[ January 05, 2011, 01:10 AM: Message edited by: Beautifulfeetonline.com ]
Posted by FootLongSub Zero (Member # 19380) on :
Not really a genre I commonly listen to but I do have a pretty-wide and pretty-flexible spectrum and I dig this track first pop . (btw what does genre does this fall under? ) Never heard of Dubstep before so thanks for pointing me in him/her/their direction as I need a new music playlist.
Posted by Andy-Laa (Member # 31511) on :
Isn't Dubstep meant to be Reggae-stylings?
This strikes me as "wobble"
Posted by Beautifulfeetonline.com (Member # 13717) on :
Andy, Sub Zero, I think the name is subjective. I like the darker stuff, not really all of that sunshine, happy thoughts BS. You may also like this track from ginz and joker. More classic dubstep with the bass and all of that. I have never heard of reggae influences with this genre Andy, may be wrong though.
Sub Zero, it is called "dubstep". Just another subgenre of electronica, like breaks, downtempo or drum and bass...
[ January 05, 2011, 01:57 PM: Message edited by: Beautifulfeetonline.com ]
Posted by Andy-Laa (Member # 31511) on :
quote:Originally posted by Beautifulfeetonline.com: Andy, Sub Zero, I think the name is subjective. I like the darker stuff, not really all of that sunshine, happy thoughts BS. You may also like this track from ginz and joker. More classic dubstep with the bass and all of that. I have never heard of reggae influences with this genre Andy, may be wrong though.
Sub Zero, it is called "dubstep". Just another subgenre of electronica, like breaks, downtempo or drum and bass...
Got a mate that raves on this stuff (literally and non-literally) - it's been subverted - the not-true-to-form stuff is considered "wobble" by the "true" purist aficionados, but I've listened to the same song as him and I could barely make out any reggae in it, so it's wayy open to interpretation.
EDIT (Wiki):
"While dubstep is its own distinct form of electronic music, its roots are surely located within Jamaican dub music and soundsystem cultures. Jamaican soundsystems were "large mobile hi-fi or disco...[with] an emphasis on the reproduction of bass frequencies, its own aesthetics and a unique mode of consumption".[24] These soundsystems represented the appearance of records (dub plates) as modes of legitimate artistic creation. This was an integral moment in the evolution of electronic musics, both in Britain and worldwide."
Posted by Beautifulfeetonline.com (Member # 13717) on :
wow thats crazy bro. well thank for sharing
Posted by GQguy (Member # 16534) on :