this uk funky roundtable is hilarious, is it any wonder the thing fell apart if this is how they interact with even basic discussions on their scene?!
i'll mostly be preaching to the converted here, but.....
a lot of artists who weren't part of the funky scene cashed in on the underground hype of funky as it bubbled thru the hardcore continuum enthusiasts in the fickle form of uk bass. people were making tunes inspired by funky that sounded (almost) like they could have come from the actual scene (breach - fatherless, mosca - square one). i think PR and labels partly marketed this as being part of the london funky scene and therefore having this 'street authenticity'. that's what record shops, boomkat and the like also did, giving some of these uk bass guys their first big releases and dj sets before they quickly moved onto something totally different.
if u listened only to the big releases and read the online articles, rather than ever experiencing the scene, u wud either think that these tunes really were uk funky or u wudn't care and uk funky wud be a convenient name. but wasn't this shit categorisation and PR responsible for smaller actual uk funky releases getting buried to a wider audience? how many times 5 years ago would u find NOT A SINGLE uk funky tune other than something by roska or cooly g amongst loads of records in eg phonica or rough trade? maybe some people listened to the uk bass that was actually there and decided they didn't like uk funky, stopping them from looking deeper.
if funky tunes from the actual london scene had been written about online or put in these shops (online or offline) they could have potentially gained the artists involved a much wider or even international audience. u could say it was a problem with funky's sparse label infrastructure, like people usually do. but articles would also put u off even searching out the OGs from the scene. they tended to encourage the view that people from funky (cooly g, scratcha dva, roska - kinda fringe artists anyway in terms of DJing on the circuit?) had already moved on, leaving the silly dances, aggro and mcs behind (all pretty much loosely guided stereotypes?).
this article on xlr8r perfectly sums up what i remember commentary on funky (when there was any) being like
what im saying is their scene didn't only fall apart, on a larger scale it kinda got jacked.
blackdown u might groan at this, but the legacy of funky is that it created the conditions for deep tech to thrive (like trilliam said elsewhere). it opened people to house, producer/DJs and audience. when i started listening to funky i remember being amazed by how people cud make a 4/4 kick actually sound interesting. guys like Tazer and Carnao who've made the biggest deep tech tracks so far got into production and djing (as far as i can tell) thru funky. like i said before myself, a lot of the bass syncopation also reminds me of that 5-snare driving rhythm of funky.