That's an oddly anti-intellectual stance to take for a forum like this, and not what I was talking about anyway. I simply meant the music sounds like it was made by reflective people. And you know what, so is a lot of gonzo-sounding music. Iggy Pop is a reflective person too, and you can hear that in the Stooges. Gonzo vs reflective is another false binary, just as pernicious as "street" vs "intelligent" ever was. Tear-out vs emotional: false binary. Future vs retro: false binary. Punk vs soul: false binary. Current vs classic: false binary. So much of the discussion always seems to be about defining stuff by what it's not - which by definition involves the creation of a false binary.
Whats all this about false binaries?
Don't particularly want this discussion to turn nasty, but you really did manage to make what is already boring music sound even more boring than it actually is. What you described sounded EXACTLY like IDM, only thats become such a negative term that you wouldn't dare say it.
the reason why current productions and dj sets are so eclecticly all over the place, is propably that in last 20-30 years developments have been so fast that people are still digesting these many genres. + you have the internet overflowing things.
yeah this is propably what happens. recently i'v thought that maybe i should just chill out (in terms of producing so intensively and worrying about current stuff not excatly being my type) and wait till this happens. kind of like waiting for that big wave on where you can surf![]()
it's always nice to have a few diehard muppets defending to the death whichever sound they've latched onto, that passion drives a lot of people to do good things - .
I will always stand by the opinion that the best dance music comes out scenes, I don't care. There isn't one idea in any of these post-dubstep guys tunes that hasn't been pinched from a hardcore scene. You even listed them in your article!
So fucking pompous...
this discussion is happening within the context of a recent London, things to remember:
ASBO is a little over 10 years old
CCTV per person in London is off the chain
Grime raves were criminalized to a degree (was having trouble finding the specifics of all that the police did to stifle them on the nets just now, but you would know better than i do anyhow)
incredible gentrifying pressure on East London with the Olympics coming
this is all to say, when thinking about the social aspects encircling the music--and their potential stuffiness/pastiness/richness or lack of liberatory qualities as against older iterations of rave culture...
people are less allowed and eventually less inclined to take the freedom which we figure they once took...
Benjamin and a bunch of other folks have dredged up this line from an interesting journalist named Karl Kraus, talking about "cultural running room"... and at the moment, not just in London (although intensely so, in the same way that it has been intensely so here in Vancouver over the last decade), but globally in the neo-liberal bastions... there is a pretty gross deficit. culture is lost at the expense of safety and condos. youth expression is contained and commercialized.
and if post-wotyoucall it is being maligned against funky/uk house well, socially they hardly seem to shake out any better in this conversation... (dress codes, the smallness of the scene, etc.)
Taking a lot of these ideas away from a rooted, 'scene' context and mixing them together can make for nice sounding music, but I rarely get the same buzz I do from say, a proper grime track by Wiley for example.
It doesn't half get peoples' backs up though doesn't it?
Can we even be really sure that there will be another definable scene? Now that the internet means we are all open to so much music/ideas/philosophies ect.
I don't know if I can imagine there being such a epicenter as there has been in the past whether its detroit, croydon, chicago or whatever. Everything seems so open...
Well that's a far clearer explanation - but why would you want "the same buzz"? Different sounds = different buzzes. Nothing wrong with that. If you like raw music, buy raw music and go to club nights that only play raw music.
Disagree it's about production value though - I'd say, for example, that Terror Danjah or Geenues are every bit as sophisticated producers as Kavsrave or Ras G... but in this hardcore/non-hardcore binary worldview, TD has to be defined as "raw" (and real/authentic/hardcore/blahblahblah). You couldn't have a higher production value than DJ Krust - is he non-hardcore? Because as soon as you start believing in this binary thing, the question has to arise - where do you draw the line?
Well it all depends on how you use these high production values. Terror Danjah's stuff still has that road vibe about it because thats the scene he's come out of, the street vibe is embedded in it still. It is still Grime through and through (at least his older stuff anyway). Someone like Kavsrave or Joy Orbison doesn't really have this behind them and to me, the music is less powerful as a result.