lol
The samplepack competition thing from the production forum is back on if anyone give a flying..
http://www.getdarker.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=636
seems to me that the move is quite a personal thing, which is maybe a bit understandable given how demanding and insulting some posters (and even a big-ish producer) were starting to become
calling it theft seems a bit highly-strung droid, though i see where you're coming from i guess. as i said on dot-alt, for me this is a superb move, politically speaking
not to be childish and focus on beef, but which producer and what were they saying that was so insulting? just mildly intrigued.
calling it theft seems a bit highly-strung droid, though i see where you're coming from i guess. as i said on dot-alt, for me this is a superb move, politically speaking.
in any case hold tight boomy and seckle and dubway etc for all their hard work - i don't know how ppl muster the energy to mod message boards, it genuinely impresses/baffles me![]()
to try and concile the twin poles of macho-mid range wobble and the more spacious, experimental 'deep' stuff.
but i think that's about kulture taking the piss out of last year's awards and not being able to understand why 'lean fwd' won...
yeh i wouldn't go so far as theft, mainly because i don't really like to conceptualise about things like this in terms of property rights, but i think the fundamental point is an interesting one about the dynamics of contribution etc
Well it's the politics of forums innit? A forum is literally nothing without the contribution of it's members. Anyone can fork out a few quid for hosting and set one up but it's the members who provide all the content, and the 'worth' of any forum is based on their input and the networks that are created around and within the community.
This is about property rights. People who have contributed to that forum (or any forum), have a stake in, their comments are a large part of the intellectual property that give the forum worth and meaning.
doesn't it depend how you view things though? i am not really keen on the idea of the language and concept of property being the defining or ultimate language of any debate, because its founded on ideas of the individual which don't make sense to me, and are tied to / reinforcing of associated dynamics that i am not keen to support. so especially in matters of such a disparate nature, i prefer not to conceptualise of the relationships involved in terms of 'property'.
thats not to say though that you can't question how the moderators have acted in this case - as i say i think your point is very interesting about where value comes from, and im never in favour of monetary or managerial contribution or even necessarily time contribution as being the ultimate deciders of moral 'rights'
it got a bit more than that though i seem to remember, some quite insulting words and a general allegation of injustice and conspiracy?
kulture said:i just hope that it doesn't piss everyone off as much as it did last time.. that's the problem when nerds try and take shit over.
xxxxx said:Kultures right though. Last year was shit. All the forum 'scene' kids stood at the front and thought what they'd managed to put together was a work of absolute genius. It wasn't an excuse to party it was just an excuse for the forum heads to get together and do some cliquey shit. dress as ninjas, laugh at MC buffalo bullshit.
I dont know if any of you noticed because you were all so busy filiming it on ur phones, but the room emptied behind you and completely died after Kode9's set. N-type had the task of mopping up the pieces which didnt really seem to happen.
I think what some of the folks on this forum don't seem to realise is that is that they make up only 0.02% of the people that go to events and pulling that kind of shit just confuses people and makes dubstep into just another 'scene' with its own kids. I took some friends who'd never been to an event before and id never felt like such a twat for taking people to a complete shambles.
dubway said:thank you for advice.
i am sure it will be considered and useful.
I think it could finally trigger a fascinating split and, indeed, its becoming increasingly difficult, and arguably increasingly absurd, to try and concile the twin poles of macho-mid range wobble and the more spacious, experimental 'deep' stuff. Personally, I've long taken the concept of unity as an almost unquestionable essential facet of the scene but its not the be-all and end-all by any means.
I wonder how long it will be before nights start becoming divided along sub-generic lines ala. DNB, in which you have liquid nights, dark/tech nights, jump up nights etc.? I hope it doesn't become that compartmentalised. In a way I'd like to go to a dubstep night at which I was guaranteed not to here much/any shitty wobble, but when you start separating strands like that there's a danger of the dancefloor stuff becoming militantly banging and the deeper stuff becoming self-important and ponderous... then again, if you listen to the average wobble banger nowadays you might say that its already got to that point.
Also, with the arrival of blatantly commercial tunes like that latest Chase and Status thing (with the cheesy vocal b2b typical growling wobble), I wonder if there might also be more marked a division between commercial/mainstream dubstep and underground/experimental dubstep in the near future? Again, this has already happened, sadly enough, in the case of a lot of the bigger nights, where stuff that seemed to be almost at the core of the sound when I got into it (Vex'd, Toasty et al... today producers like Darkstar, Geiom etc.) has become marginalised and defined as 'leftfield'. I preferred it when the whole of the field leaned to the left a bit.
I wonder how long it will be before nights start becoming divided along sub-generic lines ala. DNB, in which you have liquid nights, dark/tech nights, jump up nights etc.? I hope it doesn't become that compartmentalised. In a way I'd like to go to a dubstep night at which I was guaranteed not to here much/any shitty wobble, but when you start separating strands like that there's a danger of the dancefloor stuff becoming militantly banging and the deeper stuff becoming self-important and ponderous... then again, if you listen to the average wobble banger nowadays you might say that its already got to that point.
Also, with the arrival of blatantly commercial tunes like that latest Chase and Status thing (with the cheesy vocal b2b typical growling wobble), I wonder if there might also be more marked a division between commercial/mainstream dubstep and underground/experimental dubstep in the near future? Again, this has already happened, sadly enough, in the case of a lot of the bigger nights, where stuff that seemed to be almost at the core of the sound when I got into it (Vex'd, Toasty et al... today producers like Darkstar, Geiom etc.) has become marginalised and defined as 'leftfield'. I preferred it when the whole of the field leaned to the left a bit.
also music doesn't have to be deep, it can be fun too, and startlingly brilliant. the polarisation between two production production styles, ie one a bit more complicated and subtle, one about bashing out noisy aggro business already close down all the other choices too.