I can stomach some dubstep (in low amounts) but we all have our preferences...
On a side note, I'm still trying to get used to the term RAGE / RAGING even though it's been ages since I first heard it, lol.
acronym
quote:
Originally posted by taface
Skrillex killed dubstep.
Nah man. Excision, Datsik and Borgore did before him, and Rusko before them. There's always someone ruining dubstep.
Romchik22
quote:
Originally posted by acronym
Nah man. Excision, Datsik and Borgore did before him, and Rusko before them. There's always someone ruining dubstep.
Post some "good" dubstep please then
WittyHandle
I adore this track, and was surprised to learn it's technically dubstep.
quote:
Originally posted by zyklon-jay
par for the course, especially considering who made this. that being said, dance music is really in a bad place.
It's much better than it has been for the last 5 years imo.
quote:
Originally posted by jester
What is crazy, this guy practically came out of nowhere and he's now what the #6 dj in the world and he's just 23 :crazy:
I can't stand his music, but he works his ass off, so I respect that. He lives on a tour bus, and works like a mofo.
Maher Daniel
Maher Daniel
One of my all time favs
jester
quote:
Originally posted by Romchik22
My theory is : - Most people that listen to radio
You forgot satellite radio... that is as bad as the FM radio :nervous:
Passskal
skrillex video and interview when he played in Montreal.
acronym
Here's a few classics. Try to avoid listening to them on laptop speakers. I'm not trying to be elitist about it or anything, you just won't pick up the sub frequencies and you'll kind of miss the point.
Digital Mystikz - Anti War Dub
Skream - Midnight Request Line
Loefah - Horror Show (one of my personal favourites)
Kode 9 & The Spaceape - 9 Samurai
Passskal
The term dubstep is used so loosely by kids and teenagers these days that they event renamed the ''popping and locking'' break dance style ''Dubstep dance'' or ''Dubstepping''..
acronym
quote:
Originally posted by Passskal
The term dubstep is used so loosely by kids and teenagers these days that they event renamed the ''popping and locking'' break dance style ''Dubstep dance'' or ''Dubstepping''..
It was always a loose term to begin with (though never this loose). If you watch Living Inside the Speaker, a documentary on the early Bristol dubstep scene, you'll see everyone describing dubstep as being a bunch of different individual styles connected by the heavy sub-bass. That was true at the time; each producer sounded significantly different from one another. The fact that dubstep was treated as an umbrella term and there wasn't any nitpicking over sub-genres is something that drew me to it at first (I found it refreshing), needless to say, it's had its draw backs lately.