It's an approach that hasn't done dancehall any harm.
having said that, it was a bit weird seeing brackles drop So Solid at the only night slugs rave i went and seeing everyone go nuts for it. i just thought, don't lie - you all hated So Solid when they were on top of the pops.
might be being too cynical tho?
Never liked 21 seconds and still don't really. 'Haters' tho.
My number one at-the-time UKG purchase is 'OI!'
sorry not exactly what this turned out to be about but couldn't resist with that thread title:
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listening to rinse today, grime does seem frozen in time.![]()
Coming from the angle of someone who is a bit...ahem...older than some, I think that mr UFO's last mix (the Hessle/Fabric one) provides one solution to this (most reggae dances being the other...), given that it has SO many signifiers of UK dance musics both past and present, presented in an interesting way, at pace.
This approach seems to me to be a way around this, using a sort of JA approach to sound/signifyers etc- not being afraid of the past whilst avoiding dropping into retro fetishism.
Maybe, but regardless - how much weight does that hold if half of the crowd were 12 at the time? There's definitely an increase in requests for "old UK Garage like So Solid" in certain circles, for whatever reason.
Sometimes it's easy to forget that today's 18 year olds will have never heard a lot of these tracks played out loud in a club.
i missed him as i think i was watching egyptian lover at the time, but if anyone saw martyn's set at bloc back in march, can they confirm what a mate of mine said - that he dropped simply red in the middle of his set?? this would truly be pushing the envelope of nostalgia/relevancy/taste.