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Imported on Apr 11, 2009

sunshine in pdx & other updates

played in portland at various this past weekend with monkeytek, ryan organ and chris coda. had a lovely time at the gig, great vibes and an amazing sound system. the various fellows are really wonderful blokes and it was a real treat to get to hang out with them. also shouts out to the lovely and gracious ms. emily, and my main man jojo. i missed portland, it was magic to be back there. i’ve been toying around with the idea of moving up there for a few months this summer. i also got to meet jon a.d. who owns and operates the fantastic shop anthem records and the lodubs label, a super cool guy and kindrid spirit. got a sneak peak at the forthcoming clubroot album on lodubs - keep your eyes peeled for it because it’s amazing. if you’re in sf next week, be sure to catch both jon and monkeytek at grime city. here are some more pictures from the gig taken by simon ellis.

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speaking of next week, i’ve got two massive gigs on friday in nyc at dub war and saturday in montreal at komodo dubs (flyer above). i can’t tell you how excited i am for both of these shows, probably two of the biggest of my life; i spent all week finishing up new material specifically for them. if you’re in the area please come by and say hello.

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some releases hitting the shelves recently and very soon: buena vista

Untitled! Recordings 001

A - DJG - Buena Vista
Straight out of the San Fransisco dubstep scene DJG is known for his clever use of rhythms and bass throughout his productions. Having had releases on Pressing Issues, Full Melt, Narco.Hz and Subway in 2008, 2009 looks to be a promising year for this artist.

Buena Vista is testament to his skills bringing an old school house flavour and shuffling drums together into an uptempo affair. The drop accentuates the clever bass pattern and re-emerges as a natural skanker. Sure to set any dancefloor alight, whilst retaining extended shelf life.

AA1 - Commodo - Green Piece
A brand new artist on the dubstep scene. Commodo is a young producer hailing from Sheffield and has been making waves with this new track that brings you straight back to the ’97 Full Cycle days. Currently gaining support from quite some dj’s, amongst which Ramadanman. Heavy halfstep drums, eerie sounds and a big rolling bass exemplify this track.

AA2 - Sines - Love Becomes She
Last but not least we bring you Sines straight from Houston Texas who is the head honcho of Formant Recordings. An updated take on the classic two step sound, this one rolls on with typical drum edits, an underlining shuffled break with soulful vocal dubs and a very deep bass reminding us all of the pre-halfstep era.

Available through all vinyl shops and online stores from Tuesday 14th. Distributed by Triple Vision.

the tide:

This heavyweight release from Narco.Hz features three of the Bay Area’s finest producers with two superb tracks. Both selections are rich in musicality and dance-floor intensity, with top-notch production.

On the A side is Wind Up, DJunya latest dubwise rumbler. Punctuated with half-step snares and persistent bass wobbles, Wind Up is a melange of reggae horns and processed skanks, all presented with an atmospheric dub treatment. DJunya’s tracks are consistently thoughtful productions, often deriving their musical sensibility by blending strong, interesting reggae elements with deep grinding basses and great dubstep beats. Wind Up is no exception.

The Tide, DJ G and Antiserum’s latest opus, is a powerful track, epic in scope, and conceptual in nature. From it’s digi-reggae intro, The Tide drops into a very strong (dare i say anthemic?) synth melody with strong supporting bass work. As the track rolls on, the bass work is greatly expanded upon, with interesting counterpoint elements. The break re-introduces the soaring melody line, which contributes to a compelling build and exciting second drop. The Tide is masterfully produced and wonderfully composed. It’s great melody and bass work sets it apart from so many other dubstep tracks, you just need to let The Tide carry you away.

also, my ‘we are the glitch’ remix is finally out digitally at beatport and other fine digital retail shops.

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i’ve written a review of the new martyn album ‘great lengths’ for big up magazine which you can find in the latest issue or on their website: http://thebigupmagazine.com/blog/music-reviews/afrostep/martyn-great-lengths-3024/

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finally, check out this fantastic and interesting article written by tomas palermo on the techno/dubstep crossover with quotes from myself and my good friend jus wan:

Dubstep: The New Techno?

By Tomas A. Palermo

Dubstep is a genre name coined by Neil Jolliffe and Sarah Lockhart (Sarah Soulja) of East London-based Ammunition Promotions to describe UK Garage’s reggae-dub influenced tracks, which began emerging in 1999-2000. The term was prominently featured in XLR8R magazine’s July ’02 cover story on Tempa Records artists Horsepower Productions. In the article writer Dave Stelfox refers to the emerging genre as “yardcore,” picking up on a thread first developed by Steve Goodman a.k.a Kode 9 (Hyperdub Recordings). Goodman asserted: “Yardcore, from jungle to garage and forward, is the mutant strain of the UK Hardcore audio virus, where Jamaican dancehall flavor meets London’s freshest riddims.”

Elsewhere in the article Stelfox adds that 2-Step and UK Garage sounds matured between 1999 and 2002, and were shaped most significantly by producers who were ardent followers of UK reggae sound systems such as Jah Shaka, Aba Shanti and Saxon. Hence, dubstep blew up in the early ‘00s with Horsepower Productions, El-B, J Da Flex, Ms. Dynamite and Oris Jay releasing a slew of dubbier garage and 2-Step, as well as dancehall remixes and ragga-MC flavored tracks.

Those heady days segued neatly into Croydon producers Benga, Skream, Loefah, Digital Mystikz and Hatcha’s half time signature dub styles, which firmly established the dubstep niche, as well as it’s distinctive sub-bass wobble patterns. But things change, and as dubstep expanded exponentially throughout the world, myriad influences mutated the audio virus further.

Techno shades have been present in dubstep productions for a while, pioneered by artists like Boxcutter, Elemental and Plastician (formerly Plastic Man UK) and labels such as Tectonic, Planet Mu and Hotflush. However, dubstep’s techno flirtations ramped up considerably following Skream’s ’05 “Midnight Request Line” single, Benga & Coki’s massive four-four kick drum pattered “Night” in summer ’07 and Burial’s international album smash Untrue (Hyperdub) the same year. Since then artists including TRG, Scuba, Martyn, Pinch, Headhunter, Vaccine and 2562 have significantly drawn on techno’s drum, synth and production motifs, seamlessly melding them into dubstep’s amorphous blueprint.

With minimal techno reaching a global critical mass in 2008, corrupted by mainstream labels and arena DJs in search of a new field to hoe after progressive trance’s ignoble self-implosion, underground techno producers and dubstep heads have formed an unspoken alliance, with each group borrowing and bartering with the other.

In San Francisco, for instance, several club nights have featured both minimal techno and dubstep DJs either on the same bill or in separate rooms, hoping to attract crossover audiences. Dubstep has not seen similar pairings with house, hip-hop or drum & bass to the same extent that it has with techno. However, even prominent producers who are pioneering dubstep tunes that incorporate Basic Channel-like echoes and Kompakt-style melodies are not so sure that dubstep is now in a techno phase.

“I think its cool that people are experimenting with different influences,” says San Francisco producer Justin Shields, who records as Jus Wan for Apple Pips, Tube 10 and other labels. “To me its still all about the bass and the drum and the reverb. The rest is just icing, really.” Fellow San Franciscan Dean J. Grenier a.k.a. DJG agrees: “I think dubstep is essentially a BPM range, a vibe and a lot of bass. How you present those elements is up to the producer.”

Songs like Jus Wan’s “Action Potential” (Apple Pips) or DJG’s “Breathing” (forthcoming) balance dubstep bass lines atop fluid yet steppy drum programming with arpeggiated keys that swirl in pleasing patterns. These tracks’ four-four kickdrum programming and deep synth pads invoke late-night Berlin bunker parties. Therefore, it came as no surprise when earlier in 2008 premier Berlin techno PR firm Tailored Communications, run by Brit ex-pat Melissa Tailor, added both Apple Pips and Hotflush to their promotion ranks, which includes techno mainstays Osgut Ton, Mule, Aus Music, Kompakt and Wagon Repair.

Contrastingly, however, Grenier reaffirms what Stelfox and Goodman asserted years back about dubstep’s sound system roots. “Dubstep has roots in dub, reggae, jungle and 2-step,” Grenier offers. “I think producers are experimenting with the vibe and aesthetic of techno and pulling from their immediate or past influences.”

Grenier, like others in the dubstep fraternity acknowledge the role that German techno artists and labels – Chain Reaction, Burial Mix, ~Scape – played in the development of electronic dub sounds. “I’ve been a longtime fan of Rhythm and Sound, Monolake and Deadbeat,” says Grenier. “To me the idea of blending dub bass-weight and aesthetics with techno vibes and sounds is nothing new. Producers in Berlin and elsewhere have been doing it since the ‘90s. I think what is exciting now with dubstep messing with techno sounds is that it’s a new genre, but to dub techno heads it just makes sense. It’s a logical step.”

Logical to some, perhaps, but dubstep still finds itself dominated by heavier, aggressive tunes, such as Rusko’s “Mr. Chips,” Chase & Status’ “Eastern Jam” or TC’s “Where’s My Money.” That’s not to say there aren’t gems among the heavier fare. Jakes, Mala and DZ have a knack for producing big-bass tumblers with experimental touches. What’s clear is that dubstep has more variety than ever, although the explicitly reggae-dub influenced tracks are not as much at the forefront. Still, Grenier thinks the scene is experiencing an exciting period.

“I love what’s coming out of Bristol,” he says. “[I like] tracks on Pinch, Peverelist and Appleblim’s labels, plus [producers] Headhunter, Rob Smith, Joker, Jakes and so on — Bristol is killin’ it right now. Same with Jus Wan, Djunya, Eskmo and all the SF gang.” His admiration also extends globally; he rates French producer F, XI in Canada and the UK’s Quest, Silkie and LD. “There is no shortage of incredible music in this scene.”

Whether or not dubstep will become as entrenched and significant a genre as techno has become in its 20-something year history remains to be seen. It is clear, however, that many in the dubstep fraternity have a healthy respect for techno’s musicality, spatial grooves and what Grenier calls “tension.”

The techno/dubstep relationship is a work in progress, a mutual conversation that’s reached a high point or just the natural cross-pollination of electronic artists in an accelerated global scene. What happens next is something of a mystery but an intriguing one, as Grenier recognizes. “You can’t control what happens to these things, all you can do is make music that matters to you and see where it takes you.”

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© 2009 dean

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