badmen out of Fistful of Dollars.

I brought up the idea of the horse in a meeting, everyone laughed it off but I think they both secretly wanted it. It was a bit of a joke suggestion, I mean who's going to lend us goons a horse? I mean, whose got horses to lend in the first place?

Avon and Somerset Constabulary.

So as a joke I sent a few emails to the local police force, one girl sent an email back saying she'd got in contact with the horse trainers in Bristol and put me in contact with a Sergeant. So, turns these guys are happy to do it, I don't think they do a lot outside festivals and football matches. Not only that but they don't want anything in return. Serious.

So we turn up on the day with the most ridiculous costumes, roll into their car park, walk straight in the door only for a lot of fucking big dogs to go absolutely mental at me.

Wrong door.

Walk round the side, wondering how the fuck any of us ended up actually going to meet the police, out of free will. The main guy comes out to meet us. He's safe and is chatting to us about what the horses get used for, what times they go out, what we're thinking of doing and says...

'What type of horse do you want?'

What type. Jokes.

We've gone from some comedy suggestion in the pub to deciding which trained police horse we want to use. So blatantly I just said, 'Err, the baddest and meanest looking one you got...'

Man walks out this 10 foot, half tonne steed of justice.

The thing is huge and I get the impression the guitarist Ben ain't too comfortable with this mass of muscle and metal hooves pushing him around and treading on his feet. But we crack on. And after telling us about his kids and other such wholesome things, one of the policemen say 'you guys need those cigars they had back then.'

'Shit yeah, I fucking forgot to get that on the way over here...'

'Well we got some cannabis you could roll in the back.' says the copper.

...

What do you say to that? I wasn't sure, neither did my mates, just a proper awkward silence as we all looked at each other. The copper just bursts out laughing with his mate, like yeah, who'd be dumb enough to bun weed.

Who would do a thing like that?

So we get the shots done, try and control this beast and finish up this surreal experience when the guy says can him and this next handler wear the costumes and get their photo taken with the horse. So we're stood there, with these two coppers dressed as cowboys, taking photos of them with a horse, like we do this everyday.

Need to link them the photos actually..."

Soul Motive 001: Joker

Joker on bass...[SoulMotive001]

Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Rinse July

Rinse FM

RINSE

Dusk and I were back on Rinse on Thursday (31st 11pm-1am) rolling the grimey, wonky and skippy, before we legged it off to The Big Chill. We played the main stage there, which was so ludicrous it made me laugh, but it was fun.

Download the mix HERE.

Dusk + Blackdown Rinse July 08

St Germain "Alabama Blues (Todd Edwards remix)" (F Comm)
Todd Edwards "Saved my life" (FFRR)
Maddslinky "Desert Fogg" (Sirkus)
Gant "Sound Bwoy Burial" (Positiva)
Dub War "Murderous Style" (Tempa)

Zomby "Gaffling Breakz" (unreleased)
Rude Kid "Photo" (unreleased)
Terror Danjah "Trojan" (unreleased)
Starkey "Pressure" (unreleased)
Black the Ripper and Rudekid "R U Stupid?" (unreleased)
Bruza "Not 2 Nite" (unreleased)
Zomby "Bur5t" (unreleased)

Flying Lotus ft Lil Wayne "Robo-Tussin" (myspace.com/flyinglotus)
Joker "Digi Design" (unreleased)
Dot Rotten ft Voltage "Rotten and Voltage" (from "RIP Youngdot" mixtape)
Gemmy "Supligen" (unreleased)
JME "Ps" (Boy Betta Know)
Zomby "Aquafre5h" (unreleased)
Jerzey "Taiko" (unreleased)

Skream "Hedd Banger" (forthcoming Tectonic)
Ekalon "7th Soul (Sully remix)" (unreleased)
XI "Prophet" (unreleased)
Pangea "Router" (forthcoming Hessle Audio)
Landslide "Dreams & Visions (instrumental)" (unreleased)
Dusk + Blackdown ft Farrah "Iqbal's Groove" ("Margins Music" on Keysound Recordings)
Sollabong "Up and Down" (unreleased)
LD & Cluekid "untitled" (dubplate)
Dusk + Blackdown ft Teji & Farrah "Kuri Pataka" ("Margins Music" on Keysound Recordings)
Forsaken ft Joker and Ben Blackmore "Last Saloon Swagger" (Soulmotive)
Forsaken "Do You Know" (unreleased)
Zomby "Tst Me For a Reason" (unreleased)

You can still download last month's show HERE

Thursday, July 17, 2008

FWD>> and Rinse

Rinse & FWD>> August 08

The return of Pay As U Go!!!

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

who's got?

The way I battle/I battle like I’m in Iraq.
The way you battle/you battle like you’re a beginner, star…


-- Ghetto, "Who's Got?"

So on the whole I don’t, and I won’t, be reviewing my own gigs: come along if you can, but me reviewing them just doesn’t feel right. However last Sunday was a special one for Dusk and I, as it was the launch party of our debut album at the very club that inspired us to make music.

Now I know when you stick your head over the parapet, you can expect to get shot at, and you know what? It’s a fair cop. But check this little beauty of an email I received on Monday…

Sunday set at FWD‏
From: XXX (XXX@gmail.com)
Medium risk: You may not know this sender.
Mark as safe | Mark as unsafe
Sent: 14 July 2008 19:04:11
To: martin_clark7@hotmail.com

Hey,
FWD was quite strange last night: One Man and Joker were fantastic - Joker's set really peaked up at the end, and I was looking forward to some Blackdown / Dusk beats to round it off perfectly.

I know you've been a leading proponent of FWD moving back to Sunday night, and returning to its dubby / non-wobbly roots, and I've got a lot of time and respect for that position. I also recognise that good DJs try to stay dogmatically true to their own brand and style. In your recent interview with Appleblim he said Sarah gave him the advice:

"don't play to the crowd [...] you're here because you have a certain
selection and taste"

However, like many things, I believe compromise is the way forward.
Yes, a DJ needs to carve a niche for himself, and develop a unique
sound. However, this does not preclude giving the crowd what they
want. It's about responding to the atmosphere and vibe in your own
way, which is personal, and yet pleasing.

Unfortunately, I have to say you really missed this mark last night.
Joker's set finished with that banging Roni Size remix, and the crowd
was really hyped up. We were all expecting a more laid back, dubby set from you, but to go from that energy down to nothing was disastrous. The final nail was not to grow the set's energy at all, leaving it at the "warm milk and slippers" level for the full 30 minutes that I stayed for.

I don't know if the metaphorical and actual lights were shining in
your eyes too much for you to see, but the dance floor ground to a
halt, with the only movement being that of people leaving.

I don't know if it was just a bad set or if you actually achieved what
you set out to do last night. If it's the former, then I wish you the
best of luck for next time. If it's the latter, then I'd ask you to
limit your crusade for a return to the roots of dubstep to your blog,
and when you're playing the closing set in a busy club full of paying
punters, give them what they want, because unfortunately, they don't like what you've got.

Well, well, well. Seems General Doughnut here thinks I should “give people what I want” by “limit[ing] your crusade for a return to the roots of dubstep to your blog.” Alright mate, you want to have it right here, you got it…

Let’s take it blow by blow. First para, nothing to see here: move on. Second para:

“I know you've been a leading proponent of FWD moving back to Sunday night, and returning to its dubby / non-wobbly roots, and I've got a lot of time and respect for that position. I also recognise that good DJs try to stay dogmatically true to their own brand and style.”

Ah OK, nice. We’re on the same page. DJs Lead and not follow. Moving FWD>>, never backwards eh?

However, like many things, I believe compromise is the way forward.
Yes, a DJ needs to carve a niche for himself, and develop a unique
sound. However, this does not preclude giving the crowd what they
want. It's about responding to the atmosphere and vibe in your own
way, which is personal, and yet pleasing.


Ah. Now hold on. So it’s about carving your own niche, being unique and responding in your own way, but somehow compromise is the way forward?

Now, let’s not pull any punches here so Junior Spesh here doesn’t get the wrong chicken in a box. When it comes to music, especially dubstep, I absolutely, 100% do not fucking want anyone who’s anyone right now to do any more fucking compromising. Now, of all times in dubstep, please could everyone just not compromise, whatsoever, about anything? Burial, Kode, Mala, Shackleton, Martyn, Zomby, Joker, Sully, Guido, Darkstar, Ikonika, Appleblim, Quest, Starkey, TRG: could you all please just do you, to the max.

There should be no pandering to Johnny-come-latelys, no getting bogged down in formula, no forgetting your lines when you get on the big stage, no policy U-turns now we got elected - otherwise what the hell was all that time spent in the wilderness for, when we could have fucked off to breaks and toured Australia’s superclubs with Tayo?

Cos this is the thing, right. Dubstep’s got it superclub moment right now – hand up even I’ve played a few of them myself this year (who would have thought it!). Dubstep’s finally got the audience it deserved, but if I’m honest, quite a few people who got us to the main stage have found themselves bricking it while looking into the bright lights.

It’s been a great source of personal pain to see innovators deviate from what made them exciting and vital. I’ve had to deal with it and move on and accept that things have changed. So those left who still have “it,” please: no aligning “compromise” with “forward,” or is that Forward>>, motion.

"Unfortunately, I have to say you really missed this mark last night."

OK fine, that’s your view: fair comment.

"Joker's set finished with that banging Roni Size remix,"


He didn’t actually, but I’ll let you off.

"and the crowd was really hyped up."

They weren’t actually – I was in it until 5 minutes before my set half worrying that they weren’t going off to “Holly Brook Park” and “Snake Eater” and feeling responsible because I’d booked him to play, but half thinking “fukkit, this is FWD>> and people are committed to exiting new sounds. Stop worrying.”

"We were all expecting a more laid back, dubby set from you, but to go from that energy down to nothing was disastrous. The final nail was not to grow the set's energy at all, leaving it at the "warm milk and slippers" level for the full 30 minutes that I stayed for."


Well done Police Chief Wiggum, better call for extra doughnuts and cancel the backup because this is a prize piece of detective work: you came to see a 2 hour set and judged its entirety on 30 mins. You going for detective of the month were ya?

Now sure, we were the last set of the night, which you might expect to come a little harder but consider the circumstances. It was a) Sunday night b) our own launch party c) a two hour set and d) Forward>> - a place committed to new sounds not full of “’ave you got ‘Cockney Thug’ mate?” types.

We started with an Appleblim anthem, Pev’s “Waterfalls remix,” a DJ you seem to rate. We mixed it into our own “Con/Fusion ft Farrah” which got rewound in Dub War in New York – and we were coming off the back of the Bomb Squad, not doing the warm up set. We played some of Grievious Angel’s 2step, not dis-similar to the garage you enjoyed Oneman playing, followed by my 2step remix of Martyn’s “Broken.”

I don't know if the metaphorical and actual lights were shining in
your eyes too much for you to see, but the dance floor ground to a
halt, with the only movement being that of people leaving.


But I’ll definitely give you it, it was a mellow start and we should have mixed quicker. So?

Here’s the thing right: if you want someone to rip the arse off it from the get go, go see someone else. Our thinking is twofold. Firstly, without the mellow, there’s no hard. Without the gentle, there’s no hectic. Without the quiet there’s no rowdy. Our sets build, because we don’t want to end up in some harder/faster contest that’ll lead dubstep into some 150bpm, zone-of-fruitless intensification (© Simon Reynolds) tear-out-competition that deadout genres like d&b now find themselves in.

Secondly - and this point is the main reason why I’ve chosen to blog this piece in public – this harder/faster issue goes to the heart of what dubstep promised to be and now is. Dusk and I were happy with the new dark swing era, the Velvet Room, Zed Bias, El-B, Horsepower era. Then Ghost imploded, Zed went broken and a new era began, which was dominated – production wise - by Skream, Benga, Mala, Coki and Loefah. And in came the halfstep era, which I admit, took some getting used to. For two or three years, literally no one but producers and friends of the DJs came to the gigs and the subzero temperatures of the dancefloor felt at first alien. But I began to appreciate them for being genuinely unique within dance music, that this form of urban music could exist that didn’t need to always “go off.” It was something unique at a time when a lot of other critics were saying dubstep was less than the sum of it’s influences.

Had no one come to the gigs indefinitely, it might have not worked out, but the concept was proven as Mala, Loefah and Coki brought scale to the equation, with the success of their night, DMZ.

Things have moved on from then, I fully appreciate that, and Dusk and I are not looking to win a halfstep contest these days: quite the opposite, as we’ve championed the return of percussive and 2step flavours, amongst other vibes yet have tunes that go far lower than these on the album – one has only one kick and one hat per bar! But I don’t see why this unique element in dubstep needs to be abandoned totally, just because the scene got popular, as truly unique elements are hard to come by, trust me

"when you're playing the closing set in a busy club full of paying punters, give them what they want, because unfortunately, they don't like what you've got"

If you’d stayed a little longer Wiggum, you’d have noticed our sets, as they tend to do, got a little wonkier and grimier. By the time I’d dropped the Durrty Goodz “Concrete Streets” accapella/Joker/grime anthems/UKG rollout mashup dub I’d spent week damaging my sleep patterns making last week, it was pullup time. “Focus VIP” and “Focus” did what they do and “Kuri Pataka” got the rewind.

Then we went old school, into Reach n Spin and then the pullup on the ultra deep Steve Gurley’s “Hotboys” vox which did something to Soulja I have never, ever seen. I double dropped Dizzee’s “I Luv U” into Skream’s “Request Line” which had hands reaching for both decks, as did the MAW mix of “Sounds of the Future”. By the time we rolled into “Splash’s “Babylon” and Omni Trio “Renegade Snares” I was literally, physically fighting people off to let the tune roll out, rather than get pulled again. And this isn’t me giving it the ‘bigun (NO EGO), this is simply a statement of the facts about our set.

So bruv, the way we battle we battle like we’re in Iraq: it’s going to be a long grind, but ultimately we got the big guns. The way you battle, you battle like you’ve been kept in the dark…

Monday, July 14, 2008

Farrah: Searching for 500 Faces of Islam

Farrah 13 - by Simon Toplis

I first met Farrah through this very blog, when I wrote about urban crime and she got in touch. We chatted and became mates before working out she'd grown up a few school years below Dusk.

Then one day she sent me the shittiest recorded loop of her singing an Indian scale. The hairs on the back of my neck stood up. As a journalist you learn to trust this reaction instinctively and absolutely. I suggested the three of us try record some of her singing. She features on three of our album tracks.

But since then she's taken on the most amazing challenge for Channel 4. Here in interview, Farrah explains all...

Farrah 76 - by Simon Toplis

Blackdown: So Farrah, obviously you’ve sung on several of the tracks on our album “Margins Music”, but recently you’ve got yourself involved with a proper project: travelling the Islamic world for Channel 4 to find 500 men called Osama. So with that in mind, introduce yourself those unfamiliar with your voice…

Farrah: Well, I’m genuinely passionate about the electronic urban sounds that come out of this, undoubtedly the greatest city on the planet. By trade I’m a junior doctor, but I’ve always loved music and have sung since I was at school, writing with friends or more latterly, singing on electronic tunes created by a friend using software like Cubase. Though I am of Pakistani blood, I’ve never had any training in classical Indian music. On “Margins Music,” the vocals I’ve done are definitely reaching back to my subcontinental roots, but in a pretty freeform fashion. As an amateur, essentially, I’ve not really developed any sort of concrete vocal style so it was a refreshing challenge to sing to spec for “Margins Music” in terms of style.

B: Can you explain to everyone a little about your cultural, national and ethnic heritage? (Southend massive, stand up!)

F: My parents came over to the UK from Pakistan as economic migrants and I was born in Essex – Southend on sea. I grew up listening to jungle on the pirate radio and of course, was in the heart of the 2-step garage phenomenon in the 90s. I consider myself British and proud, but I’m lucky enough to have some extra cultural elements from my eastern parentage that are really positive – respectful attitudes towards the elderly, strong family values, impeccable hospitality. Ethnically, I’m pureblooded Punjabi with Kashmiri ancestry. Overall though, the part of my identity that is the strongest is my Britishness – perhaps not the sort of Britishness of stiff upper lips and twitching net curtains, but more the kind that you feel in the air of London town, unrivalled in its rich diversity and tolerance.

Searching for 500 Faces of Islam

Farrah with her camera man/producer Masood

B: You’re about to begin filming something quite unique for Channel 4. Explain the outline and it’s purpose of the trip you’re about to embark on?

F: I’m about to go round the world in 50 days looking for 500 people called Osama to ask each of them what they love. Why am I doing it? Cos I’m irritated at the way people see Muslims. I’m not doing this to chat about Islam – in fact, I’m personally pretty secular – but to show that people that belong to the Muslim community are the same as people everywhere else. We all want the same stuff – we love the same things. I guess it’s a sort of rehumanising project. One key thing I want to emphasise is that it’s going to be lighthearted in spirit – something that I feel has been lacking whenever Muslims are mentioned for some time. I’m sure it’s going to be a positive project, and at the very least, an incredible experience for me personally.

Now let me ask you a question: Do you know anyone called Osama? If so, please hit me up on the website: www.osamaloves.com

B: What are the countries you plan to visit and what are your expectations for each one?

F: Right now we’re planning to start in the UK and then take ourselves down to Northern Nigeria for the first foreign leg of the mission – I’m damn excited and my expectations are that it’s going to be hot, hilarious, delicious, thought-provoking and a heady whirl. I am very keen on getting some Nigerian threads inna area. Next time you see me I’ll be wearing one of those lush headdresses with a fishtail cotton print skirt and eating some fufu.

Farrah 70 - by Simon Toplis

B: Looking at the trip in its entirety, what are your expectations for the impact on you as a British Muslim for the journey?

F: I don’t think that this trip will have much of an impact on any personal religious or spiritual beliefs I have. At least, I hope it won’t turn me towards being more ritualistic about religion and spirituality. I do hope that it makes me a better doctor – I think that the more people you meet and the more diverse and broad your experiences are, the ability to empathise increases. I think I’ll be shocked by attitudes towards women in some areas. Luckily, being a doctor means that often in such societies one is treated as an honorary man, but not always. If I get sidelined for being a woman and people refuse to engage with me or talk to me on that basis, it’ll make me really cross. For 6 years now I’ve been regularly immersing myself in the Islamic world, mainly in the Middle East, and I find it an incredible enriching and vibrant part of the world, but I’ve never been to south east Asia or sub Saharan Africa. I’m hoping I will come away a wiser person with a little more depth.

B: Who are you most excited about meeting? Where are you most excited about visiting?

F: Honestly? Honestly?? I’ve gotta tell you the truth – I find most people utterly fascinating if you scratch the surface. Everyone has a story to tell. Everyone has tender secrets, dark secrets, hopes and desires, bizarre dreams, ambitions. Having met a couple of very famous people in my life, it’s become quite clear that what they have is really no more fascinating than an unknown Joe Bloggs with a comparatively pedestrian existence. The key is teasing out those tantalising nuggets and fascinating details that make up each person. I cannot wait to begin meeting ALL the Osamas, but I suppose the ones who are “featured” Osamas will be people with whom I can spend more time, get to know and bond with. I’m most excited about visiting our first stop – Nigeria!!

B: Conversely, what are your concerns for the trip?

F: I’m bloody scared of cockroaches. I have a penchant for sampling gnarly looking street food that may leave me confined to the water closet for days if I’m not careful. I loathe religious extremists and find it difficult to bite my tongue when I see people being unjust and unreasonable and forcing their opinions down other people’s throats.

Farrah 102 - by Simon Toplis

B: From this vantage point, pre trip, do you expect your sense of identity or outlook to be affected in any way at a result of the journey?

F: As a Londoner, one constantly lives in a microcosm of the world, so long as you venture across postcodes, so I’m constantly saturated in ethno-cultural diversity here at home without even venturing out of the city. I think the main change in my outlook is a heightened appreciation of the liberties we enjoy in this country compared to many parts of the world – e.g. places where Shariah law applies.

The other thing I think I’ll have a heightened sense of is how much anger and resentment there is towards our government for what we’ve done and joined with the Americans in doing around the world. We all know this is the case anyway, but coming face to face with the bubbling frustration and rage that so many people feel towards our government will be sobering and may make me a little bit more committed to making my voice heard on political issues back in the UK.

B: Do you expect to encounter much music on your trip?

F: Hell yes – I hope so. To start with Nigeria, the land of Afrobeat and Fela Kuti, the region of body-shaking West African drums, is a music lover’s wet dream isn’t it? I am ready to be educated about Nigerian music and hungry to hear it and maybe even help make some. I hope that if we get to the Middle East, I can have the unparalleled experiences of listening to the throaty, emotional, melodic sounds of Umm Kalthoum singing on the banks of the Nile with a shisha and a fragrant Turkish coffee.

Arab music gets a bad rep for being melodically uninspiring and unambitious but I think that the backbone of Middle Eastern percussion is such a pure and primordial aural pleasure that I’m willing to overlook any number of repetitive string section sweeps and boring song structures just to hear that Bedouin drum beat. Don’t worry Martin, I’ll bring back a selection of cross pollinating transcultural sample sources for your next project!

B: Damn girl, now you’re talkin’: I’m gonna hold you to that!!!

“Searching for 500 Faces of Islam” is due to air on Channel 4 this autumn. For regular updates check www.osamaloves.com including her daily journal.

Monday, July 07, 2008

"Margins Music" album launch @ Forward>>

Dusk + Blackdown album launch flyer

Dusk + Blackdown album launch @ FWD>>

Sunday 13th July
Foward>>, Plastic People, London

DJs:

Dusk + Blackdown (2 hour set)
Joker
Oneman


Dusk + Blackdown "Margins Music" (Keysound Recordings) is out August 18th featuring Durrty Goodz, Trim, Farrah, Target and more... For more info check here.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

P-fork flava

Dot Rotten

The death of Young Dot and the resurrection of 2step by Grievous Angel in my Pitchfork column this month.

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

LDN005

Focus2 - Dusk - by Simon ToplisFocus4 - Dusk - by Simon Toplis
Focus3 - Dusk - by Simon ToplisFocus1 - Dusk - by Simon Toplis

Dusk "Focus"/Dusk + Blackdown "Akkaboo" (Keysound Recordings) is out now.

UPDATE: Keysound now on iTunes. Brap!!!!

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Rinse June

Rinse FM

RINSE

I was back on Rinse on Thursday (26th 11pm-1am) rolling the grimey, wonky and skippy. No Dusk this month, he was locked in a deep underground bunker, cooking up some mad ish. He'll be back next month.

Blackdown on Rinse June 08

Download the mix HERE

Nu Birth "Anytime (Groove Chronicles remix)" (Locked On)
Brandy "Never Say Never (El-B remix)" (white)
Bird "Game (MJ Cole remix)" (white)
The Ends "R U Really From the Ends" (white)
Roll Deep Entourage "Bounce" (Roll Deep Recordings)

Joker "Dead End" (unreleased)
Jerzey "Allstar Fade" (unreleased)
Zomby "Rumours and Revolutions" (unreleased)
Starkey "Gutter Music" (unreleased)
Sway and Lady $tush "F- Ur X" (from The Dotted Line mixtape)
Geeneus ft Wiley, Riko and Breeze "Knife & Gun" (unreleased)
Brags "Know About Me" (unreleased)

Joker "Gully Brook Park pt 2" (unreleased)
Y.Dot "I'm Not One of Them" (unreleased)
Ghetto and Rudekid "Sing For Me" (unreleased)
Dips "Noodles" (unreleased)
Don Goliath ft N. Dot E "To the Top" (unreleased)
Zomby "Diamonds & Pearls" (unreleased)
2000F & JKamata "You Don't Know What Love Is" (unreleased)
Guido "Time" (unreleased)

2nd II None "Waterfalls (Peveralist remix)" (unreleased)
D1 "Oingy Boingy" (unreleased)
Skream "1 For the Heads Who Remember" (unreleased)
Grievous Angel "What We Had (garage mix)" (unreleased)
Blackdown "Lata VIP" (unreleased Keysound Recordings)
Dusk "Focus" (Keysound Recordings)
Blackdown ft Durrty Goodz "Concrete Streets" (unreleased Keysound Recordings)
Martyn "Broken (Blackdown remix)" (unreleased)
Joker "Holly Brook Park (Forsaken remix) (unreleased)
Zomby "Duality" (unreleased)

Here's a link to download last month's show. Thankfully the lights didn't blow or the station go off air this time :)

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

Sonar sounds

Sonar crowd blue

Festivals are supposed to be a challenge: an endurance marathon as to how long you can survive without washing or how much you can wake up at 6am sweating in a tent.

Not Sonar.

The festival, which I got back from on Sunday, is in two parts, by day and by night: both parts bypass the need for endurance or tents.

Putting Sonar By Day in the middle of Barcelona opens you up to an amazing city, much of which feels very Mediterranean but, because it was built in the late 19th century, lacks the ramshackle, Medieval feel.

La Boqueria market

My favourite part was La Boqueria, an incredible market that reminded me of the Chinatown market in Bangkok, except with less toads in bags and more fish, sausages and olives. While the food itself was pretty incredible, the explosion of colour was even better: worth an addition to any trip.

La Boqueria Market

Even before Sonar got started we saw some great DJs. Flyers on walls all pointed to the Sleaze Nation party at Mondo. We wandered down past dozens of amazing yachts anchored in the marina, before reaching the venue which the guide book said you couldn’t get in unless you arrived in a Jaguar or a yacht, which is never my kinda vibe for a club.

Inside Rustie and Hudson Mohawk were playing to what looked like a dressy Ibiza crowd, most of whom turned out to be Brits, all of whom were loving the mix of wonky, bassline, rave, crunk and dubstep. I’d heard Joker “Holly Brook Park” and I’d only been in the country about four hours, perfect!

Given the setting, and the, erm, beer, I thought it a good idea to text at 2am Joker to tell him even clubs with plasma screens in Barcelona marina on the walls go off to his next level shit. Turns out, somehow, I had his mum’s number.

She calls back the next day trying to work out who the hell I was. She put Joker on the line by which point none of us knew what was going on. I’ve deleted Joker’s mum’s mobile out of my phone now: it’s probably for the best.

Sonar by Day takes place in and around an art gallery, and it was fun to link Mala and for the first time, the mighty TRG, and chill. It was cool to see the tents and stages, but nothing would prepare me for Sonar by Night.

Justice @ Sonar

I’ve seen a few festivals over the years – Glastonbury, Creamfields, Homelands, Phoenix, Big Chill, T in the Park – but no one mentioned just how insanely large Sonar is. There were not one but three rooms that you could have parallel parked two airbuses next to each other in. The rooms were cavernous, just enormous, like the main stage at Glastonbury but in an aircraft hanger.

Justice @ Sonar

No wonder then that Diplo, a small dot even from our vantage point down the front, chose to play disco house to begin with. As dubstep has exploded in the last two years the relationship between musical choices and scale has become ever apparent. Subtleties get lost in front of a crowd of biblical proportions.

Diplo found room in the end of his set to drop some of the flavours he’s best known for, not least MIA’s “Paper Planes” and Chamillionaire’s “Ridin’ Durty”, but I’d have preferred him to have taken the massive opportunity presented to him and used it to drop a more daring set.

It was also curious to watch him as a DJ, nervously touching flitting around the mixer, four or eight times a bar. It looks like he’s busy, but if you know how little effect EQ tweaks have, it was definitely a question of: just what is he doing up there?

The same applied to the act that followed him, Justice. Essentially a clone of Daft Punk, they make a massive effort to visually engage the audience. They perform from behind two stacks of Marshall amps (which looked like they’d been hollowed out from where I was standing), rock 80s leather jackets, haircuts like Noel Fielding and a huge glowing cross. Beside the baffling and contradictory symbolism, their music took Daft Punk’s sound and altered the balance in the arrangements between the breakdowns and the full tracks, so just as you got your groove on, you’d be back to filtering again. And while it was a fun set, like Diplo and as I've wondered before about "live" electronic music, it definitely looked like a question of: just what are they doing up there?

It’s hard to answer precisely: they wouldn’t be the first dance act to put on the DAT and act like it’s live. It just goes to show if you turn up with enough rock paraphernalia and glowing crosses, your audience will cease to care how the music’s made.

The dubstep took place on a smaller arena, though still about the size of DMZ. Mary Anne Hobbs mixed it up: it was great to hear grime riddims like “Intensive Snare.” Shackleton felt far less claustrophobic than when I saw him last, perhaps because it was warm and Mediterranean and his setup was flanked in a cascade of decorative lights, but it was really great to hear his detailed and abstract percussion. Am so glad he’s made it to a level where he can perform on this kind of stage.

Having seen a bit more of Justice, I arrived back in the space during the heavy metal track Mala is playing, which oddly, was exactly the moment I left his set at Brainfeeder festival the weekend before. Flying Lotus, also at Brainfeeder, dropped the instrumental of Truth Hurts/Dre’s “Addictive,” which with the Lata vocal samples, is a persy ingle. Buraka Son Sistema put on a good show, with tough and layered Kuduro percussion and a good stage presence.

The rest of the night was all about Theo Parrish though. Bar a few hollow amps, glowing crosses and Teenwolf leather jackets, there’s little in essence difference between Parrish’s meticulous EQing of long JBs records and Justice, but something felt to perfect about the former. How does he make gentle classics sound so fresh and physical?

Sonar

It made a total contrast for Sonar on Saturday, which by night confirmed my fears about techno. I used to love Detroit techno, I really did, until I’d worked my way backwards through the classics and realised moving forwards wasn’t cutting it. Yet this was apparent again as Jeff Mills tried to re-create his classic, conceptual X-102 project. But if his idea of conceptual engagement is 30 minutes of ambient loops and NASA photos, it didn’t seem to do much for the massive warehouse crowd watching it. But worse still were some of the DJs on the stage Mary Anne had curated the night before.

I’m apprehensive about 4-to-the-floor at the best of times – it’s a rhythmic trap that means that audiences who’re fed it, wont accept anything else – but even within the spectrum of tech/house/garage/hardcore 4x4, there are tens if not hundreds of sub genres and flavours. But the DJs booked seemed to only want to play one flavour: techy but not boshingly hard, cool and never warm, seamlessly mixed without breakdown nor ever moments of true emotional intensity. It began to really grate after several hours. Put it this way, my Saturday highlight was either the double strength Caipirinhas a local friend had earlier led us to down some dark side alley or the dodgems.

Techno dullardry aside, Sonar is an amazing festival. If you go, I hope the weather is just as amazing. If it is, you’ll love it...

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Meme collision

say no to wonky

So Dusk and I were up on Rinse the other month and clocked a flyer that said “say no to wonky.” I tried to follow it up but big up Mel for beating me to it. Gwann girl!

It was in May I wrote about the outbreak of unstable synths both reclaiming the mid-range from the deadout heavy metal wobble massive in dubstep and ripping through other scenes too. I described the flavour as "wonky" because it, well, seemed to fit. Simon then noticed there were several other wonkys, the rest of which I’d not heard of.

(As a quicky wonky update, the Brainfeeder night is this Sat with an insanely wonky line up: Flying Lotus, Rustie, Hudson Mo, Kode9, Mala and more. I'm deya!)

But the flyer at Rinse belonged a funky event Circle, so it’s unlikely they’d be talking about the same “wonky” as me. What made it even more confusing is that Mel thought it looks like their “say no to wonky” flyer graphically indir-ed the Hudson Mo logo, someone I’d named in my Pitchfork piece.

Turns out there some kind of urban meme collision going on.

Shout to Mel for getting to the bottom of it, with a quick Q&A from Tippa of Circle events.

“Our take on the term ‘Wonky’ is that for us,” says Tippa from Circle, “in terms of house it means poorly produced UK house or funky should I say as this is what all the kids are calling it.”

“Now I’m not saying that all UK house is shit, cause that’s not the case…. Phil Asher, W Beeza, Coopr8, Freerange, Perempay & Dee, Geeneus, Fanatix, Sy Sez & Gavin Peters (Aphrodisiacx), Guy Robin etc… there are loads of acts and producers doing what house is about and producing quality stuff that can rival the us.”

“But we feel the other side of the production which is produced poorly, sounds like a spin off from UK grime and kids using the same loops, same beats, same tribal sounds… And we feel as some of the well known DJs that if we as a whole don’t speak out and try to educate the new producers coming through on how house is supposed to be made and sound, what its meaning and background is, then who will?”


Crikey, as Ben UFO points on the Dubstep forum, it’s like the circa 2000 garage wars all over again.

Back in 2000 as UKG became popular, there was an influx of youngers keen to gain status in a community that had essentially been founded around “the Sunday scene,” one originally run for older, smartly dressed ravers. When the genre got jumped it created a series of dynamic tensions that resulted in an amazing tempo plateau where Zinc’s breaky “138 Trek” sat with Todd Edwards’ vocal chopped US garage. DJ Narrow’s hard 4x4 would ride with r&b influenced 2step. El-B’s dark swing got mixed into Slimzee and Geeneus’ proto grime of riddims like Musical Mob’s “Pulse X.”

Perhaps inevitably, the tensions on the plateau could only be contained for a while: young and old, raw and well produced, feminine and masculine, DJ-focused and MC-based, dark and light, hectic and mellow, road and mature could all sit together only for so long. Check the Guardian piece where the Dreem Teem interview So Solid on Radio 1 and the tensions surface…

"Any tip for ageing rockers like ourselves?" Spoony asked them sarcastically. "How can we stay out there?"

"Give the youth of nowadays a chance to bust through that barrier - 'cause you lot have been there for so long and it's our time now," retorted Romeo.

"Are you saying we must step over?"

"A little sidestep," Romeo suggested. Mega Man added: "Look for new talent that can carry your name when you lot are too tired to DJ."”

Whether Circle feel the same way as Dreem Teem did then or not, there definitely seems to be parallels. As it’s hype grows, funky’s getting jumped by a lot of grime producers and it’s clear the some funky headz aren’t keen. As Geeneus put it in a comment on my blog “let grime be grime and funky be funky!”

If you ignore production values (one man’s lack of production values is another’s aesthetic, ain’t that right Bok Bok?), the elephant in the room is the aggression of grime. Circle events are tightly regulated: I tried to get on the mailing list about six months ago but balked at the prospect of having to give information like my mobile number and home address to someone on the end of an email. Yet given urban London, I can understand their interest in keeping the “Circle” tight.

It’s going to be interesting to see how funky develops. On one had you have the sense of déjà vu that being familiar with the London nuum cycles brings, that with the influx will come darkness and an emphasis on MCs agin. On the other you have the assertions that Supa D comments suggest, that these are separate things (grime and funky) and the implication that the funky scene wont let history repeat itself.

Speaking of history, the Guardian article references a photoshoot I was actually at, co-ordinated by The Face, who’s staff at that time included Emma Warren, now of “Steppas Delight” [Soul Jazz] fame.

I was an intern back in 2000, and the shoot was held over two days, so I wasn’t there, in Croydon, when “[Norris ‘Da Boss’] Windross … refused to have his photograph taken with Dee Kline for the Face magazine.” Instead I was there for the first day, that featured El-B, Zed Bias and Jay Da Flex. It would be my introduction to what would, six or so years later, blow us as dubstep. It seems like things have all come full … “Circle.” Meme collision alert number two!

Pirate presha

Pirate's Dilemma

If you don't know Matt Mason, he's my previous editor at RWD magazine and predicted the funky movement years ago.

Anyway, since leaving RWD he's emigrated to NYC and rocked it by writting a book that subtly drags the 'nuum to the Americans: "Pirates Dilemma."

Now, in a new overload media age, I'm a slow reader, so I thought I'd blog it now rather than wait until I finish it in 2009. So far, it seems to be weaving a path between disparate cultural phenomena, finding common cause in web 2.0 empowerment and subversion of culture. Checkit...

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

Pitchfork June

the bug

New Pitchfork column from me featuring Rude Kid, The Bug and 2562. Check it here.

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Appleblim

Appleblim@DMZ

Recently I interviewed Appleblim for the Dubstep Allstars 6 CD sleevenotes. Now the CD has dropped, here’s our conversations in full.

Blackdown: So can you tell me a bit about your musical background?

Appleblim: “I am not originally a Bristolian, I came from Notts and Plymouth before I moved to London in ’94, was there 8 years playing bass in a math-rock / psych band, going to Metalheadz, Jungle Fever, Movement and all the major techno nights like Final Frontier, Bloodsugar as my mates set up a d&b label and played on pirates etc, then 3 years in Bath studying music technology, which is when I discovered the FWD>> scene, then after that started supporting Pinchs early Context & Subloaded dubstep nights, and finally moved to Bristol after the course in ’06.”

A: “Basically moving to London in ‘94 was ‘the one’ really. I’d been going to raves but never really thought of being a DJ. But when me and my mate moved to London we just caught the bug, listening to the radio, of what was going on, picking up our first jungle tunes and stuff. It was actually my friend that got me into DJing: he came into some money and bought some decks. But I taught him to mix because he wasn’t a particularly rhythmic bloke.”

“So I learnt with his records: Moving Shadow, Reinforced, Omni Trio kind of stuff. So I’ve always been around it but didn’t take DJing seriously until Sarah asked me to play at FWD>>. I’d had a few gigs before that, just from putting on a few nights on in Bath where I was at the time – that’s actually how I met Pinch, Blazey and Peverelist. They came over and played basically. Pinch gave me my first gig actually, just in a little room at a drum & bass night, but when Sarah said I should do a warm up at FWD>> it was a bit ‘whoah,’ a reality check.”

B: How had she heard you DJ?

A: “Just from stuff she’d heard me play in the office and generally pushing, stuff I was listening to that she enjoyed. I’d done a little cover on Rinse as well. She was like ‘you should play down at the club’ and it was bonkers really. I’ve had a really steep learning curve. Playing at your favourite club was a bit much. I was never nervous and I wasn’t technically that good at the time. It’s been a bit of trial by fire: chucked in and learning in front of people. It’s been a bit harrowing a few times but it’s sharpened me up. Going from just ‘doing it’ to thinking about how you want to shape your sets – it’s made me think differently about the whole thing. I’ve always enjoyed listening to DJs who took you on a journey, but I’d never really thought about how they did it. It was really good fun to do it myself, doing the warm up slots gave me the freedom to mess around a bit more, y’know?”

B: But didn’t you play at the Skull Disco parties in Stoke Newington?

A: “Yeah but then again it was more just like I wouldn’t have said they were good sets. I wouldn’t have said they were good sets, just more of an opportunity to hear the music more. And to hear Shackleton’s music more: and his music wasn’t being heard many places. So it was a place to hear that stuff loud. But that was playing recently bought tunes for the fun of it. I’ve been chasing producers around for new music since I very first discovered FWD>> and I gradually ended up getting given a few things: it’s a real addiction. Some DJs have the strength of their mixing talents to see them through.”

B: Despite all the stress, it must have been fun playing FWD>> though?

A: “Yeah it’s my favourite room in the world.”

B: Yeah it’s my favourite room too, that space between the pillar and the decks.

A: “There’s been so many moments. It’s very strange going from being a raver who was there obsessively down the front to going to someone standing behind the decks. It’s definitely an honour: I’ve had countless epiphanies down there, so if I can give people a few of those then that’s my job done.”

B: I remember coming down to see you early in 2007 and leaving feeling you’d really discovered your ‘sound’ as a DJ...

A: “Yeah I remember and was really proud of that because before I’d felt that I’d either tried to fit too many or the wrong style into my sets. But I made a conscious decision, and Sarah [from Ammunition/FWD>>/Tempa] had told me this too, to stick to my guns. Sarah had said that’s why she’d asked me to play there. Not that it’s ‘don’t play to the crowd’ but you’re here because you have a certain selection and taste. And I was like, yeah I should just keep drawing for the things I like listening to, because if you lose a bit of the floor, gradually you’ll get it back again."

B: Do you think you need to be stubborn as a DJ?

A: “It’s that age old thing: do you want to be a party DJ or do you want to be someone who carves something a bit new? But playing down there is so different to someone who’s employed in a bar to keep people drinking, you have carte blanche. So even if there’s only ten blokes down the front going ‘oi speed it up will ya, we want ‘dubstep!’ sod it, the boss has told me I can play what I want so I will. Take risks. Even Hatcha playing the Mystikz. I remember the first few times he did and I was confused and I stood still for a bit. I remember Youngsta playing breaky or early grime but then to hear this weird odd offkilter stuff... it was weird but then look at what it did. But you’ve got to be brave like that, definitely.”

B: So is this CD ‘about’ your sets at FWD>>?

A: “Yeah, pretty much. I guess being given the opportunity to go to other places shapes what you do and how you want to approach selecting tunes but FWD>> is the one for me so if something works there then that’s what I’m happy with, y’know?”



B: So tell me how things have evolved with Shackleton? You were first best known together with Skull Disco but now have both developed unique but different styles.

A: “Shackleton was never from a dance music background, whereas I was. I’ve been into it since I was a little kid. For Shackleton DJing was never part of it and he was always not every confident, and in terms of finding tunes and playing them to people that’s not something that was ever going to be a buzz for him. He is about making his own rhythms and trying them out. It’s a completely different way of looking at things. So it makes sense that we’ve drifted our own ways. But the stuff he’s doing with his live set is incredible, I’m so pleased to see him go from struggling to do things on turntables because that’s the way we’d seen it done – you go cut your tunes and you play them – but he’s just taken it on somewhere else completely. Every time I see him it’s mad, I see it taken on a step further, becoming just totally himself. Really incredible, y’know?”

B: While his music is quite technical to mix, you both share a love of bass and percussion: is there no way you could try to find room in your sets?

A: “I think for that reason I was always quite scared of playing Shack’s stuff, because of the percussive nature of it: if you’re not confident as a DJ it’s hard to pull that off. But I think we have got really different ways of looking at music and while we have a lot of shared tastes we have things we probably don’t understand about each other’s way of looking at things. And Shack is single minded like that, y’know? Which is brilliant because I think that comes through in his music. Whereas for me I’m not a creator in the same kind of way. I’m more the person who used to carry tapes and records around to people’s houses, being the one sat next to the stereo going ‘oi, check this out!’ That’s what I feel like I’m still doing now. So it’s kind of a different thing but nice we’re still in touch and the whole Skull Disco venture has got a long way to go in lots of weird different directions. It’s great to be involved.”

B: In many ways you’re central to the faction that has pioneered this dubstep/dubby techno axis. Tell me about the trip to Berlin...

A: “That was an amazing trip, in the early days of us getting any bookings anywhere. One of the things that Shack and I had bonded over, in terms of what we listened to, was all the Burial Mix stuff. So getting booked to play Berlin it was like, of course we’re going to go to Hardwax and Dubplates and Mastering, as places we’d heard about for so many years. I’d been a big fan of the whole Chain Reaction sound since working in a record shop in ‘97. So we went and cut some dubs at Dubplates and Mastering and met the people who run the shop and it’s just completely fascinating, as these are the dudes who were the first to set up a dance music shop in Germany. There’s a lineage there.”

A: “But it was funny because they don’t keep posters up outside the shop, in fact they’re quite militant about taking them down, but they left up this huge one that had a photo of Shackleton raving at Subloaded with his arms in the air and another weird one of me. I think it’s still there now. They love Shackleton, it was a real buzz. I got to meet all of them, they treated us like family. We didn’t realise they’d been such fans since the first one: you put the records out and you don’t think about where they’re getting to. But they’d been really interested, so to meet those people and know they were into our music is bonkers really.”

B: And then you took it a step further with the T++ connection...

A: “It was literally through that meeting and that I’d been chatting to one of them, Torsten, online before, to do with stocking our records, and I said to him oh can you get me the details of T++ and he said, ‘oh you do realise this is me?’ And it’s like oh, you were Resilent, Erosion and Various Artists and all these things that I absolutely used to love. It was wicked and mad to think that the music in England makes waves over there in the same way that it was making waves back then for us. They’re as obsessive and fascinated by the whole dubstep thing. He sent us music, we struck up a friendship and did a real nice job on the Shackleton remix. His remix of “Vansan” isn’t going to come out on Skull Disco so I’m definitely thinking about it for Applepips and there’s this really nice techno basically thing he sent us – most of the stuff he sends isn’t as he’s moved into this really strange breaky chopped up stuff – but there’s this one thing that is the straightest thing he’s done in a while and I absolutely love it. But it’s a case of the label being established before I approach too much. Once the new release is in the shops I’ll feel more confident but it’s definitely something I want to do.”

B: I like the idea of you taking Bristol dubstep and Berlin dubby techno and exploring the space between the two and finding something that’s neither.

A: “I love the shared area between them and I’ve decided that ‘Pips is going to explore any one of them. Hopefully people will know that it’s going to be just, good interesting music rather than one particular genre. Because you find that people are listening to all this other stuff even if they’re making techno, so let’s bring it all together.”

B: The mix nails the state of the dubby techno/dubstep sound really well. But I have two concerns with this interesting direction. One is that it will just become 140 bpm techno, with little elements left from the dubstep side of things, like an edge or bass or swing or odd rhythms. Also it's a fine line between having a little dubbed out breathing space and totally clean formless e-lead headspace, where you move from the London/Jamaican-influenced dub to empty anodyne techy headspace. The edge, the rudeness of the bass could get lost. Do you think either of these concerns are valid?

A: “Completely. For me, it’s about the swing. Now, you may say that some of the tunes on this mix are essentially halfstep, like ‘Harajuku’ or ‘Moog Dub’ , even ‘Circling’, but I fell anything I play with that kind of halfstep feel must always have a swing or funk to the rhythms around the main kick and snare…for example, ‘Lean Forward’ - one of my all time favourite tunes, regardless of genre’ -essentially has that halfstep kick and snare pattern but there is so much funk and swing going on around that in the percussion etc that you don’t even really notice…”

A: “I think there’s a lot of genre blurring going on, and like you say its sort of a danger that it will become 140 bpm techno, but the answer is exactly what you have said, it needs to retain some funk and swing. Having said that I try to just view great music as great music, and always have, so that I might play a tune by a ‘dubstep’ producer that sounds essentially like a ‘techno’ tune… in the end, if it moves you it moves you… also there is so much funk in say, the hi hats and rhythms of Derrick May, whilst some boring techno can be very straight and unfunky… there is always those that have the funk and those that don’t in any scene!”

B: How did you go about approaching the mix, in terms of how you wanted the direction of it to go?

A: “I wanted the mix to be a representation of what I play in the clubs, a mixture of unreleased exclusive dubplates and some big tunes that I helped to break, things like RSD’s pretty bright lights, Peverelist’s ‘Infinity is now’, and Martyn’s remix of Broken Hearts. I was amongst the first to play these tunes out, and wanted to give more exposure to tracks that I really think are phenomenal.”

A: “I like to build a set, not always start with bangers, I like to create an atmosphere, obviously it’s a bit of a cliché to start mellow and work upwards but I find it works for me, the harder tracks have much more impact if you have played some spacey-er, deeper, more ‘head’ music first. So this is what I tried to do with the mix, moving through spacious dubby tracks like ‘Gather’, ‘Circling’ and ‘Moog Dub’, then heading into reggae drops and 4x4 techy stuff with ‘Babylon’ ‘Bad Apple’ and ‘Percession.’”

B: The mix is hung on two real emotional peaks for me, sticking out almost like the pillars of a suspension bridge: early on with Pinch’s “Get Up” and later Martyn’s “Broken Hearts remix”. How did you go about ordering the tracks?

A: “I wanted to include get up as I personally love the song, and it is a SONG rather than a track and I think that’s very important for this scene, it’s the same with ‘Reminissin’ by Geiom… these are two tunes that always make me sing along and give me a shiver down the spine. The same with ‘Broken Hearts’, for me it’s a real emotional track so I wanted to give something like that towards the end of the mix to show that its not just all about taking it harder and more banging.”

Dubstep Allstars 6 mixed by Appleblim is out now

PS who knows the story of how Appleblim got his DJ name? My lips (sic) are sealed. Hehehe…

Rude Kid

Rude Kid

As part of this month's Pitchfork column, I interviewed hype new grime producer Rude Kid. Here's the full transcript.

Blackdown: How long have you been producing?

Rude Kid: “I’ve been producing for four years, two years properly. Mostly grime – I can do anything – but right now I’m doing grime.”

B: Where are you based?

RK: “East London, Ilford, Redbridge side.”

B: In grime, most people seem to want to be an MC. Why did you choose to be a producer?

RK: “I always liked making beats. I always wanted to let out what I was thinking at that time on a beat. If I was angry, I would make a dark beat, feeling happy a happy beat. Y’know? Them ones there. Obviously I used to spit, to MC but now I’m onto the producing, fully.”

B: You’ve worked with a lot of east MCs, but are you part of any one crew?

RK: “I’m in Alien Music. That’s like my team, MCs, DJs, producers – basically all my guys. Marger, Death Star, Danny D, Kwam, Champman, Nut Case, Rico ... and there’s more. We’re on grime mostly.”

B: So tell me about some of your recent beats, they’ve been getting a lot of attention...

RK: ““UFO Mode” is going to be on my 12” EP release on No Hats No Hoods in June, with “The Best (instrumental),” “Bandannas On” and “Alien Skank.””

B: You’ve got this alien theme going on, what’s that about?

RK: “That’s just my beats, my style: alien music. If you listen to my beats they have a little thing to them: they’re different to others. So that’s why it’s called that. I’m not obsessed with aliens or nothing. It’s not dat. It’s more about being different from others, being alienated, that’s more of the meaning.”

B: That’s cool because as a producer it’s essential you sound original...

RK: “... yeah that’s how you get more noticed, so it helped me a lot.”

B: Do you use samples from films?

RK: “Yeah, like on “UFO Mode” and I’ve got a next tune that Maximum’s playing recently called “Exist.” I just go on YouTube and type “aliens” and if I hear something I like I get someone to rip it for me. That’s it bwoy.”

B: So how did the tune “Sing For Me ft Ghetto” come about?

RK: “Basically that tune was getting a reception and then Wiley wanted it and Ghetto wanted it. So them two had a little thing over it but obviously Ghetto wanted it a lot so he done his thing on it. So that’s it. Obviously I didn’t mind who vocalled it, Wiley or Ghetto, because they’re both big. But Ghetto had an idea for it, so Wiley let him have it and I made Wiley another one with similar sounds. Ghetto’s doing a video for it as well. It’s in progress.”

B: How did the vocal sample in “Sing For Me” come about?

RK: “It’s not a sample, it’s a singer. When I was doing the beat I wanted a girl to just do me a jingle at the beginning. But randomly she did the singing in there too. It sounded good so I kept it in there. From there, I gave it out to a few DJs and that was it.”

B: Obviously grime these days is all about mixtape CD, what does it mean to you to get a vinyl release?

RK: “As a producer, that’s the only thing I can release properly. If I didn’t release it through vinyl it would get leaked, eventually. Me releasing a vinyl I will be making a bit of money from it and obviously people will think “yeah, he’s released something” so yeah I did want to release something and No Hats No Hoods, they’re good at releasing, distributing and promoting things.”

B: There aren’t that many people putting out grime 12”s now are there?

RK: “Them and Logan’s Ademantium music. I could put it on a CD but someone would just rip it and send it to everyone, so it would get leaked. But ripping from vinyl, you can tell so if DJs play that then... they’re not proper DJs are they?”

B: You seem to be getting a lot of support from Maximum as well as Logan, is that right?

RK: “Yeah Maximum and Logan, they’re the two people who’re playing me the most. And Scratcher DVA. But Maximum and Logan are like the two biggest DJs in the scene! So really that’s helped me a lot. So them banging out my tunes has helped.”

B: So your MySpace has an ad for studio time, do you work as an engineer there?

RK: Nah that’s just my cousins’ studio, I’m helping him out. I’m still studying. I’m at uni now, doing a music degree. I’m gonna do music, get a degree in that and have something to fall back on. You need a backup.”

B: Yeah, especially since it’s really hard to sell music these days...

RK: “...yeah it is, grime anyway. It is hard to sell grime. “

B: So when did Logan and Maximum start playing your stuff?

RK: “Last year, but it wasn’t a lot. Tunes like “Alien Skank” were getting played but not a lot. I think Logan played a vocal of “Bandannas On” by Griminal. Then a lot of people were asking for tunes.”

B: So who have you worked with, vocal wise?

RK: “I’ve worked with the whole scene: Ghetto, Lil Nars, Griminal, Black the Ripper, P Money, Little Dee, Badnesss, Jendor, Fudaguy, Dot Rotten, Brutal, Lauren Mason... there’s more people but I’ve fully forgot. And I’m going to make a few tunes for Skepta’s album. I’ve sent tunes to Ny.”

B: So how does it work once you’ve written the beat?

RK: “If I think a beat will suit Ghetto then I will ring him, tell him about it then email it to him. Then if he likes it, I’ll go studio with him. The MCs use proper studios, they don’t have their own. The MCs book the time – I go there and give them my input.”

B: What do you think of the grime scene right now?

RK: “It’s good. The only thing is there’s talent out there but they’re not getting brought in. The same people are getting played over and over again. But there’s so much talent out there... obviously because I was one of them, not getting recognised.”

B: But you’ve done it...

RK: “Obviously but that was due to hard work. So obviously them people need to do that too and they’ll succeed. Though obviously some people get lucky and make food.”

B: What other producers to you rate?

RK: “Manic is good. Dot Rotten. Scratcher DVA, Terror Danjah, DOK: they’re big. Wiley, Rapid, Skepta and more.”

B: Is it me or are the number of producers in grime getting smaller?

RK: “They’re not getting smaller it’s just that people have their own time. You can say [a certain producer] had his time – he’s still doing his thing but there was a time when it was all about him. He had hype round his name. Now, I’d say – well bwoy – it’s me I reckon.”

Read a full article on Rude Kid, alongside The Bug and 2562 in this month’s Pitchfork column.

Monday, June 02, 2008

South meets Nagano



Me n Dusk are reaching George Infinite's rave this week. Should be big. We might have to play "The Drumz of Nagano" just so we can say we dropped it at Drumz of the South. It's the drum thing, you know (sorry!).

Tuesday, May 20, 2008

I had a dream



Dublime @ Fabric Sunday 25th May featuring Lee Perry Soundsystem, Congo Natty aka Rebel MC, Dillinja, Loefah, Don Letts, Souljazz Soundsystem, MCs Pokes, Warrior Queen and Rod Azlan. Pole, Sleeparchive, Kode 9, Scuba, Pinch, Appleblim vs Peverlist, Downshifter with MCs Flow Dan and Rogue Star. Iration Steppaz, Moody Boyz, Anti Social, Dusk & Blackdown, Earl Gateshead and Jonny Trunk.

It was around the end of 2001 that I decided I wanted to learn to produce. The early Forward>> parties at Velvet Rooms had got me hooked and so I set myself some goals.

One of them was that I dreamt of playing Fabric. It seemed laughable at the time, in fact my friend, who I expressed this goal to (hey James!) definitely had a good laugh. Getting to a stage where I’d play the club seemed so impossibly far away that I couldn’t even see the steps required to get there. In fact they remained distant as close as this Christmas, over seven years later.

But I’m playing Fabric this Sunday. I blame the dream.

In general, I’m not overly mad about dreaming. The term seems synonymous with people of no action or direction. It conjures up suggestions of naivety, which won’t get you very far.

But there’s another kind of dreaming.

I guess I tend to focus on what’s possible, what’s real or what’s around me. Electronica’s headspace irritates me because it’s all plastic utopias, whereas dubstep’s bass is grounded in reality. But the key part of getting to where I’ve wanted to be has been allowing myself to not just accept what’s around me but to dare to imagine what could be.

The first time I mentioned the words “Dusk + Blackdown album” it was summer 2006 and I’d been on the phone to our (very understanding) distribution company. Just me saying the words out loud had left me shocked. I came away from the phone and thought “damn, I’ve said it out loud now, I better go work out how to do it.” I’d dared to dream.

So there we are: Dusk and I are playing Fabric on Sunday. Seems insane but it’s true. I for one won’t be taking it for granted.

Friday, May 16, 2008

"I'm not saying I'm big/but my face is in the Guardian..."

Isle of Dogs

Mr Stelfox comes correct with a piece in today's Guardian about grime mixtapes. Thanks to Dave not just for the kind words about "The Bits" but for getting a massive shot of Trimbale into the paper, where he rightly belongs. "...Nan, thanks for the cardigan."

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Rinse May this Thurs

Rinse FM

RINSE

We were back on Rinse this week, Thurs 8th 11pm-1am rolling the grimey, wonkey and skippy. The lights blew out half way through, which actually added to the vibe.

Here's the offical download link.

Dusk + Blackdown Rinse May '08 show

United Grooves Collective ft Gods Gift "Mic Tribute" (Jameson remix) (United Grooves)
Craig David "Fill Me In (Sunship dub)" (Atlantic)
Darqwan "3 Note Blue" (Hospital)
Zoom & DBX "Coming Again (Tubby remix)" (white)
Sound of the Future "Sound of the Future" (SOTF)

Skream "Angry World" (unreleased)
Sully "Duke St Dub" (unreleased)
Shup Up and Dance "Epileptic (Martyn remix) (unreleased)
TRG "Sputnik" (unreleased)

Gemmy "BK To Tha Future" (unreleased)
Zombie "Revolution" (unreleased)
Joker "Snake Eater" (unreleased)
Doctor and Ny "Street Soldier" (unreleased)
Skream "Smokers" (unreleased)
Forsaken "Fighting Spirit" (Immerse)
Al-Haca "Kryptonite (TRG remix)" (unreleased)

LD and Cluekid "Not Gonna Cry" (unreleased)
Starkey "Gutter Music" (unreleased)
Doctor and Cotti "Temperature" (unreleased)
Martyn "Vancouver" (unreleased 3024)
Kosheen "Guilty (Plastician remix)" (unreleased)

Sully "Sleezy" (unrealeased)
Grievous Angel "My Dub" (unreleased)
shonky "Eternal" (unreleased)
Mavado "Dying (Blackdown refix)" (dubplate)
Dusk + Blackdown "Akkaboo" (Keysound Recordings dubplate)

Out to David M for saving our audio bacon with the recording of this one.

In the meantime, you can still download the last show from the Rinse podcast (via iTunes) or from the Rinse blog here. You can still download the February show here.

Sonar


Photo by infinite
I'm going to reach Sonar for the first time this year. Mary Anne, Mala, Shackleton, Flylo, Diplo and some sun, sea and pedalo seemed too much to resist.

Now, I could just as easily pack a few dubs with me. You know from our Rinse show we've got a few.

So if you're in Barcelona and looking for some bass pressure around the festival, give me a shout.