bassline house

viktorvaughn

Well-known member
Grime is more West African than it is British - you listen to inner-city music from other countries with large west African populations (France is the best example), grime sounds way more like that than any other type of British music, dubstep included. And actual West African youth music is totally like grime, from the vocal styling to the production methods to the business models. Loads of people in grime are first- or second generation West African immigrants, as opposed to afro-carribean or black British. Grime is the international music of the late 20th century West African diasporia, with some UK-derived trimmings. People call it British because it sounds nothing like American hip hop, which is most people's default model for black music - if they looked towards Africa instead of America, they'd realise Grime is much more international than it's made out to be.

Just echoing what Dan wrote, this sounds interesting but slightly preposterous in the extent to which you push it.

What about people like Geeneus and Slimzee who clearly have no West African heritage, yet played a huge role? I mean Slimzee was pretty much the most important DJ in the whole scene for two or three years wasn’t he?

What about the number of people in Grime who claim W. Indian heritage rather than African? Wiley going on about 'Trinidad bloodline' etc...

True, I have heard voices on the other side (Skepta - 'I'm a badboy from Nigeria/Not St. Lucia etc.) but i don't think these outweigh the other side that heavily. The times I have come across explicit or obvious Africaness in Grime it has usually been in a semi mocking tone – Afrikan Boy’s ‘One Day I Went to Lidl’. On RWD someone was calling out Dirty Danger I think for having a ‘straight of the boat’ accent.

And what about the clear evolution of grime from a genre so British it’s country of origin was contained in it’s name – UKG? How do PAUG and So Solid fit into your idea, they were clearing pushing the vocal side of (the admittedly hybrid genre) garage. At what point did the West African influence come in? I find it hard to believe that there is music in Africa that sounds like Wiley’s ‘Icerink’ or Slew Dem’s ‘Grime’. I would love to be proved wrong though!

Just because it doesn't sound like other British forms of music doesn't mean it doesn’t sound like some exciting hybrid British sound.

I would be really interested to hear some of the stuff you are talking about though! I just instinctively don’t trust the extent to which you are pushing the argument (no sendage).
 

elgato

I just dont know
a less interesting post, sorry, but i was wondering where are the bassline raves in London going down? are they?
 

Blackdown

nexKeysound
a less interesting post, sorry, but i was wondering where are the bassline raves in London going down? are they?

bassline = northern
funky/uk house = london

no? so by this reasoning there are no bassline nights in London (yet), but funky house raves. whenever i open RWD, Jon E Cash seems to be "hosting" at them all... MCs as hosts? feels like 2000 again.

I NEED to hear the Punjabi variant, as anyone who heard my FWD>> set might realise :)
 

elgato

I just dont know
but is it not the case that 'funky' house is more diverse, that it might include bassline, but also includes euro, funky, deep, soulful etc?

do people like Reckless and the Northern Line lot not get bookings down here?

to be fair i think for me it'd be best if it was bassline along with other house at a night, at this stage i think i'd struggle with a whole night of the non-stop rushing mentalism
 

Logan Sama

BestThereIsAtWhatIDo
There's a couple people playing bassline in London. Target and Cameo both do, but they predominantly play it at northern or midlands based events. There's not a Bassline scene in London really.

Funky house is guys like Supa D, Kismet, Marcus Nasty, Hotsteppa etc
 

viktorvaughn

Well-known member
Some guy has done a mix here.

http://www.wordthecat.com/goku/2007/08/20/bassbin-4-bassline-house/

Cos of the troubles the namebrand 'Niche' itself has been banned I think, it's at Club Vibe now. And it has shifted homes quite a few times.

When i went the other week a pilled up mate of mine got into a slight tiff with someone who then started moaning to the bouncer who encouraged my mate to smack the guy in the face! And they were telling everyone to smoke in the toilets cos they didn't want to let the smokers out of the building haha.
 

lissajou

Well-known member
likely old hat to most of you, tho this particular mix haunts my house like a herd of fat phantoms lately:

DJ Fiskin UK Garage Mix

01 : Omar - Nothing Like This (Duncan Powell 'Alternative Intro' Remix)
02 : Nina Jayne - Circles (Delinquent 'Nu-Soul' Refix)
03 : MJ Cole & Karl 'Tuff Enuff' Brown ft. Vula - Our Destiny (Original Mix)
04 : Artifact - Touch Me
05 : Amy Winehouse - Pumps (MJ Cole Remix)
06 : Paleface ft. Nina Jayne - Like A Feather (Delinquent Remix)
07 : Top-T & Danny C ft. Jade & Supplier MC - Magic (Original Mix)
08 : D.I.Y ft. Kaya - Feelin' High
09 : Delinquent ft. Shad - Ghetto Queen (Nu Skool 2-Step Mix)
10 : MJ Cole ft. Shea - Never Say Never (Original Mix)
11 : Jon B - Lately (Wookie Vocal Remix)
12 : Jodeci - Cry 4 U (Afrodeziaks Vocal Remix)
13 : John Legend - Ordinary People (Wookie Vocal Remix)
14 : DJ Fabion - Bass 2K (FiSKiN Special Mix)
15 : Low Deep - Straight Flush (Original Mix)
16 : IMP Batch - Gype Riddim
17 : D&G - Superdub
18 : Bossman - Bongo Eyes
19 : Lethal Bizzle ft. Fire Camp - No
20 : Lethal Bizzle - Uh Oh! (I'm Back)
21 : Dr Venom - Whisper (Scandalous Unlimited Remix)
22 : Bogeyman - Smelly
23 : Sunship ft. Warrior Queen - Almighty Father (Vocal Mix)
24 : Dexplicit - Bullacake
25 : Roll Deep - When I'm 'Ere
26 : Sparks & Kie - Fly Bi (DJ C 2005 Mash Up Mix)
27 : Antonio - I'll Take You There
28 : The Beloved - 1000 Years From Today (Todd Edwards Dub Mix)
29 : Strickly Dubz - Realise
30 : Antonio & Lee - Touching You (4 2 Da Floor Mix)
31 : Cloud 9 - Do You Want Me (Original Club Mix)
32 : Box Clever ft. Elizabeth Troy - Treat Me Right

http://www.madefordjs.co.uk/audio/mixaudio/fiskin_&_nv_-_promo_uk_garage_mix_05.mp3
 

Gabba Flamenco Crossover

High Sierra Skullfuck
Just echoing what Dan wrote, this sounds interesting but slightly preposterous in the extent to which you push it... I just instinctively don’t trust the extent to which you are pushing the argument (no sendage).

First up I'm not claiming to be some expert on grime, this is just my 2c worth. I've never been into it on the level of individual artists & producers, so my take on it is macro.

I was at LSBU for two years with a lot of young guys from African backgrounds,and the music they listened to (and made themselves in a lot of cases) was in some hinterland between RnB, grime, bashment and hiplife, without being easliy characterisable as any of those. That got me thinking of grime in terms of a UK outpost of some international west African youth music.

Then I went to Ghana in the summer just gone, and I was hearing a lot of hiplife on the street that was darker and more aggressive than the hiplife you come across in the UK. From speaking to Ghanains who were into it, it seems this stuff is way underground because the money men won't go near anything with that nihilistic tone - hence most hiplife that gets released is sunny and romantic, and where it is political it's very earnest and conscious. So there's a kind of self-censorship going on, and the problems the underground hiplife artists have (misunderstood by the music industry, fear of compromise, trying to make money from a genre where the big fans won't or don't buy music) are similar to the problems the grime scene has in the UK.

This blog has some great info on the Ghanain music industry from someone who spent a lot longer there than I did.

Apparently they have big yard dances playing everything across the hiplife-ragga-RnB spectrum, but they don't seem to be into taping them. I tried to get tapes a few times but didn't have any joy :(.

And what about the clear evolution of grime from a genre so British it’s country of origin was contained in it’s name – UKG? How do PAUG and So Solid fit into your idea, they were clearing pushing the vocal side of (the admittedly hybrid genre) garage. At what point did the West African influence come in?

I think the idea that grime evolved directly from UK garage is an orthodoxy worth challenging - which isn't to say that it didn't, just that people seem to say it without qualification. There's very little musical link between grime and UKG - to someone coming at it fresh, grime sounds much more like hiplife's dystopian twin. And there were few people of immediate west African descent involved in UKG, whereas in grime they form maybe the majority element, or at least a very significant minority (of course, there were far fewer west Africans in London in the late 90s than there are now).

PAUG and So Solid were MC-led garage that paved the way for grime, but the production is slick and centred around off-beat hi hats, and the MCing is smooth, it flows around the beats like honey. If I was to identify the most African elements of grime, it would be the jagged, sample-heavy production and the raucousness in the MCing , particularly the trick crews have of splitting the bar into a call-and-response, which maybe grime's single biggest vocal meme and had no precedent in any UK urban music before 2002-ish that I can see. It's got much more in common with African and Carribean music like hiplife, soca and Kuduru - and all of them in thier modern form involve people rapping across 4x4 beats running at around 125-140 bpm, hence maybe why people coming to Britain out of those subcultures felt an affinity with UKG.

In fairness to you and mos dan, the term 'grime' wasn't in currency with anyone I spoke to in Ghana. And Ghana as an anglophone country might be over-represented in grime compared to other west African nations because of the language connection.

And obviously the London-specific lyrics are, well, specific to London. But grime surely has to be about more than that, otherwise it's just urban Britpop (a concept that the more self consciously Lahhndan MCs skate dangerously close to IMO).

Grime is a hybrid music, but I stand by saying that it's roots are more west African than anything else. I'm not saying that Grime didn't develop in London, I'm just arguing for a recognition of it's international, African dimension. I'd like to see people looking at grime as African music influenced by UKG, rather than vice versa.
 
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viktorvaughn

Well-known member
Thanks for the wicked response mate.

Am at work so can't reply in full. Just wanted to point out

1. Loads of Grime is not sample heavy or indeed is totally sample free. Wiley has always used sound packs and has hardly sampled anything at all I don't think.

2. I think you characterisation of UKG - soft and glossy/Grime - hard and abrupt a little to easy. There were UKG tracks such as So Solid's 'Dilemma' that were incredibly sparse. And there are softer Grime tracks – e.g. the recent rash of ones keen to reassert their garage heritage by either resurrecting older UKG MCs or using deliberating older sounding garage beats (See Ruff Sqwads ‘From A Place’ Ft. Maxwell D, Skepta’s Duppy Ft. MC Creed and The Movements ‘Weighty’ Ft. Plaguelero).

3. Wiley. He get's his own point! Devoid of any immediate Africa heritage he makes tunes such as Icerink and Eskimo which do fit you stark/hard template. His lyrics from the dnb days (1997 on Rinse FM with DJ Trend and Riko) to the garage days (Say a PAUG set in 01/02) to the current days of warring with The Movement have been fairly similar - riding powerbikes, drawing gash, earning money, threatening opponent MCs. All classic stuff. His flow on dnb was quicker, but he sounds just as rough on ready on garage then as on grime now.

2. You say the call-and-response is taken from African music.

It could be argued that there is a clear precedent in US hiphop for this - eg the simply rhyming style pioneered by Run-DMC, for instance, which was then nicked by the Beastie Boys. This was a collaborative style with MCs finishing each others lines of etc. Of course you can say this originally came from Africa too!, from the Griots or what have you, but I guess we are talking about the shorter term. And pretty much every hiphop night i have ever been to has involved some call and response action. I know it's not exactly what you are talking about, but still....

In short, I think you are creating a false polarity between UKG and Grime. Whilst the ideas work really well as a theory I don’t think it holds together enough when examined in close detail. You are right to assert this African heritage and I am really curious and interested to hear more of this hiplife stuff. I just don’t think the position of ‘grime as African music influenced by UKG, rather than vice versa’ is reached. I still believe the Africa influence to be secondary to that of UKG.

Safe for posting mate, well interesting;)
 

mos dan

fact music
do people like Reckless and the Northern Line lot not get bookings down here?

my good friend Alex Bok Bok booked Rekless (I'm sure there's no 'c' in his name, though Rinse FM disagrees) for the Party of the Year night at Corsica with DJ Assault... the guy tore it up, seriously.

there's more to come - you will be first to know Ben! Okay maybe not first.. but keep checking dot-alt tho :)

****

all that stuff from gabba and vv looks fascinating but i gotta dash out now. later! (btw i worked at lsbu for two years - didn't really meet any students tho)
 

elgato

I just dont know
my good friend Alex Bok Bok booked Rekless (I'm sure there's no 'c' in his name, though Rinse FM disagrees) for the Party of the Year night at Corsica with DJ Assault... the guy tore it up, seriously.

there's more to come - you will be first to know Ben! Okay maybe not first.. but keep checking dot-alt tho :)

nice one man, thanks for the info :) wish i'd been there at Corsica :slanted:
 

continuum

smugpolice
Made a mix to bump this thread. Link to download:
http://www.mediafire.com/?0xbxjbqejcm

Tracklisting:

'If I Ever Feel Better' (Todd Edwards 'Little Dub' Remix) - Phoenix
'Heartbroken' - T2 feat. Jodie
'Straight Up' - Virgo
'Optimus Prime' - Rossi B And Luca
'Can't Stop' - Wong
'Gotcha' - Plasticman
'The Rush' - Plasticman
'Best Of Me' - Virgo
'Every Word' (Vocal Club Mix) - Tyken
'Smelly' - Bogey Man
'Dupps' - Skepta
'Decoy' (Triple Bass Mix) - Agent X
'Smelly' - Youngstar
'Straight Down The Middle' - Wiley
'I Do Me' (Ft Nio) - Virgo
'Closer To You' - JME
'What We Do' (Remix) - Horsepower Productions

Haven't touched the decks since start of August. Went through my music collection tonight and picked out these tracks and ordered them in itunes before then mixing them using Serato..
*dunno if the Virgo tracks are by him - nicked them off his mixtape*
 
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mos dan

fact music
did anyone see on prancehall that 'heartbroken' got played on daytime radio 1, by jo whiley of all people?
 

continuum

smugpolice
Yeah I saw that. The version I use in that mix above is ripped from someone who has put it up on Youtube with a static background. Has got 237,500 odd views. I think its a good tune. Could see it going into the charts like Prancehall says.
 
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