Monday, May 07, 2012

Rinse April




Dusk & I were back on Rinse Thurs 26th 11-1am.

DOWNLOAD the audio. 


Rudimental "Deep In The Valley ft. MC Shantie (Woz Remix)" [unreleased]
Marcus Nasty and Funk Butcher "Public Service Announcement" [WeRBass]
Visionist "Danger" [unreleased]
Ill Blu "Late Night" [unreleased]
Roska "You Dun Kno" [forthcoming Rinse]
Walter Ego "Messeh" [Bootlegs]
Beneath "Witches"[unreleased]
Sleeepin' Giantz (aka Zed Bias & Rodney P) "Badungdeng" [forthcoming Tru Thoughts]
Jon E Cash "War (Grievous Angel refix)" [unreleased]
Mr Casual "Sublotec" [unreleased]
Roska "Badman feat. Sweetie Irie" [forthcoming Rinse]
Nocturnal Sunshine (aka Maya Jane Coles) "Meant to Be" [DJ-Kicks]
Roska "OnRinseSinceZeroEight" [forthcoming Rinse]
Emma "Marina" [unreleased]
Grievous Angel "Your Love Will Never Be Enough For Me" [unreleased]
FBOM "Hoods Up" [forthcoming]
LokiBoi "One House (Mista Men Mr Bumps House Remix)" [unreleased]

Wen "Spark It" [unreleased]
Logos "Devils" [unreleased]
Moleskin "Slow Dancing with Ms haversham to Moments in Love in Satis House" [unreleased]
Moleskin "Thru the Rain" [unreleased]
Comma "Mezcal Hologram" [Frite Nite]
Octaviour v LDM (LHF) "Retitled" [unreleased]
Buzzin10 "StringTing" [forthcoming Frijsfo]
Octaviour (LHF) "I Carry Message" [unreleased]
Cluekid "GRIM" [forthcoming Aquatic Lab]

Baobinga & ID ft Rider Shafique "Gun Talk (Kahn RMX)" [Build]
Phon.O "Slavemode" [forthcoming 50 Weapons]
Guido "Flow (Instrumental)" [unreleased]
Whistla "My Father and I (Remix)" [forthcoming L2S]
Gremino "Rupi (140 VIP)" [unreleased]
SRC "Red Shirt" [unreleased]
Guido "Africa" [unreleased]
Mr Mitch "Junior" from "Searching, Volume 1: Venus", free download - send
"searching" to music@mrmitchmusic.co.uk to get it]
Dusk & Blackdown "Don't Stop (Give it to Me)" [unreleased]
SRC "Milkshake" [unreleased]

Joss Ryan "Melancholy Dreams (Slick Shoota remix)" [DVA Music]
Kowton "Jam003 (Desto refix)" [unreleased]


  • Download all the Dusk & Blackdown Rinse shows to 2008 HERE.

Tuesday, May 01, 2012

LHF: in it but not of it.



Rare, insightful interview with LHF thanks to Rory Gibb. Photo by my man Nico Hogg.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

How do I get started in production?





I’m no production expert, honestly I’m not. If you want the info on every VST ever, the secret to world’s most mind blowing mixdowns or how to record to 5.1 surround sound, then there’s tons of people out there who can help. But Dusk and I have been producing for over ten years, written an album and some singles and I co-engineered about half the LHF album, so periodically people ask on Facebook or whatever about how to get started in production and this is something I overcame, so I thought I’d share my thoughts. Who knows whom it will affect and what music might, down the line, come of it? Just that idea alone, of all those possibilities, makes me want to write & share this post…

Get hungry, find a way

Learning to produce from scratch is hard, it is like learning an entire language in itself, so the first thing you’ll need to be is hungry. I could probably explain how to how to beatmix (DJ) in ten steps and teach someone in an afternoon. I don’t think this is possible with production. So a hunger to overcome obstacles and find a way to your sound is essential. If you’re not sure, it’s probably not for you: this is not the path of least resistance.

Make music, a lot.

This is something I say to people when they ask me about getting started and perhaps it sounds a little strange but as a guiding principle, it’s true. Whatever you do, find a way – any way - to make music and do it a lot until you progress.

My advice, if you’re into studio based music, is to beg, borrow or steal one of the soft studio packages. Reason, Fruity Loops or Ableton are a great start. Why not Cubase, Logic or ProTools straight away? In my experience the learning curve is too steep. You’re busy looking for your sound, learning about chords or arrangements, positionising and rhythmic composition – the last thing you need is the most advanced sound engineering package to master too (been there, lost months or years to it). Just get something up and running so you can make music, a lot. That’s the single biggest, most fundamental step: all other music making after that is just an iteration.

Don’t let the machines master you

At first music production programs are confusing, they are. Most presets are crap and the tracks you make don’t sound right. Essentially the technology is having its way. You need to fight those crap pre-sets away, throw out default samples and most of all, don’t let all your music fall on the grid. Most software programs lead you to making music in regular intervals: 1 beat, ½ beat, an 1/8th a 1/16th or 32nd. But stick to these and your music will sound stiff and lifeless. Master the machines and find a way to your sound, not the sounds you first find in front of you.

Find a good source of advice but…

Wheel re-invention is an admirable pursuit for which there are no prizes.  In the early days what you’re technically trying to do has probably been done hundreds of thousands of times before. One of my regrets is that when Dusk and I in 2001 decided to start producing that we didn’t ask enough for advice. Most producers I now know are more than happy to talk about production, often at length. Some of them prefer talking about sound engineering than music (though that’s another story). Find one of these people who’s on your wavelength and ask if they’ll show you how to get up and running. Trust me you’ll save yourself years. But remember you will need to…

… decide what to ignore.

Producers often present subjective opinion about sound engineering as fact. They describe their single data point as an incontrovertible rule. Absorb from them for a while but never forget to log what you’ll take on board and what to ignore. This will prove vital in developing your sound. What sounds you refuse to use or techniques you wont touch are as vital a those you do.  Later on when you have a sound of your own you may want to question what you’ve questioned and rejected, if you get what I mean, so you can evolve your sound (I swore for nearly a decade I’d never use a 4x4 kick, but after UK funky decided that’s exactly the reason to use one and see if we could still make it sound right for us) but that’s a bridge to be crossed when, well, there’s some water under it.

Find your own way

As an extension to “decide what to ignore,” finding your own ways to make music is also a great route to individuality. Working out weird new things to sample, time signatures to work in, odd hardware configurations, mutations and fusions of otherwise un-connected styles will all help set you apart from the pack. Your sound is a reflection of you. So, who are you?

Take inspiration, don’t clone.

Often at the beginning of your production career your hunger will be fueled by producers who have inspired you. You want to make music because of the way their music makes you feel (in my case it was El-B). In the process of getting up an running, you might well find yourself in a phase where you – consciously or subconsciously – start to sound like them. This is normal but you should probably get over it as quickly as possible. Honestly you should, no one is going to play weak clones of Burial and your J-Dilla tribute? They're not.

Now I’m all in favour of “scenius,” the idea of producers collectively vibeing off each other, that a scene works as a hive, honestly I think it’s vital. And equally while some individuals contribute more than others, few exist in a vacuum: they are just probably less overt with their influences than others.  So my advice is look deeper into what inspired you about the producer in the first place and look deeper into a few others, then combine them in your own, unique way. Then it’s greater than the sum of its parts.

When I say “look deeper,” here’s an example. My inspiration was El-B circa 2000, so a cloner’s approach would be: right, let’s get a woodblock and put it on the 2 & 4, few hats & kicks, maybe get a bassline and some r&b vocal samples. There: a shit Ghost clone.

Instead, I’d say what I loved about Ghost records was their delicious sense of tension, perfectly balanced between dark and light. Their juxtaposition of masculine and feminine, rude and gentle. Finally they were percussively funky, all swung and skippy, i.e. they had elements off the grid. Now all these learnings can be applied in quite varied contexts, tempos and to different sounds, arrangements and types of percussion. Do this and it won’t sound like a Ghost clone but it might be in part inspired by it. The other part inspiration is all yours. 

Same applies to jazz. Jazzy = shit sax sample, walking double bass line, failed attempt at sophistication. Jazz-inspired: use of free improv melodies, live interaction between different elements in the track, a free spirit & mind.

Get honest feedback

This is useful once you get up and running. I had this teacher at school that said “your first idea will be your worst one” and while it may not be incontrovertibly true, it stuck with me. Certainly when I’m first sent unreleased tracks by producers I can hear if someone’s "got something" but they invariably get better over time. Having someone near you who can give honest feedback can help you make this progression. Super famous DJs will probably be too busy to give you detailed feedback, but a good A&R, producer or DJ you connect with should be able to help. If it sometimes hurts a bit, it may end up being useful in the end.

Be in it for the right reasons.

Learning to produce well and find your sound takes ages: years of dedication at the expense of other things that are more fun like drinking, clubbing, sex, drugs and Xbox. It’s also a terrible way to make money: people don’t buy music anymore. You can make more money DJing for 1 hour than a four track EP makes in a year, and four good tracks could take you months to write. Now as Bun Zero points out, as a DJ you increasingly need to produce to "make it," so the two path's are interlinked, but making it as a DJ is a separate article entirely. So my position is: make music because you love it; honestly it’s not a good “career” move and if you write beats from your bank balance not your heart, people can tell.

[UPDATE:] Buy monitors

Hear your sound. Nuff said.

I think that’s enough for now. Other follow up topics are kinda subsequent issues to the above, so I’ll leave them for now, but they include in no particular order…

  • Compression
  • Mixdowns
  • EQing
  • Arrangements
  • Mastering
  • Sound sources – VSTs, hardware etc
  • Getting your music “out there” 
  • Publishing, Distribution, PRS/PPL, licencing and other industry issues.
  • others I'm sure I'll think of later...

Friday, April 27, 2012

Road rap and the uncertain future of the nuum


Road rap and the uncertain future of the 'nuum. My debut for Fact Mag.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012



Why does Keysound look like it does? This is why.

Double Helix's jungle selection

Exclusive Vibezin showcase: download






Download an exclusive production showcase from Vibezin here. He's really f**king under-rated.

Vibezin – You Know
Vibezin – Weirdo’s Only
Vibezin – Hot 4 U [Keysound]
Vibezin – Step by Step
Vibezin – Yearning
Vibezin – Mad Sick [Keysound]
Vibezin – A Little Higher [Forthcoming Keysound]
Vibezin – Vicious [Keysound]

20% off Keysound back cat at Juno



20% off all Keysound releases and an exclusive free LHF track? Yes.

Full Keysound back cat here.

Wednesday, April 18, 2012

LHF Fabric takeover


Ahead of the LHF album launch at Fabric next week, we're going to be unleashing a bunch of articles to celebrate the night. There's going to be free mixes, crate digging of classics, light randomness and more.

I'll link to them all here. As the first step, Oli Marlow has written some kind - and quite personal - words about Keysound.

Update 1: Download Logo's top5 grime sets of all time.
Update 2: Download a free production showcase mix by Vibezin (United Vibes).
Update 3: 6 videos LV have watched more than once.
Update 4: Sully's guide to 2step swing.
Update 5: Double Helix's jungle selection
Update 6: my guide to the history of Keysound's visual identity

Logos "Atlanta96" video



Logos "Atlanta96" taken from the Kowloon EP, out on vinyl and digital 23/4/12.

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Benjy Bars on decks

Loefah warm up

Benjy Bars is a longtime Dubstep souljah. He had myself, Dusk, LHF and Vibezin play at a great if slightly ill fated attempt to put a heavy system in the biggest pub in Green Lanes (near where our album cover was shot) last year.

At our album launch at Plastic People in 2008, he rewound my copy of Omni Trio "Thu the Vibe (2-on-1 mix)" so hard I thought he'd break it. I took that as a compliment.

Anyway he's done some sick retrospective mixes. If you're not sure why you should listen to them, you're on the wrong blog. I've also linked to my interviews with the producers, where possible.




"Mix of old Wiley tracks from 2001-2007"

Wiley - Tunnel Vision Freestyle (Scratchy beat)
Wiley - Ice Rink
Wiley - Goin Mad
Wiley - Avenger
Wiley - Bow E3 (Maniac beat)
Wiley - Igloo
Wiley - Crash Bandicoot Freestyle
Wiley - Taplin
Wiley - Ice Pole Remix (vocal)
Wiley - Fire Hydrant
Wiley - Pump Up Tone Up
Wiley - Jam Pie
Wiley - I'm a Flyboy
Wiley - Colder (Devil Mix)
Wiley - Colder (Vocal)
Wiley - Eskimo
Wiley - Nothing Less Freestyle
Wiley - Morgue
Wiley - Graveyard Freestyle
Wiley - Firefly
Wiley - U Ain't Real

  • Read my two eski-era Wiley interviews here and here.




"Mix of old Kode9 tracks from 2001-2008. original hyperdub virus business.. Spaceape with some next level dread visions."

Kode9 - Sine of the Dub
Kode9 - Sub Kontinent
Kode9 - Spit Kode9 - Swarm
Kode9 - Stalker
Kode9 - Dislokated
Kode9 - Fukkaz
Kode9 - Ping
Kode9 - Ghost Town
Kode9 - Curious
Deep Alpha - All Think (Kode9 Alphadub remix)
Kode9 - 9 Samurai
Burial - Distant Lights (Kode9 remix)
Massive Music - Find my Way (Kode9 remix)
The Bug - Skeng (Kode9 refix)
Kode9 - Den of Drumz
Kode9 - Stung Dabrye feat Doom - Air (Kode9 remix)
James Yorkston - Woozy with Cider (Kode 9 remix)

  • Read my Kode9 interview here.

 


"Mix of old Mala tracks from 2004-2007 dread vibes on this. pure soundsystem music."

Mala - Conference
Mala - Pathwayz
Mala - Give Jah Glory
Mala - Awake
Mala - 10 Dread Commandments
Mala - Walking with Jah
Mala - Left Leg Out
Mala - Lost City
Mala - Neverland
Mala - Hunter
Mala - Changes
Mala - Misty Winter
Mala - Anti War Dub
Mala - Ancient Memories
Mala - Blue Notez
Mala - Lean Fwd
Mala - Bury da Bwoy

  • Read my Mala interview here (with Loefah).


 
"Mix of early Benga tracks from 2002-2005 more Big Apple vibes on this one.. proper weird grimey garage!"

Benga - Full Cycle
Benga - Hydro
Benga - The Lead
Benga - Walking Bass
Benga - Untitled
Benga - Amber
Benga - Bass Beat
Benga - Dreams
Benga - Untitled
Benga - Dose
Benga - Skank

  • (I interviewed Benga with Skream in 2002 for Mixmag but sadly it's not online).

 
"Mix of early Skream tracks from 2003-2005. proper Big Apple vibe on this one. beats.bleeps.bass."

Skream - Get Mad
Skream - Afrika
Skream - Mr Keys Dub Loefah - Indian Dub (Skreamix)
Skream - Explode
Skream - Korma
Skream - Afeks
Skream - Elektro
Skream - The Bug
Skream - Key Dub
Skream & Benga - The Judgement
Skream - Hallowerd
Skream - Traitor

  • Read my Skream interview here.

 
"Mix of old Loefah tracks from 2004-2006 ... before he went on a dread-cold halfstep vibe"

Loefah - Jazz Lick
Loefah - Beat Them
Loefah - Life Dub
Loefah - Bombay Squad
Loefah - Fire Elements
Loefah - Truly Dread
Loefah - Root

  • Read my other Loefah interview here.

 

"Mix of old Coki tracks from 2004-2007.. back when he used to make pure mutated dubbed-out riddims.. no midrange here!"

Coki - Stuck
Coki - Officer
Coki - B
Coki - Jah Fire
Coki - Molten
Coki - Mood Dub
Coki - Country Man
Coki - Tortured
Coki - Earth a Run Red
Coki - Intergalactic
Coki - Ugly

  • I interviewed Coki with Mala in 2004. Read it here and here.


Sunday, April 01, 2012

LHF: light keepers



Unbound, unbridled, dissociated, from experience, from the mind of a child. Beyond, above, below, surrounded. Jam, play, experiment, correct, break, discover, stumble, unlearn, never truly know: finally see. Reload, rewind, uncoil, recoil, orbit, single helix, double helix, 01, 0171, 0181, 01010010001, UCGAUAU, UHF, UVB-76, FM, LDN, LAX, KIN, JFK, BOM, BAA, AAATTCGCGCGATCG, RNA, DNA: LHF.

The world is not as it seems, or moreover, as it’s seen.

LHF are the keepers of the light, one that burns brightly but yet is increasingly threatened with extinction. Lit most recently in London, this energy spread to sound waves and was amplified by the pirate broadcast network infrastructure that flares up at night and transmits in encrypted code. In transmission of that enflamed message, errors were made, mutations occurred and unintentional frequencies were received. The wave’s cycle became a circle: transmission became reception such that notions of then and now, or here and now were no longer distinct. Hackney now, Croydon then? India now, Egypt or ancient Greece then? New York a decade ago, New Orleans a century back, Milky Way eternally? Is this reality or a memory? Where we are or where we’re going?

Questions. LHF’s vision leaves you blurred, asking of you more than you had answers for. Is it of now or then? Is it of here or there? Why doesn’t it sound like everyone else… or should that be ‘why doesn’t everyone else sound like it?’ Does the mind of a child see most clearly? Does… does… does what?

To focus on the mind on the clan is to miss the heavenly glory that backlights them. Where they’re from, where they are, where they’re going – this is to be looking in the wrong direction. Instead ask why are you here, how did you get here and where are you going? Their imprecision, their lack of distinction merely reflects the imprecise, ill defined yet wondrous backdrop that surrounds us all. As one LHF fan put it recently: “Make it random, we are all keepers of the light…”

Friday, March 30, 2012

LV live - Paris



LV & Joshua Idehen live from the Batofar Keysound takeover. LV have really nailed the live thing, the swing & bump made me dance like a happy person.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Freshness




Win a dubplate & see it get made!

To anyone pre-ordering the LHF album, Keysound recordings are offering that all orders will be entered into a special competition draw to win a one of a kind 10" LHF dubplate, cut with your choice of LHF tracks.

What's more, you'll be able to view the whole process as you are cordially invited to the seminal Transition Mastering Studios (home of Hyperdub (inc Burial), Planet Mu, DMZ & of course Keysound). Here you'll be able to see your tracks cut to order and view the whole process first hand, then walk away with the fresh dub at the end.

Enter the competition here.

Hear two new LHF album tracks

"Inferno" and "Rush" here at RedBull Music Academy. "Chamber of Light" is over at Boiler Room.

On Record

Double Helix picks out an obscure d&b 12" and unravels a mystery for Fact. Check the LHF jungle special show here.

Sully interview...

...for BLTN blog, via Red Bull





Critical Beats #2: Place, Locality and Globalisation

Me having a waffle with  few people about dubstep and grime for The Wire.




PS... **cough**

Thursday, March 08, 2012

Keysound takeover Fabric: LHF album launch


KEYSOUND PRESENT LHF 'KEEPERS OF THE LIGHT' LP LAUNCH

LHF
Dusk & Blackdown
LV
Sully
Logos
Vibezin

Friday, 20th April 2012.

In the other rooms, Grooverider, Ed Rush, Jubei B2B Doc Scott, DJ Die, Bailey, Youngsta B2B J:Kenzo & more.

Advanced tickets here. Show you're repping on the Facebook event here. LHF "Keepers of the Light" is out April 2nd.


Read full review of Keepers of the Light - LHF on Boomkat.com ©

Monday, February 27, 2012

Rinse Feb




Dusk & I were back on Rinse Thurs 22nd 11-1am.

DOWNLOAD the audio.


Tracklist:

DVA "Where I Belong"  [forthcoming Hyperdub]
Shox "Aztec" [Hundred2ONE]
Double Helix "LDN VIP" [unreleased]
Desto "Shadow Sole" [Noppa]
86 Baby "Word of Mouth" [unreleased]
Mista Men "Cardiac Arrest" [Green Money]
Presk "Kook" [forthcoming Fourth Wave]
Polar Pair "Days of funky mood" [unreleased]
Walton "Thunder" [unreleased]
Warlock "Space Junk" [Rag and Bone]
Reuben G "Frozen Planet" [unreleased]
Wen "Takin' Over" [unreleased]
Emma "Dream Phone" [Tones]
Mista Men "Daylight Robbery" [Green Money]
Zed Bias & Trigga "Booster" [unreleased]
Neon Jung "Delirium Tremens" [Magic Wire]

Destiny's Child "Say My Name (Palace remix)" [unreleased]
Evian Christ "Fuck It None Of Ya'll Don't Rap" [Triangle free download]
Evian Christ  "Go Girl" [Triangle free download]
Trim & Riko "King of Kings" [unreleased]
Tessela "Darlene, Please" [2nd Drop]
Kanvas "Dragon Fly" [unreleased]
Tessela "D Jane" [Punch Drunk]
Blackwax "Trapped Dub New" [unreleased]
Double Helix "Judgment Day 2012 VIP" [unreleased]
Real "Oak" [XVI Records]
Visionist "Pour water on a witch" [unreleased]
Sublo "Shinigami" [unreleased]
Champion "Crystal Meth" [forthcoming Butterz]
G3P0 "Lupo" [unreleased]
Portico Quartet "City of Glass (LV remix)" [forthcoming]
Sublo "Nocturnal Roadway" [unreleased]
Amen Ra "Taniainnaldn" [unreleased]
Drake "Crew Love (Shlohmo Remix)" [unreleased]
The Weeknd "Gone (Sines Slowed Remix)" [unreleased]

Last month's show is here. All our old Rinse shows are archived here

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Gremino showcase mix



So there's a producer we've been playing on our Rinse show called Gremino. I think he's ruff and very underrated.

He seems to totally get the vibe of early '02 Slimzee 8bar grime dubs in way that's really fresh compared to a lot of the over-compressed grime and dubstep about at the moment. We've dropped tracks like "Rupi," "Storm" "Monster" “Accordion Tune (VIP mix)” "Lush Synth" "Ruffness," "Finneskimo" and "Drumbeat" on our show.

Underrated producers always deserve a little bit of the spotlight so here's an exlcusive Gremino production showcase for my blog.

  • DOWNLOAD an exclusive Gremino production showcase

Turns out he's got an EP coming out on Fade to Mind, which weirdly I didn't know this when I commissioned this mix, though I'm really happy for him.

You can also download a bunch of his 8bar tracks for free. Check one here...



You can also buy for a mere $4 four VIPs of some of his best tunes here. Check them here...



The roots of Detroit techno



So chatting to him, post "Unity" it seems Damu's been working on a bunch of new material, some of which is inspired by current techno. When he mentioned this, I instantly thought of the parallels between his colourful sound and the euphoric sweeps of classic techno. So I thought I'd put together a playlist of Detroit classics to share with him to see if he found something he liked.

Once I'd shared it with him, well, I thought I'd share it with you guys too as the idea of someone hearing World 2 World EP or "Desire" for the first time via this blog is really what it's all about for me.

I have a mixed relationship with techno, especially Detroit techno. I began listening to it in about '96. But as I outlined in my Resident Advisor chat with Todd, two factors separated me from daily consumption of it. Firstly was the realisation that I'd mostly been working backwards through techno, not forwards, and so when I'd unearthed all the main gems, it became a law of diminishing returns, literally in some sense, given Jeff Mills and Robert Hood's pioneering of minimal techno.

Secondly I fell in love with London, became massively inspired and influenced by its surroundings, multiculturalism and pirate mindstate and began to find techno as a scene uninspiring culturally as well as musically.

On reflection, when I look back to techno, my feelings coalesce into two camps.

Things I don't miss from techno:

  • The rhythmic stiffness, lack of offbeats, corrupted rhythms
  • The reliance on straight 4x4 kick as the primary driver
  • The purist mentality and how it feels disconnected from multiculturalism
  • Minimalism as an end unto itself

Things I will always love & cherish:

  • The sense of pure, epic synth-driven euphoria (quite distinct from the drug-tainted chemical chords of trance)
  • A love of detailed, mid and upper synthetic melodies
  • An attuned sense of abstract texture, space and detail - esp from Basic Channel (though they're not from Detroit, obv).
  • A spirit of an unbeatable underground movement


The Playlist:


Model 500 "No UFO'S"
Model 500 Night Drive [Time, Space, Transmat]"
69 "Desire"
Carl Craig "At Les (studio version)"
Rhythim Is Rhythim "Strings of Life (Original Mix)"
Derrick May "Icon (Montage Mix)"
Rhythim Is Rhythim "It Is What It Is"
Underground Resistance "Jupiter Jazz"
Galaxy 2 Galaxy (Underground Resistance) "Hi-Tech Jazz"
Galaxy 2 Galaxy (Underground Resistance) "Journey of the dragons"
World 2 World (Underground Resistance) "Amazon"
Red Planet "Star Dancer"
The Martian "Firekeeper"
The Martian "Voice Of Grandmother"
The Martian "Windwalker"
Reese "Just Want Another Chance"
Suburban Knight "Art of Stalking"
Robert Hood "Minimal Nation"
Robert Hood "Detroit: One Circle"
Robert Hood "All day long (b2)"

Saturday, February 25, 2012

RIP the month in grime/dubstep on Pitchfork (2005-12)



It's with sadness that I have to write that my Pitchfork "month in grime/dubstep" column is over. All things come to an end; this one began in 2005 and seven years later finds its end here, 56 columns later. I'd like to thank Scott Plagenhoef, the man who originally commissioned the column and supported it throughout.

Before we get into any light messenger shooting, the column is being retired, I did not choose to stop writing it. I've been invited to pitch to other sections on Pitchfork but my grime/dubstep column doesn't fit into the new editorial strategy. I'll be honest and say this isn't something I really understand but naturally recognise their authority to make this call.

It does however, not come at a completely inconvenient time. While it's boring to winge about these kinds of things, the honest truth is personally I have never been busier and any free time I do have now gets split between preparing for Rinse, producing music, DJing, writing sleevenotes for compilations and most of all, running Keysound. In addition, while I have been determined to plough relentlessly on with the column, the increasing conflict between A&R and journalism in my life has made it tricky in recent months to find an endless stream of new scene pieces to write without risking conflict of interest or going over old ground.

A case in point: Andrew Ryce filed recently a detailed and well written piece for RA on the bass/house intersection, but having had my say on this increasingly all pervasive movement at least twice in the last two years the prospect of having to re-iterate these arguments again and again in another two year's worth of columns (is house boring? if you add dubstep to it is it more or less than the sum of its parts? etc etc) fills me with dread.

In 2012 I'm increasingly looking for ways to counteract the more tepid parts of that spectrum and in the past that would have been by writing and who I chose to cover. Now it's increasingly addressed by who I sign to Keysound, who I try to shine a spotlight on Rinse and how I make music with Dusk. I'm having a lot of fun right now and feel as strong as ever about underground music, just not necessarily by writing about it in the music press.

My blog will remain of course, as an outlet for writing, but the column is over. I felt no remorse when my NME column was cut last year (you didn't know I had an NME column? Exactly...) but this does come with sadness. I've spent days, maybe even weeks of my life on these 56 articles so I spent a little time this week making them accessible here (see below) if people want to find them.

If you took the time to read one in the last seven years and came across someone you'd not noticed, well then bigup: my work here is done.


Pitchfork month in grime & dubstep:

2012

Jan: JME (unpublished)

2011

Sept: Kuedo
July: Trim
June: Roundup: (Eastwood, P Money, Krept, Untold, Kid Smpl, Redhino)
May: The post-dubstep archipelago
March: Teeth
Feb: Falty DL
Jan: Maxwell D

2010

Nov: End of year roundup
Oct: Roundup (various)
Sept: Darkstar
Aug: Circle and dubbage
July: SA house
June: Kode9
May: SBTRKT
Apr: MJ Cole
Mar: Ikonika
Feb: Post dubstep
Jan: Elijah and Skilliam

2009

Nov: End of year roundup
Oct: Zomby & Ghetts
Sept: State of Generation bass
Aug: JME & LD
July: Dot Rotten & Grevious Angel
June: Rude Kid, The Bug and 2562
Apr pt 2 : Wonky
Apr pt 1: Jungle-influence dubstep and Ghetts
Mar: Ruff Sqwad, Cotti, Spyro
Feb: Oneman, Wiley, TRG

2007

Dec: End of year roundup
Nov: Various (Martyn, UK funky, BBK, House Party...)
Oct: Pinch. Peverelist, Burial, Ghetts
Sept: Skepta, LV, Hyperdub
Aug: Durrty Goodz, Skream, Dubwar
Jun: Various
May: Techno dubstep, instrumental grime
Apr: all-grime special
Mar: Joker
Feb: Exclusives and Beezy
Jan: awards and the underground

2006

Nov: End of year roundup
Oct: Plastician, Wonder, Skream, Kode9, Distance
Jul: The art of the rewind
Jun: Zomby, Headhunter, Quest, T.H.E. M.O.V.E.M.E.N.T. and more
May: Burial and Wiley
Apr: After halfstep, the Roots of Dubstep and Newham Generals
Mar: DMZ explodes, Fuck Radio
Jan: Dubstep Warz

2005

Dec: End of year roundup
Nov: Internationalisation of dubstep, Rinse FM
Oct: Yard MCs, DMZ, Subloaded, Distance
Sept: DMZ, grime adopts "Midnight Request Line"
Aug: Rinse FM station party and more
Jul: DMZ post 7/7, Aim High
Jun: Internationalisation of dubstep begins
May: DMZ, Roll Deep

All are archived at Pitchfork here.

Monday, February 20, 2012

96 reasons to rate JME

 



A few weeks ago a grime MC entered the UK top 50 charts. Five years ago this was pretty much unthinkable but in 2011-2012 it’s hardly news, as in recent times a layer of the grime scene’s a-list have migrated from east London badmen to saccharine sweet chart MCs backed by major labels. The difference here is the MC is the single is grime and the MC did it all by himself.

96Fuckries” is the remarkable new single by JME, remarkable because as an actual grime track it’s not that distinct from previous JME material yet been successful. The track’s title comes from the number of lines he spits and indeed hand writes out on the YouTube metadata. The best line however has to be the first - “Oh please, I couldn't care bout your T&Cs” – amusing because who else in grime would spit about legal terms and conditions? Then again who else would spit about iOS5 or indeed get something into the charts with 96 bars but no chorus?

While much of grime’s lead MCs seem content making commercial tracks with token bolt-on chorus’ sung by irrelevant female session singers, JME’s too strong minded to pander to commercial clichés. The track’s final three lines, 94-96, seem a reference to those lost once-grime stars: “MCs think they're raising the bar/By spitting on 14 genres a day?/Safe. Raising the bar makes it easier for me to score anyway!” And score he did, using the fanbase he’s built up over years of hard slog to take the track into the national charts.

And this is the remarkable thing about “96 Fuckries”: JME has no record label as such and doesn’t have a PR team. “96 Fuckries” was not supported by national radio playlists nor sent out to journalists. Half the DJs in grime didn’t get it, not that their collective weight behind a track could put it in the charts anyway. JME doesn’t really do interviews with blogs or magazines per se. If there’s a PR rule book, JME’s ignoring it.


Though JME’s long since been an independent, free thinker, his hardcore grime credentials are unquestionable: he founded BBK alongside grime legends DJ Maximum, Jammer and his brother Skepta, and was part of Wiley’s Roll Deep and before that Meridian Crew (who had a serious street reputation). He came through the pirate radio scene on stations like Heat FM and Rinse. Yet if grime MCs turned themselves from garage hosts to “artists,” with grime a culture not a sound, then JME has pushed that expansion forward. He also went to university, is a technology “early adopter” and quickly established himself as someone who leads not follows. 


“Not following” is an apt term in the quest to understand “96 Fuckries” success. To date JME has built a 133,000 strong twitter following yet follows no one back, literally not one user. He’s tweeted over 57,000 times. His YouTube channel has 29,000 subscribers and has had over 17,475,000 views, with videos as diverse as records of every time he’s needlessly stopped by the police to BBK launching their own range of Pay As You Go top up credit. So as the “96 Fuckries” release approached he distributed his music on iTunes, dropped a music video and got a series of high profile music acts  (Tiny Tempah, Ed Sheeran, Calvin Harris) supported him by RTing the download link.

This is how the social media revolution was meant to be; a meritocratic system that put the tools of distribution in the hand of the people and gave them a level playing field with the established powers that be. Instead the reality was that dominant players just imported their reach, resources and reputation into social media, quickly dwarfing those attempting to work from the bottom up. Stars being “discovered on MySpace” was usually a quaint fabrication for PR purposes by the major label that had funded their development deal. But JME is completely different.

To celebrate its release, JME, his brother Skepta and sister Rinse FM’s Julie, alongside DJ Maximum, Jammer and friends did what any pirate station crew would do in 2012: took to Ustream, to play give-away games (“Snapback”) with their fans, wear silly hats, spit bars and bigup anyone who’d bought “96 Fuckries.”




UPDATE: since I wrote this piece, I bumped into JME's sister, Julie, lost at a train station. This might seem perfectly normal occurance in "blog land" but in a city of 8 million people, it is pretty unlikely. In my day to day life it's pretty unlikely. She didn't know who I was and looked pretty baffled by me randomly knowing who she was and offering to help, but I explained I  was on Rinse, had written her brother's mix CD sleevenotes four years ago and gave her some directions: I hope she got to where she was going safely.