Friday, September 09, 2011

Rinse: Roots of Sully & 100% Unreleased Keysound set



Dusk and I couldn't make our August Rinse FM show but to make up for it, Rinse kindly offered us the chance to do our first ever 9-11pm show since we joined in January 2008, last Monday (12th September).

To say thanks we put together something a little different...

DOWNLOAD the audio here.


1st hour Sully showcase:

Roots of Sully section

KMA “Cape Fear” [Urban Beat]
Burial “South London Boroughs” [Hyperdub]
Musical Mob “Pulse X” [DDJs]
Distance “Empire” [Hotflush]
Mala “Lean Forward” [DMZ]
Toasty “Knowledge” [Hotflush]

Sully production retrospective

Sully “Duke St Dub” [Mata-Syn]
Sully “Reminder” [Frijsfo Beats]
J-Treole “The Loot (Sully remix)” [Keysound Recordings]
Sully “Saviour” [Frijsfo Beats]
Sully “Jackmans Rec” [Mata-Syn]
Sully  Phonebox [Frijsfo Beats]

Sully “Carrier” LP showcase

Sully “2Hearts” [Keysound]
Sully “In Some Pattern” [Keysound]
Sully “Let You” [Keysound]
Sully “Encona” [Keysound]
Sully “I Know” [Keysound]
Sully “Scram” [Keysound]

2nd hour 99% Unreleased Keysound mix by Dusk & Blackdown

Logos “Kowloon” [unreleased Keysound]
Dusk & Blackdown ft Farrah “Lonely Moon (Android Heartbreak) [demo version] [unreleased Keysound]
Logos “King Mob VIP” [unreleased Keysound]
Dusk & Blackdown “We Ain’t Beggin’” [unreleased Keysound]
LV & Joshua Idehen “Primary Colours (extended mix)” [Keysound 22N]
Kowton “Looking at You” [unreleased Keysound 25]
Blackdown “Apoptosis” [unreleased Keysound]
Damu “Maths is Fine for Sum” [unreleased Keysound 27]

Visionist “Come In” [unreleased Keysound]
Dusk & Blackdown “untitled” [unreleased Keysound]
Vibezin “A Little Higher” [unreleased Keysound]
Logos “Error 808” [unreleased Keysound]
Damu ft Trim “Ridin the Hype” [unreleased Keysound 27]
Amen Ra “Low Maintenance” [unreleased Keysound]
Double Helix “Rush” [unreleased Keysound]
Dusk “Fraction” [unreleased Keysound 25]
Amen Ra “Akashic Visions” [unreleased Keysound]






PS You can still get our Rinse show from July HERE.

Sunday, August 21, 2011

Damu Unity



Damu
"Unity"
Keysound Recordings


Breathless by Damu

Saturday, August 13, 2011

LV and Joshua Idehen "Northern Line"



LV and Joshua Idehen "Northern Line"

- "Northern Line (radio edit)"
- "Primary Colours (Extended remix)"

Keysound Recordings LDN022N

Out digitally September 5th

Locked on?



"I think London pirate radio is generally pretty boring now, tbh. there's still some great DJs and MCs, of course, but bland house and minimal has really taken over, with DJs seeming to see it all as a stepping stone to Pacha or wherever.

There's a lack of energy to most pirate shows now. It's nothing compared to the vibe of 5 or 10 years ago. you now have to be quite careful to pick out a few shows to get anything worth listening to - you used to be able to just switch on the radio at random."


-- Simon Silver Dollar Circle

In a short Dissensus discussion of the role of London’s pirate radio stations during the London riots, this quote from early grime blogger Simon made me think about pirate radio.

The question “is London pirate radio less healthy now than it was 5 years ago?” breaks into two components. Firstly you have to factor in your subjective judgment on how you feel about house. Not UK funky but the kind of international trad house that currently dominates a lot of the pirate shows. Because if you’re not into its sophistication and/or - depending on your viewpoint - blandness, it would stand to reason that you were happier in ’05 when grime was more dominant.

But the other component is the real question here: is the medium – not just the type of music it’s carrying – more or less healthy?

Now I should flag here that obviously I’m a massive pirate radio fan, playing Rinse is the highlight of my month and I’ve been tuning in to Rinse and stations like it (Deja, Raw Mission, Kool, Heat...) for over a decade. But like other medium’s I love, vinyl for example, I know its reach and role is not fixed over time.

I spend quite a lot of time thinking about technology, probably a lot more than this blog lets on, and my base position it is fairly simple: great technology should do a job best. Some people are so into tech and online that they believe in technology for its own sake - but I don’t buy it. If an online version of something works better than a physical version, then I’m in. If it doesn’t, count me out.

So what “job” does pirate radio “do best?” Well, in the last 30 or 40 years, what it’s done is empowered people to get heard who couldn’t get the chance to broadcast via traditional media companies. Mainstream UK broadcasting calls itself “broadcasting” but outside of the BBC, in the music sphere it mostly narrowcasts, using the old model of building a large audience [for advertisers] using the mediocre middle ground. Pirate radio is far more long tail, with large numbers of pirates broadcasting to (in relative terms) a smaller, though not insignificant audience. It was User Generated Content (UGC) broadcasting, long before the term “UGC” was invented. So to answer the question what “job” does pirate radio “do best?,” it gives or indeed gave people a voice when they had few other alternatives.

The thing is, in 2011 people have never had more ways to express themselves, especially musically. Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Google+, blogs, Sound Cloud, iPhone apps, BB Messenger, file sharing, podcasting, self digital music distribution (Tunecore etc), software for music production – there’s so many this list is incomplete.

I think a good example of this is road rap, south London's variant of hip hop that is like a cousin of grime and has emerged since social media became ubiquitous. Demographically it's exactly like grime and other hardcore continuum variants, except as far as I can see it has no significant club infrastructure nor pirate radio backing.

People take the path of least resistance, especially when it comes to getting heard, so for road rap that's YouTube hood videos or mixtape free downloads on www.ukrapmusic.com. In 2005 the path of least resistance for many people that probably was still pirate radio when it comes to music. But buying and sticking up a transmitter is expensive, hard work, not to mention illegal, and so in 2011 I don’t think pirate radio has a monopoly on self expression with those excluded from mainstream broadcasting anymore. And that’s cool - most medium’s have had their monopolies broken by the internet: ask TV stations, newspapers or book publishers – that’s just how things are in 2011.

Despite all the choices, I still listen to more Rinse podcasts as hours per month of music than anything else. It’s that pirate mentality but broadcast in a 2011 way.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

London riots 2011







-- Photos of the Totenham Riots by Nico Hogg, full set of shots here.


Nico on taking these shots...

"Most of these were taken up the front, in the no mans land between the mass and the police line protecting Tottenham Police Station, bottles and missiles going everywhere.

It was a very tense environment, a lot of hostility was expressed to people with cameras. Got tangled in a trample of men lashing out against a professional photographer - 15 or so plus some bystanders jeering them on, but others trying to calm it. I had mine snatched from round my neck but managed to get it back... had friends there, don't think a non-local would have been so lucky. to be honest that put me off for a while.

It's pretty difficult to convey exactly how it feels to watch the place you grew up in getting trashed and torced. Still can't really believe it, every time the reality of it sets in another bit of news comes up - those Croydon aerial shots in the news earlier made my jaw fall to the floor. So much tinder in London at the moment."

-- Read more about Nico Hogg's photo's here, here, here and most recently here.


So what do I think about the riots? I can't condone the actions and don't think much positive of it will come about for the communities involved. I feel for the home and shop owners having their posessions randomly destroyed. What did they do to deserve it?

But as for the underlying causes of the anger and tensions, I honestly have thought to myself it's unsurprising it's not happened more often. From my vantage point these riots seem to be about a blend of opportunism and inequality. The former you can never mitigate but I still can't accept why some parts of London have ever been allowed to fall so far. And when people hit rock bottom, there's a bang.

10 years FWD



Zinc 2001
Oris Jay 2002
Hatcha 2003
Slimzee 2004
Youngsta 2005
Skream 2006
Kode 9 2007
N-Type 2008
Marcus Nasty 2009
Oneman 2010
Ben UFO 2011

On the 20th of August at a secret east London location, Rinse FM will be commemorating FWD>>’s tenth birthday. To celebrate, they’re telling the story of the music they have championed through the DJs who have made entire years their own. Eleven influential Rinse DJs will play a selection that takes the assembled headz back in time.

Every DJ on the line up, in one form or another, owes a debt not just to the UK garage scene but to its demise and subsequent fragmentation. And no track had more of a catalytic effect on garage than DJ Zinc’s breakbeat anthem “138 Trek.” It’s tearing breaks upped the ante and energy levels from the warm swing of UKG, opening the floodgates for a torrent of new mutations.

Another pioneer to ride the wave from UKG’s flex to breakbeat garage’s power moves was original FWD>> resident Oris Jay aka producer Darqwan. As the darker side of garage began to develop momentum and a sense of identity at the Velvet Rooms, his anthems like “Confused” and “Said the Spider” upped the levels.

By 2003 dubstep, as it was soon to be named, was adrift from the UKG mothership, its own, distinct entity, an no other DJ in any other year can claim more influence or credit on dubstep than Hatcha in ’03. With an unrepeatable exclusive ownership of dubstep’s A-list producers (Artwork, Skream, Benga, Loefah, Mala and Coki), his dubplate-driven sets at FWD>> are the foundation the entire genre is built upon.

The way original dubsteppers pay the utmost respect for Hatcha, so grime – another dark garage fragment – looks to Slimzee, the grime dubplate don. At raves like Sidewinder or as part of the foundational Pay As U Go Kartel or his SuperSunday sets on Rinse, he’d unleash exclusive 8bar dubs and in part by association, break the freshest MC talent. Ask Dizzee.

If Hatcha laid the foundations for dubstep, by 2005 Youngsta began reengineering its DNA, cutting out unwanted base pairs until it was left raw and skeletal. Through his sets, full of Loefah, Skream and D1 dubs, came the dark halfstep backbone that would become the scene’s default rhythmic template.

From the darkness comes light and 2006 was the year the colour came flooding back into dubstep and with it for the first time large audiences. And no other dubstep track had ever touched so many people nor made so many new fans as Skream’s Youngsta-broken anthem “Midnight Request Line.”

As dubstep began to gain popularity so it’s diversity began to narrow. Long since determined to swim against the tide, FWD’s warm-up-DJ-turned-sonic-and-A&R-visionary, Kode9, would begin to plot a new course. Many would later come to know him as he who found Burial, but his journey was long since underway.

2008 N-Type sets are in many ways the culmination of dubstep’s transformative process that began with Hatcha’s flailing bongos in ’03, Youngsta’s dread halfstep in ’04 and went to new energy extremes with N-Type’s jump up b-lines. The stage was set for the scene’s global domination.

As grime shifted from bubbling MC-hosted dark garage raves to a sonically shocking, artist-dominated performances, the aggression and lyrical assault proved a bridge too far for some, who turned to revival UKG and US house for a sense of groove. From that sprung UK funky and its leading proponent, Marcus NASTY.

Dubstep coalescing around wobbly jump-up basslines had a divisive effect on the scene and soon a part of its fanbase had its head turned by UK funky. A new hybrid began to emerge and with that, a new pioneer. Oneman may have made his name with breathtaking blends of UK garage and ’06 dubstep classics but by 2010 he was looking forwards not backwards.

Taking a parallel path, Ben UFO was also inspired by mid era dubstep, coming to prominence via the Hessle Audio label. But this year his sets have shown the influence that has dominated so much of the current creative thinking: house and its newest variants. Blending new and old vinyl, Ben UFO makes it unclear what decade we’re in. Ultimately past becomes future, the end the beginning in this London musical continuum.

Tuesday, August 02, 2011

Friday, July 22, 2011

Rinse July



Me, Dusk were on Rinse thurs 28th July. AUDIO HERE.

Damu "Unity" [unreleased]
Breton "RDI Girl unit remix" [Hemlock]
General Levy "Heat (Xxxy vs Swing ting refix)" [free download]
J Beatz "Subwoofer" [unreleased]
Walton "Untitled#2" [unreleased]
JTRP "Hypnotise" [unreleased]
LV ft Joshua Idehen "Primary Colours (extended remix)" [forthcoming Keysound]
Pacheko "Waiting For You (Nehuen remix)" [forthcoming]
Eastwood "Oh Yeah" [unreleased]
Presk "Love Again" [forthcoming Ramp]
Eastwood "I Wanna Funk U" [unreleased]
Double Helix "London v Helsinki" [unreleased]
Monique Lewis "Cassanova (Fuzzy Logic remix)" [forthcoming]
Blackwax "Surface" [unreleased]
Visionist "WMID" [unreleased]
Matt IQ "Brick Lane" [unreleased]
Presk "Slick Rick" [forthcoming Ramp]
Geiom feat Terrible Shock "Two Four Six" [unreleased]
Shortstuff "I Am" [forthcoming]
Eastwood "Hard touch" [unreleased]
Zed Bias "Fairplay feat. Jenna G (Zed Bias Old Skool Remix)" [Forthcoming Tru Thoughts]
Woz "Loose" [Black Butter]

Darq E Freaker "Afghan Cherryade" [unreleased]
Faze Miyake "Jump" [forthcoming]
Trim & DOK "Notice Now" [Butterz]
Filthy Beatz "Throw Em Up!! [forthcoming]
Melé "Lego" [unreleased]
Faze Miyake "Blackberry" [forthcoming]
Addison Groove "Bad Things" [unreleased]
S-X "Bricks" [free download]
S-X "Expensive Talk" [free download]
Blackwax "Offkey" [unreleased]
Visionist "Still Awake"[unreleased]
Sepalcure "Love Pressure (XI Remix)" [forthcoming]
Trim "Notice Now (Kid Smpl Remix)" [unreleased]
Ifan Dafydd "No Good" [unreleased]

The full archive is here.

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Monday, July 18, 2011

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

They call him Roska


In late May I spoke to Roska in order to put together the sleeve notes for his Rinse mix CD. This is the transcript. Unlike other DJs I've dealt with, Roska is unfazed by speaking frankly. The result is an insight into the workings of the UK funky scene from one of its most successful artists.

Blackdown: Hey Roska, so where are you?

Roska: Hotel business mate, in Switzerland. DJing in about three hours time. I’m in Bern, that’s the city, literally just round the corner, a basement sort of thing, 400 people. But i don’t remember the name of the club, I’m shit at these things.

B: Too many clubs, too many cities!

R: Pretty much, yeah man.

B: So let’s start with the Rinse CD. How did you approach it?

R: I got asked the end of last year, and I was just working out the tracklist from then. I submitted the tracklist and sourced all the tracks about two months ago. From there on I was working out what I wanted to do. The same way I approached my Essential Mix it was like just getting the tracks that I play out and that I enjoy and that people have heard me play out. It’s not for the “headz that know,” its for the headz that may have heard of me, the headz have heard me out once and here’s a recap.

B: Yeah it’s a tricky one, Jackmaster was talking about it around his Fabric CD, saying how hard it was to play “upfront” when it’s going to take months for it to come out.

R: That’s what I didn’t want to do. I do like exclusivity but in this day and age everything moves so quickly it’s like, what’s the point? You might as well just do things that are current for the time.

B: And maybe then you play the tracks you feel most strongly about, regardless of when they were made or released.

R: I was looking to see if I could take it exclusive and if I did, all that’s going to happen is it’s going to be a shopping cart for the DJ who doesn’t have those tunes. Because that’s how it works: every mix CD thats up on the ‘net, the majority of time people in the scene don’t even listen to it, they just flick through, find the tunes that are good, get the track name and then go out and source it.

I didn’t want that to be the case for my mix CD. It would just be another mix CD, I could just do that and upload it to XLR8R tomorrow. I just wanted to take it and give it that crossover feel. It’s the commercial stuff on there like Katy B and “I Need Air.” So it’s a little bit in between, rather than just being an underground CD.

B: And how did you structure the mix, the arrangement, the flow of it?

R: I sat down and looked at what tracks fit what, in my usual DJ sets I always have DJ tools, vocals and bangers. So I worked around what was a DJ tool and what was not and see where it could fit in the actual mix. So I set it, did a few test runs at home then brought it to the studio and done it. Funnily enough I recorded it once, that was it and I was quite happy with that. And me, I’m not the tightest of mixers and I thought I would have to do it quite a few times but I done it once and I was happy with everything.

B: I suppose if it’s tracks you knew well...

R: ... exactly, exactly that.

B: So talk me through the producers on there, the ones who have been a big part of your set in the last few months.

B: It is my favourite producers on there: from Zinc, Redlight, one off DVA’s label, Shy One. Yeah, it’s my favourite tunes. Most of the tunes there have been part of my set for four to five months and I’ve solidly played them. And I’ve included my own tracks in there and they’re my favourite ones by me, there’s one from 2008 “They Call Me Roska” it’s called, it’s a dubplate but it’s actually Feline VIP. And then obviously “Wot U Talking About remix” right at the end, that’s sorta one of my best remixes that I’ve done to date, and it worked really well.

And the only exclusive I put on there is actually out now, “Citrus (Don’t Get Lemon)” – Mr Tickle. But I’ve had that for over six months. “In the Deep” by T Williams, that’s probably the darkest I went on the whole CD. “The Only Way Is Down”, Marco Del Horno, that’s probably one of my favourite Marco Del Horno tunes. “I Need Love” done well on the urban, Yellow style events.

B: So what does it mean to you to play on Rinse and be part of the Rinse family?

R: It’s weird, it’s like... I’ve been listening to Rinse since it emerged from being a drum & bass station 98.1. And I listened through 100.3, 100.4 to now. It’s like I’ve always been part of Rinse from always being a follower, then to being on the station and representing. To when I used to speak to Geeneus on MSN, then being on the station and doing four shows a week just to be involved.

There’s just a love for the music and you can tell the way that Rinse genuinely love the music, the back office team just want to make good music and they want to represent good music. And I feel like, what ever I do alongside Rinse, my music will always be undiluted. And it’s going to be what I want out of it, but I’ll get the best out of it because I’m part of Rinse. That’s what I feel when I’m around Rinse. I know I’ll be represented properly and I wont have to do something I don’t wanna do in order to be part of that team.

B: It seems to have had a massive effect on your profile, being part of Rinse. It’s really got you out there, and they’ve done that with Katy B but it’s a much harder challenge with a DJ/Producer.

R: With me, I’m always willing to learn something new and so if you check my first productions and then listen to “Sqwalk” or my album, if you listen to the production level you can tell the difference. So just by listening to what Geeneus says or taking little bits of advice, and actually taking it on, that’s what changed me. What I think Rinse like about me is I don’t rely on Rinse, I’m proactive as well. I’m not going to sit there and wait for Rinse to do something for me I’m going to go out there and do it for myself. And then Rinse will help me along the way somehow. Cos anyone can sit there and be a label slave and sit there and expect people to just do things for them but you can get up off your arse and do it for yourself. It just helps you get that much further.

Even the stuff I did last year, Rinse were a big part of it as they put my album out but off the back of that I pushed myself, I made sure my DJ sets were the best I can make them, which enables me to get another booking on top of that. Just being professional as well, it’s all helped.

B: So you’ve written an album, mixed a CD and run a label but the one thing I’ve not seen you do is tackle a grass roots London club night. Have you ever thought about being a promoter?

R: You know what, I done one night alongside Robin from Dirty Canvas and it went really shit and it kinda put me off because he was really half hearted. But I have considered doing it, and once my label’s profile is raised a bit more, I’m gonna get it on board and I’ll be bringing through the people on my label, rather than it being just a Roska night. Since my album to now, the following and levels have definitely risen. I’ve put out two release with one in June and from those I’ve noticed that people are watching the label and watching me, and it easier.

It’s like knowing someone who’s already in there and them bringing you through, so at the moment I feel like I’m that person who’s bringing people through. I just want to bring out good music, I’ve just got the same values as Rinse. And obviously from good music comes good talent. Just bringing talent through that represent the same values that I have.

B: So what do you make of the state of the general house & funky music at the moment? I’d say just ‘uk funky’ but there’s stuff around this tempo like the stuff Circle played or you’d hear at Yellow that doesn’t call itself UK funky...

R: It’s good you know but there’s no general market for it, if you’re a newcomer. House is so big and the umbrella is so massive that it’s like, if you’re coming in to do deep house now, it’s not going to happen because there’s so much people doing it at the moment, you’ll be one of many. So it’s good to listen to and the urban market is representing it but it’s like they’re just fans of the music who make it. But when funky came through and was doing it, that was our own branch our own take on house. For anyone to come through, it was so easy. When I came through I was doing my 9-5, but I was doing it because I wanted to make and release music. It was so easy: I did three releases and everybody knew who I was in that scene. Looking at house now and people that do deep house now and moved from funky, you’re just wasting your time because you’ve gone from being at the front of the queue to being at the back, because no one is going to notice you unless you make some groundbreaking tune that just hits every market in house and everybody looks at you, it’s not going to happen.

B: It’s funny because I remember interviewing Supa D and Geeneus about four years ago and they were saying the same thing. Ie if you compete as house you’ll never establish your own space. But in UK funky you’ve got your own rules and space to work in.

R: Yep, that’s what funky had and funky had it so much that because there were no rules in funky, shit tunes came through, unmastered, so poor in quality they weren’t even mixdown worthy. That’s what happened and if you look at funky now it’s pretty much non existent, because no one wants to call themselves funky and all the DJs that are playing funky that don’t make music, the tunes are a myth because all the fans of the music can’t even by it. All of the labels kinda just fucked off, after 2009 after the skank tunes were all sold out.

B: I think some of the funky guys have been a bit better recently at getting their tunes out to sell. What do you make of people like Ill Blu? Do you think that style of percussive stuff could be bigger?

R: Yeah definitely, everywhere I go in Europe, people talk about Ill Blu. And they talk about Funkystepz and who else? Champion. There’s a little niche market there, they’ve got something going but there’s not enough of it, and there’s not enough coming through, but they can work it.

B: It’s strange, a lot of people want funky to succeed but a lot of things don’t seem right. There’s so little club infrastructure, outside of If bar...

R: You know what it is? Everybody wants to be a leader but no one wants to work together. I’ve been there before: you can ask a load of funky producers that went. When funky was popping in 2009 I done two meetings. I tried to get everybody on board, I had everybody there who was involved with funky, first when it was really small. And then after that it started getting really silly.

Then I done the second meeting and people were complaining about MCs and stuff. It just fell apart. Everybody was saying “yeah lets push more releases out, do this do that” and throwing all ideas out but after that you just kinda realise that it weren’t going to happen. People started complaining “why wasn’t I invited” and shit, and it just got out of hand.

It worked out like people thought I was blocking them out of the scene and stuff and then I thought fuck it and after that, if that’s the case, I’ll just do what I do. That’s why I’m just doing my stuff and not worrying about a scene.

B: Where did you do the meetings?

R: I did one at a bar in Waterloo. Me, Geeneus, Crazy Cousins, Invasion Records, Hard House Banton, Fuzzy Logic... quite a few of us there. This was late 2008, early 2009. And there was another one middle of 2009 and that was when the MCs started jumping on. The other meeting, Sami Sanchez, his dad owned a hotel and he had a conference room, so we just borrowed that. He said we could have it for free.

B: Did the MCs come along and express their point of view?

R: Nah, it was meant to be a producer thing, that’s what it was, what it turned out to be. And the funny thing was it wasn’t even my idea to do the meeting, it just ended up me organising it. And then I took all the flack for it after and took loads of shit for it. Obviously I learnt a big lesson there, not bothering with that. Everybody wanted to be the leader no one wanted to push the scene.

You’ve got things like the Sound of UK Funky three disc compilation, if you listen to those three CDs it doesn’t tell you nothing about funky. It doesn’t tell you where funky started and it doesn’t tell you where funky is going. It’s just a load of tunes. If you listen to the one Rinse brought out you can understand where funky was and where funky is at the moment, because its got a wide range of tunes. And the three DJs that mixed that Ministry of Sound CD, they were the pioneers of the scene. So it shows you how much they knew about the scene.

B: It’s funny, because there’s been a history of these kind of behind closed doors “scene council” meetings over the years, from jungle, garage, grime and now you say UK funky and they seem like they’re super important but I’m not sure I’ve ever seen anyone change anything through them.

R: Nothing changes because what you see in that room is loads of people who just want to control a scene and not really push it forward as a unit. And that’s how it always breaks down. Grime’s at that stage where everybody just wants to be an artist and the actual roots of grime, where it’s at in the underground, there’s not really much there. There’s only really a handful of DJs who are getting the tunes, it’s crazy man. It’s sad as well because I followed grime, I followed dubstep and I followed most genres and you look at them and the only one that seems to have succeeded and is doing well, is dubstep. Drum & bass is always going to be there. That’s why dubstep deserves the commercial success that it’s getting, regardless if people hate it, they’ve got every single aspect of dubstep on lock and it works and it’s a balance.

B: The weird thing is though, you’re an interesting exception because the one thing that dubstep has done is tapped into that global club network, through booking agents etc. A lot of funky DJs haven’t, but you have. People know who you are and you’re in Switzerland as we speak. So it shows it is possible.

R: It is possible but it feels so weird because I feel like I’m the only one doing it. But, I don’t know what I’ve done differently... it’s weird, and I still don’t understand it myself. I still feel shocked when I go out somewhere. I’ve played in front of 20,000 people, do you know what I mean? I still feel like, how did this happen? All I’ve done is made a few tunes out of my own enjoyment, in my own spare time after work and I’m here.

B: Tell me about the way you make tunes because, there’s a sparseness to your tunes that’s different from other funky. We talked about Ill Blu and Funkystepz for example and the thing that unites them for me is really dense layers of drums. But your sound it different to that. How did you get to your sound?

R: I don’t know, it’s weird... like, some people say it’s an unfinished track, but some people won’t. I don’t know. I just sit there and over the last two, three years I’ve started my tracks with a drum pattern. But now I’ve switched it over and I start with a melody. But when I was doing them then I just wanted to do a skippy drum pattern. Anything that was skippy. I’ve spent my years listening to garage and broken beat, listening to house and grime, hip hop. Just listening to those genres of music and making my own thing from everything. That’s all it is really, but simple. I’ve always gone with: keep it simple. If you keep it simple, people understand it more.

B: For me, it sounds like you use a lot of compression or limiting so it means the sounds you do use in your tracks, sound not loud but really confident. So you don’t need more elements over the top.

R: Sometimes I use compression, on the drums. I might use it on the snare. I’ve raised the gain on the bongos and congas, whereas some people would use it just as a bed. I listen to a lot of tribal stuff and keep it as a roller. So I use compression on the snare but not so much on the kick but also try and keep it as raw as possible.

-- Rinse: 15 mixed by Roska is out very soon.

Sunday, July 10, 2011

LDN024 Damu "Ridin" EP



In the primordial soup that is the space often referred to as “130bpm,” there lies a lot of dull debris and dirty detritus. But amidst the scattered grey asteroids lies a small but glittering phuture-star, Damu, the newest signing to bass station Keysound Recordings.

Whereas much that surrounds him is ordinary and unremarkable, Damu’s quadrant is a glittering explosion of hypercolour and kinetic movement, emotive energy and playful pulsations. To enter into its proximity is, in the nicest possible way, to be irradiated by a kind of cosmic glow rays that leaves you fuzzy and warm. The source for this remarkable sound, developed over a relatively short period, is his infectious enthusiasm and unrelenting positivity.

Damu’s quickly picked up some high profile fans, with The Street’s Mike Skinner, when asked to guest edit an entire section of The Guardian, picked him out as a glowing example of hot new talent. Damu’s also attracted plays from Night Slugs DJs and critical acclaim from Fact Mag and XLR8R magazine, with an EP recently out on Local Action.

FACT Magazine’s Tom Lea, a huge supporter of Damu, said: “Obviously I'm biased but Damu is the most promising young producer in the UK for me, and this is some of the best material he's done yet. I suppose they're dance tracks but for me it's more like big, massive pop music full of hooks, colour and emotion."

With Damu now signed to Keysound Recordings, he’s unleashing his new EP. “Ridin,” that sounds like hypergrime grounded by crunk 808 sub drops – Damu once said he wanted to slip a CDr of the track to OutKasts’ Big Boy at a gig. He didn’t: he should have. “Be Free” and “Crystal Gaea” unleash a warm, UK funky-inspired glow. “Karolina’s Magic J” is perhaps one of the oddest beasts in the realm, a trippy, woozy journey into synth-lead psychedelia.

Damu's "Ridin" EP is out August 8th on Keysound )12" and digital)

Wednesday, July 06, 2011

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Rinse June ft Vibezin



We were back on Rinse FM in June with special guest Vibezin.

Audio here.

Dusk & Blackdown ft Vibezin Rinse FM June 2011


Trim "Singer" ["Ghost Writer v Autotune" CD]
Matt IQ "Moodz" [IEQ]
Walton "Power" [unreleased]
Dubbel Dutch "Open Up" [unreleased] 
Eastwood "Toilet Blocker" [forthcoming]
Brenmar "So High" [forthcoming Grizzly]
Brenmar "Want Me" [forthcoming Grizzly]
Carnaeo Beats "Funk the Sound" [free download]
Funkystepz ft Rhian Moore "No More" [unreleased]
Visionist "Rock the Flock" [Diskotopia] 

---

Vibezin [Keysound] in the mix

Vibezin "Untitled" [unreleased]
Vibezin "The Sweetest" [unreleased]
Vibezin "The One" [unreleased]
Vibezin "Crazy" [unreleased]
Vibezin "Hot 4 U" [Keysound]
Vibezin "A Little Higher" [unreleased]
Vibezin "Yearning" [unreleased]
Vibezin "Blacker Than Thou" [unreleased]
Vibezin "I’ll Make You Hot" [unreleased]
Vibezin "Mad Sick" [Keysound]
Vibezin "Lovers' Hideout" [unreleased]

---

Admin "Pink Gloves" [forthcoming B.YRSLF]
Presk "Mold" [unreleased]
Silkie "Feel" [Deep Medi]
Silkie "New York City" [Deep Medi]
Mirror State "Unsettled" [forthcoming B.YRSLF]

Amen Ra v No Fixed Abode "So Much to Give" [unreleased]
Arkist "Rendezvous" [Apple Pips]
Wiz Khalifa "Black & Yellow Mystic Mark refix" [unrealased]
Baobinga & Hyetal "Wang it?" [Build]
P Money "Blackberry" [ibeathetune.com]
Sduk "YouNyt (Hellfire Machina Remix)" [Slit Jockey]
TRC "Back to Fluff"  [unreleased]
Filthy Beatz "FlipSide" [unreleased]
El-B ft Wiley "Romp VIP" [unreleased]
SRC "2FL003" [unreleased]
Visionist "02" [unreleased]
Trim "I Am (Mr Mitch remix)" [unreleased Butterz] 
Trim "Offbeat" ["Ghost Writer v Autotune" CD]

Monday, June 20, 2011

Vibezin production showcase for XLR8R



I've always struggled to find the words to pint point Vibezin's production style but he undeniably has one. Maybe it's the sharp zaps and marimbas, maybe it's the rolling percussion, the stolen sampledelia straight from the spirit UKG or the offkey synths from grime. I dunno, it's all just Vibezin really and this mix is the best summation of his flex I've heard yet.

Vibezin XLR8R production showcase

Tracklist:

01 A Little Higher
02 Temptation
03 I Can’t Do It Alone
04 Lover’s Hideout
05 Work It
06 I’ll Make You Hot
07 The Sweetest
08 Blacker Than Thou
09 Crazy
10 The One
11 Illusions
12 Deeper
13 Pressure Point
14 Ultra Funk
15 Get Fucked Up
16 Hot 4 U
17 Show Me

Download it free at XLR8R mag.

Vibezin "From the Crates EP" digital out now, vinyl shortly. Hear it here.

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

FWD June 30th



Been giving a lot of thought to what we should play... some rolling UK funky & 130, some of that re/nu dark swing vibe, maybe some synthy/grime stuff, some of sully's juke selection, some of the dubs Dusk & I have made but not played on radio... or maybe a selection of all the above.

Hmmm...

Monday, June 06, 2011

SAS



Over the weekend I stumbled across the video above on Grime Daily and found myself transfixed. Over 40 minutes, south London MCs SAS tell the most open, vivid and almost unbelievable tales about their experience in the music industry.

I remember SAS from about ten years ago and I vaguely recall remember them getting “signed” to a US major of some kind and thinking “why them?” Through tales of moving to Staten Island as teenagers to play basketball, getting into “road stuff”, to being shot and stabbed in the neck, battling and winning against US MCs in some of the roughest projects to hanging out with Kanye, Beyonce and Jay-Z in the studio when the latter was writing “Blueprint II,” it’s a pretty amazing tale. It’s also pretty unique.

The history of the last decade of London based MCing has a few major clusters. Of those that are influenced by US rap (rather than dancehall), they fall into two loose camps: those that see hip hop as a lyrical style to be adopted (UK hip hop/road rap) and those that see it as a framework to be adapted (grime). Both groups usually eventually become preoccupied with “breaking the US” at some point and this usually takes two general approaches: go to the US and build from the bottom up (pretty much unheard of) or get massive here first then attack (more common). SAS fall firmly into the former camps in both cases.

I guess from my writing about grime over the years, it’s probably pretty clear that I think adapting hip hop (and indeed dancehall) into your own local framework is much more creative and promising than acting like a reverent outpost to the mothership. But if you are going to try the “build from the bottom up” approach with rap, then MCing in Marcy Projects in a way the local top boys have never heard nor will ever recognise, is probably not a good idea.

So as the pair describe in detail their path from promising Brixton basketball players to Staten Island high school students, local gang affiliates with road enterprises, to MCing with the best in top New York ghettos, it just seems so remarkable. This is what every garage, drum & bass, UK hip hop and grime MC in the last decade dreamt of. And they seemed to get within a hairs’ breadth of what those MCs wildest dream consisted of, as Busta appears on the video to big them up or they talk about recording in hotels with Ruff Ryders. The Atlantic is littered with sunken ships launched with the best intentions of sailing into the top of the Billboard charts. So Solid had a number 1 single and sold millions of units, but never broke the states. When Dizzee went out after “Boy In Da Corner” he wasn’t MCing in Marcy projects, it was hipster press and festivals.

Despite all this, I don’t really know why it all didn’t work out for SAS. It looks like they had to return to the UK because of “cases” and by their own admission all the people they knew were soon inside, some of them for murdering two FBI agents; never the most advisable career move. But brushes with the law are nothing new for hip hop, in fact in some cases it thrives on this kind of hype and drama.

One thing that is remarkable about this interview is the vivid pictures they paint and the candour with which they describe the fights, guns, robberies and rivalries they became embroiled in. In my experience of interviewing MCs, this is how they speak off camera. On camera/tape, it’s all “certain man” and “certain situations” or endless non-specific bragging about themselves. Sure, a lot of the interview here smacks of bragging (paraphrasing: “I hit the guy, got blood on my designer shirt, took it off, gave it to the girl, knocked the guy out, got the girl’s number, then left...”) but there’s far too much detail for it to be entirely made up (and in some cases, like being shot, they show the local press cuttings!).

Reputation rules the roads, it’s a reputation economy and names are the most powerful vectors of reputation, hence why grime MCs speak in indirects and brag about themselves, rather than naming names until they have to. Perhaps for SAS they’re safe, since everyone involved are either on another continent or doing “football numbers” in correctional facilities, but still, the whole interview seems exceptionally honest and direct. Bigup Grime Daily.

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Vibezin “From the Crates EP”



Vibezin “From the Crates EP”
Keysound Recordings
Mastered by Transition


Keysound Recordings are proud to present the “From the Crates” EP from Vibezin, a longtime stalwart of the London pirate underground. He’s best known as one half of United Vibez, a DJ partnership between himself and Amen Ra of the shadowy LHF collective. Their Sub FM show occupies the hallowed 9-11pm slot and swerves between tightly mixed UK garage and rolling early “roots of...” dubstep, before heading into the second hour, a dazzling, bewitching production showcase.

Vibezin’s previous two releases “I Need You” and “Digital Funk” have appeared on future garage’s flagship label L2S, but fresh from supporting us (Dusk & Blackdown) on our 2010 live tour, his new EP ups the game, showcasing his sample-scattered production approach. It’s as much influenced by UK garage’s magpie-like approach to fragments of great records past as dubsteps reverence of weighty sub bass, all dug and inspired by his vast “crates,” a vinyl collection co-owned (!!!) by Vibezin and Amen Ra and used to drive their weekly radio show.

“Hot 4 U” is the most high octane cut on the EP, layering crashing drums and strange funk samples to create a soundscape that is both of its time but also evokes the rich history of black music past. “Mad Sick” rolls into darker, Jamaican dread territories while “Vicious” recalls classic jungle in spirit but with a brooding halfstep exoskeleton. “From the Crates EP” is out on 12” and digital in June.









Keysights (above) by me...