@bok_bok not a producer, just a mentally good booty/gettotech/bassline/gutterhouse dj. Off cds. Dances! Rocks, i’ll try get him to d
barksta laying down dirt @ audiophile
Monster Bass was fire!
Out to tim dub boy, sam atki2, john hanuman for a FANTASTIC night. The vibe in the club was fantastic, the soundsystem (MUNGO’S 20K rig!!!) was awesome, sweet and earth-shakingly powerful, and the music was… Well, there couldn’t have been any club on EARTH that had better music. Starkey was a revelation. I thought he was going to be really good but nothing prepared me for just how glorious his sound was. It was simply street bass heaven. Grimey, crunky, wonky, wobbly, but unutterably sharp and lithe and rhythmic. The man himself was electrifying behind the decks, hugely animated, utterly synced up to the swing behind the beats and totally communicating that to the crowd who just went mental. There was some serious voodoo going on.
2562 was also superb, a touch of uk funky apparent at first though talking to him afterwards he said he played pure house and techno… But i was fantastic, massive rolling bass and syncoptated skippy beats, similar to the late-set 3:2 riddims kode plays. Very satisfying.
heatwave were as good as I’ve ever seen them, Gabriel’s laptop Serato gear fucked up so no uk funky but rather a towering ziggurat of filthy, brutal, fuck-fuelled ragga played to a warehouse packed with waist-winding punk girls. Their new MC (rubi dan couldn’t make it sadly) epitomised wideboy swagger, he was gloriously in your face. Heatwave take crowds to places most other crews aren’t even aware of and will put a smile on the face of anyone with a pulse.
I had a wicked time doing my set, did 11 til 12.15, the room filled up around 11.30 and everyone was moving. Started with some Jill Scott then into a new dark garage thing, some more garage… Soundclash did ok, not brilliant, though I think people were singing along. Gremino’s Be and See did good. Then into a load of 3:2 ragga techno stuff, which went down really well, culture killer discomix went off (I really think this tune is TOP! It’s on the cd but that’s pretty much sold out now), Show Love went off, mixed into scuba’s klinik. Sadly I couldn’t get my remix of narcossist’s metronome to work, file screwed up. And I think I lost them a bit during the wonky/grime section, but harpy sounded amazing on that system, and playing Big$hot’s Glitch was a dream come true. So it was worth it. And I had time while gemmy was setting up to drop a load of my funky stuff – boy, bristol people really love their funky! So Solid dillemma into agent x into Go Ballistic into Loser – wildness! Finished with my remix of Missy Elliott’s Lose Control and the crowd seemed happy.
funnily enough my fears were confirmed when my fader box stopped working towards the end but it didn’t make THAT much difference but the crowd wanted to dance anyway. And it was much easier mixing when I had monitoring rather than just hearing a wall of bass bouncing off the back wall (if someone could let me know if that garage tune near the start before buck and bury was alright or shit I’d be grateful!).
Anyway massive respect to the organisers, tim dub boy in particular, cos they worked their arses off and they really looked after me. And shout to da Starkbot, you’re a genius!
FACT magazine – music & art news, upfront videos, free downloads, classic vinyl, competitions, gigs, clubs, festivals & exhibitions – Download: Grievous Angel
“If you asked us what UK Funky – the bastard son of grime, funky house and hard house (bantons) – should sound like, we’d probably just record that first OOH TELL ME from ‘Do You Mind’ and stick it on a sixty minute loop.
Bbut then we’re idiots rather than acclaimed DJs. Past FACT mix contributor Grievous Angel is an acclaimed DJ, and his digital Funky Manifesto compilation is the way he envisions the genre in a perfect world.”
DubTech mix
I’ve done a mix of dubstep that’s been influenced by techno, house an electro.
Vinyl mix. It’s quite lush and smooth. There’ll be a more jagged, jump-up one soon – and it’ll be volume 4 of the Dubstep Sufferah series.
It’s here. 174.7Mb 320. Tracklisting is in the lyrics tab:
00:00:00 Scuba – Outmost (Abucs 004)
00:05:15 A Made Up Sound – Sleep walk (Subsolo Records sub002)
00:08:53 TRG and Dub-U – Losing Marbles – 2562 remix (Hotflush HFT002)
00:12:33 TRG – Put You Down (Ramadanman Refix) [HES 004]
00:14:35 Martyn – All I Have Is Memories (Apple Pips Pips001)
00:20:02 Martyn – Broken (REVOLVER011)
00:24:13 2562 – Kameleon (Tectonic TEC016)
00:27:34 Martyn – Shadowcasting (REVOLVER011)
00:32:08 Martyn – Twenty Four (3024-001)
00:36:44 TRG – Broken Heart – Martyn’s DCM mix (Hessle Audio HES004)
00:40:47 Martyn – Suburbia (Apple Pips Pips001)
00:43:43 2562 – Enforcers (Tectonic TEC020)
00:47:39 Skream – Lightning (TEMPA 016)
00:50:49 Ramadanman – Carla (Soul Jazz Records SJR 183-12)
00:52:38 2562 – Techno Dread (Tectonic TEC020)
00:57:53 Benga – Electro Scratch (RNG005)
01:01:55 Ramadanman – Offal (Soul Jazz Records SJR 183-12)
01:06:10 Benga – Electro Music (TEMPA 026)
01:08:51 Headhunter – Sleepwalker (TEMPA 019)
01:11:48 Quest – Deep Inside (Deep Medi Musik Medi-07-Q)
01:16:16 Ends
Grievous Angel folk tune makes FactMagazine’s Top 10 Tracks
Following on from Lady Dub making Pitchfork’s records of the year (courtesy of Blackdown – thank you! and thank you even more for the album!) I am delighted to find that FACT Magazine have made one of my new tunes one of their top 10 tracks of the week.
“FactMagazine – Top 10 Tracks: Week 4
GRIEVOUS ANGEL ‘DARKNESS’ (UNRELEASED)
One of dubstep’s most diverse producers expands his palette further, cutting up Sheila Chandra’s vocals from the recent Imagined Village album. As rude as folk gets? — Tom Lea”
This is one of the new “folk” dubstep tunes I’ve been working on which premiered on Blackdown’s show last week – some of you have heard me whittering on about this new direction. I’ve been listening to a lot of folk recently, little of it is terribly pure, but there’s something about a really good vocal folk tune that makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand up and bring tears of joy to my eyes. My relationship with folk is fairly shallow, but it does go back a loooong way. (One day I will tell you the story of when I played the Stonehenge festival with a very rough and ready folk band. We walked ten miles to the stones, and ran ten miles back pursued by police helicopters! But that’s a story for another day, and probably best re-told, and exaggerated, over a beer, face to face…) And in the last couple of months, I’ve become aware that there is a deep connection between folk music and UK Garage. (Yes, I know you’re probably sniggering at this point, but you’re not the one who’s just had his tune bigged up by FACT magazine, so hear me out! 🙂 ) For, it seems to me that good folk music and good garage both share a sense of rollage, a sense which is obvious with UKG, but which to me is also prevalent in the drop of folk music… the way the rhythm hangs in the air, “the one” being dropped or ellided with the same grace as in very fine garage. To me, there was a sense that the two genres needed to come together, and blow me down if it wasn’t a piece of piss to do. The first version of the tune came together literally in half an hour – the edit of the original, the beat, the sawtooth bassline, all of it – which is much more quickly than most tunes happen. Frankly, it was almost spooky. The damn thing nearly wrote itself. The sample, BTW, comes from an agreeably impure source – an album called The Imagined Village, which is a hybrid record put together by the guys behind Afro Celt Soundsystem (with a big hand from Billy Bragg, it seems) where they marry some serious traditional English folk musicians (Martin Carthy etc.) with some dance people (well, the afro celt soundsystem drummers, who are Indian, and bloody good), some rock people (Weller! jesus…), some left field people (Tuung) and, on one track Benjamin Zephaniah. So – some deeply untrendy names in there, and its on real world, so the usual caveats apply. But there’s some truly amazing music on there (though it gets a bit fiddle-de-dee towards the end), and it’s all traditional folk songs that have been re-arranged, sometimes to stunning effect. It’s the sort of thing I would normally steer well clear of, but I saw some of their performances from the Cambridge Folk Festival on the TV and, well, it totally fucking rocked! The combination of folk voices with big electronic subs and heavy drums and tablas was really exciting and the crowd were clearly going mental. And straight away I thought, “This could be dubstep…” Then, when I bought the CD, some of the tracks jumped out as being ripe for a garage makeover – in particular a version of the old folk tune “The Welcome Sailor”, which had some extremely elevated acoustic backing alongside vocals from Sheila Chandra, the classical Indian singer, whose voice suits these kinds of tunes down to the ground. Making it work was pretty easy and I for one love the result (and I know at least one or two other people like it too) – I think it’s the best thing I’ve done since Lady Dub to be honest. So go to the page and check the link for tunage. It’s very unlikely to come out, and I’m taking it down on the 23rd, so fill your boots. I’ve got my eye on one or two other folk things, but when they’ll happen I don’t know – there’s quite a long to do list at the moment!
Lady Dub in at number 8 in Pitchfork’s Dubstep 2008 charts!
Check it out… in with some amazing company too! I.e. I make it in there against stuff that hasn’t even been released yet. This is a big thrill!
Grime / Dubstep | Pitchfork
Top dubstep singles 2008:
1. Darkstar: “Need You”/”Squeeze My Lime” [Hyperdub]
2. Mala: “Miracles” [Deep Medi]
3. 2nd II None: “Waterfalls Peverelist remix” [Heavy Artilery]/”Clunk Click Every Trip” [Punch Drunk]
4. Kuma: “Dawn Stepped Outside Horsepower remix” [Immerse]
5. Shup Up and Dance: “Epileptic Martyn’s No Strobe Mix” [Z Audio]/TRG: “Broken Heart Martyn’s DCM Remix” [Hessle Audio]
6. D1: “Oingie Boingie” [Tempa]
7. Skream: “Hedd Banger” [forthcoming Tectonic]/”Angry World” [unreleased]
8. Grievous Angel: “Lady Dub 2Step Remix” [Devotional Dubs]
9. Quest: “Stand” [Deep Medi]/Silkie: “Horizon” [unreleased]
10. Ramadanman: “Blimey” [Hessle Audio]
11. TRG: “Feel For You” [Subway]/Al-Haca “Kryptonite TRG remix” [unreleased]
12. Sully: “Trackside”/”Jackman’s Recs” [unreleased]
13. Pangaea: “Router” [Hessle Audio]
14. LD and Cluekid: “Guerrilla Warfare” [unreleased]/ Kode9 vs. LD: “Bad” [Hyperdub]
15. Cult of the 13th Hour: “Wickedness” [Soul Jazz]
Garage Tape 2000
I’ve been promising this for ages. Now the Devotional Dubz mix is finally out – thank god, took forever! – I can start clearing out some of the backlog of other, less vital mixes. First up is my first ever 2step mix, even predating the Abstract 2Step mix. It’s from – as you can tell from the pic of the sleeve of the tape – August 2000, so it’s from when most of the classics had come out and the scene was turning very 4×4 (as chronicled on the 4×4 Heaven mix) and very aggy, as the police shut off all the garage raves, and scene turned into grime, and later, dubstep. Oh and house as well, with brilliant DJs such as DJ Roo going house, never to return – wonder if he’s bought Do You Mind yet…
So, this is a live mix, off tape – dubbed to my Mac via my lovely new toy, a mint condition Nakamichi CD2 tape deck, which I have plans for! – and therefore done all in one take, live, no edits. In fact I had to turn the tape over half way through, irritatingly in the middle of It’s a New Dawn. So that’s actually one edit then – I wasn’t going to leave a gap was I? So the mix isn’t perfect, there’s a couple of clatters, and the sequencing isn’t as neat as I would have liked, but it’s still a massively vibey little piece. And there’s some tunes in there that I’ve never really heard anywhere else – they’re all probably old news to someone like Ben UFO, but In the Air Tonight (yes a cover of the Phil Collins song and Belaeric classic!), Rinse Out and Bad Acid weren’t big on radio at the time and don’t seem particularly canonical. Sadly I don’t have access to most of these tunes since they’re all in storage for the next few months, so I can’t redo the mix, but I think you’ll really, really enjoy this little thing. In fact, this tape has been a car journey favourite for me and my wife for the last eight years and surely there’s no higher recommendation than that.
Get it HERE. 170Mb 320.
Tough 2Step Mix August 2000
DJ Chubbstarr & A. Fernandes feat MC Preshus: Rinse Out (1999)
Same People: Dangerous (1998)
Missy Elliott: She’s a Bitch (1999)
M Dubs feat Lady Saw: Bump’n’Grind (1999)
Ramsey & Fen: Love Bug (1997)
The Bomb Squad: Bad Acid (1999)
DJ Zinc: Super Sharp Shooter
Carlito’s Revenge: Real Man
DJ Zinc: 138 Trek (1997)
Carlito’s Revenge: Jump Up
Section 13: Freak the Funk (2000)
<can’t remember> It’s a New Dawn (Feelin’ Good) remix
Sevi G / Groove Chronicles: In the Air Tonight (1998)
Dem 2: Baby You’re So Sexy (Big Time Scary Dub Mix) (1999)
<can’t remember>: Let it roll
Two Ton Bad Boy: Worries In The Dance (1999)
Basement Jaxx: Jump’n’Shout (Dem 2 Remix) (2000)
Artful Dodger: Woman Trouble (1999)
If anyone can fill in some of the blanks I’d be grateful…
Devotional Dubz Mix Volume One
The first Devotional Dubz mix is now up on the FACT Magazine site. Do please check it out. It’s probably the best thing I’ve ever done. Here’s some backstory.
In the summer, I put out Lady Dub, the first of the Devotional Dubz series of dubstep / dark garage refixes of r’n’b tunes, which was the counterpart to the harder ragga techno styles on the double album, Belief is the Enemy, that was released at solstice. Lady Dub is a refix of D’Angelo’s nu-soul classic Lady, or rather of DJ Premier’s remix of it; it turned out to be fairly popular, helping to propel the garage revival that we’ve seen this year. It also offered a different vision of dubstep, one that reaffirmed the form’s original tolerance for sweetness and vocals while offering the biggest booming 808 sine waves I could manage.
Each Devotional Dubz release will have a DJ mix that acts as a kind of sonic manifesto; therefore the first one focuses on the other side of dubstep, the landslide, horsepower, mala side that traces a lineage back to soul and dancehall and broken beat, just as jungle traced a lineage back to r’n’b as much as to bashment. It includes exclusive refixes and blends of r’n’b tunes, alongside unreleased Grievous Angel garage tracks that have previously only been heard on Blackdown’s Rinse show, and some special edits of dark garage classics. It’s lush, it’s spacey, it’s skippy, and at the end it’s unremittingly heavy, but all the way it’s pure garage flavour.
Turn it up and feel the sunshine. Volume two will be out in a few months when I’ve got some funky stuff out of the way.
00:00: Jill Scott: Slowly Surely (Grievous Angel’s Erzulie Edit)
02.20: Craig Mack: Brand New Flava (Grievous Angel’s Iron River Edit)
05:19: Grievous Angel: Lady Dub
08:07: Jill Scott: Watching Me
09:30: Vaccine: Wishful Thinking (VIP Mix)
12:03: DJ Abstract: Touch
15:18: Jill Scott: Crown Royal (Grievous Angel’s Fucking In Sunshine Edit)
17:07: Jill Scott: My Love (Grievous Angel’s Deeper, Tighter Edit)
19:29: HorsePower Productions: Gorgon Sound
21:56: Grievous Angel: Lady Dub (2Step Remix)
25:10: Groove Chronicles: Be Happy
28:09: Grievous Angel: What We Had
31:47: El B: Bison
31:58: Groove Chronicles: Faith In You
34:13: Dru Hill: Freak Like Me (El B Remix)
39:11: El B: Two Thousand
40:34: Our Lady of Rage: Afro Puffs
42:00: Grievous Angel: I Love Dem
49:13: Ends
Blogariddims Terminus
Droid’s a bad man.
That’s pretty much all you need to know, but let me expand.
I don’t believe in the great man theory of history, or the great man theory of management for that matter, but it is a fact that key people are nodes in the network and make cultural life happen. Sarah at Tempa is the classic example, tirelessly promoting a multiplicity if post-ardkore scenes. I had the privelege of bigging her up in person at the wonderful Beyond night a couple of weeks back. And it is no exaggeration to speak of Droid in the same breath. He is a man who links the dancehall diaspora with European electronica, arthouse with rough house, and text with sound.There are few like him and it has been a wonderful experience working with him on Woofah. Similarly, it has been a wonderful experience working with him on the Blogariddims series. Where else can you find such a high-quality series of podcasts that are both diverse yet connected, constantly stimulating yet not falling into the trap of mere electicism? Almost nowhere – there’s been nothing like it, and a vast reservoir of musical inspiration has been opened up by the series.
Now, after a monumental 50 episodes, the series is coming to an end, and it’s a special edition with contributions from a load of the regulars.
There’s a delightful circle-jerk across all the contributors going on; our predecessor is Paul Autonomic, John’s is up here (I’ve no idea what he’s going to write about, probably denounce the whole project!), while our successor is Leeds reggae supremo Matt B. Naturally me and John decided to do a Woofah-style instrumental grime mix. It’s only short – obviously – but pretty heavy, with the main cut being Big$shot’s massive Glitch, which is, this week, my favourite record of all time! The other guys are going to have to work hard to drop anything better!
Anyway. Big up droid. Droid’s a bad man!