tape #6: Mavericks

tape #6: Mavericks

Dubstep is insane right now. Many of the old talents who brought the sound to global prominence (Skream, Distance, DMZ, Loefah, Hatcha, and Kode 9) have been very quiet this year. Fortunately, the power vacuum has been good for dubstep.

Until very recently, it was looking like Dubstep might follow the same path as Drum N Bass. Since the late nineties, DnB has been an endless competition between producers to express the same formula in harder, heavier executions.

The present climate in Dubstep resembles the earlier days of Drum N Bass – I’m thinking 1994 here – when nobody really knew what the formula was. Newer producers are working to put their own signature on the sound, and new talent is emerging constantly.

This mix, titled Mavericks, captures some of the madness of the moment. Please enjoy it loud.

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tape #5: Chaos In The Council Estates

Chaos In The Council Estates

The UK Grime scene is like a mirror-world version of 90s NYC hiphop – every rap is a battle rap, every beat is bigger and harder than the next, and every kid dreams of being an MC. As familiar as this sounds, the sonics of Grime couldn’t be further from the hiphop we’ve known and loved.

While US hip hop has grown fat and lazy at the top of the pop charts, Grime has gotten hungrier since Dizzee won the Mercury Prize in 2003. The scene has virtually no major-label artists, and is instead a network of raves, myspace pages, CDRs, pirate radio and mixtapes.

It’s hard to follow grime outside of London, but buck up. This mix will whet your appetite.

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tape #4: I Hate To Disco II - The Next Generation

Disco never completely died, it’s just been living underground for the last twenty years. It slowly turned into house music, it infected rock, and somehow it still bubbles along under the surface in new music.

Part two of my series of Disco Mixes for Disco Haters is a collection of recent tunes which captures the way the Disco template has been repurposed, revered, mutated and warped by a new generation of musicians.

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tape #3: I Hate To Disco

I’ve had this conversation many times over the past few years:

Friend:
Aaron:
Friend:
So what music are you into right now?
Disco.
[eyes pop open, gawks]

Dude… you’re joking, right?

I mean, Disco?
Aaron: No no no, you don’t understand…

This is followed by my long-winded spiel about why disco is important, how it’s one of the few remaining unrevived, under-exposed, unknown dance musics, how disco is directly connected to post-punk, hip-hop, electro, and house, how there’s a huge and varied pool of music from BEFORE Studio 54 and Saturday Night Fever, and after Disco Demolition at Comiskey park in 1979, when disco had to go back underground.

Following the manifesto, my friend usually gives me a blank stare and changes the subject. So for the non-believers, I present “I Hate To Disco”, a disco mix for disco haters.

I’m not promising to convert anybody, but at the very least, this mix might make you think of disco as something more than a white polyester suit. Enjoy.

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tape #2: Strange Ritual

strange-ritual-web.jpg

If you gaze into the strobe long enough, all thought gradually stops. This mix is pure 2am warehouse business.

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tape #1: Pressure Check

pressure check art

Pressurize your engine. Driving Birmingham techno accelerates until the curved dubstep bass rips the tempo in half, drifting at top speed. Play loud, drive fast.

Click for download and tracklisting.