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Showing posts with label DUBSTEP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DUBSTEP. Show all posts
Monday, 12 December 2011
Monday, 10 October 2011
Wednesday, 5 October 2011
Snoop Dogg and MistaJam Mixtape - Throw your Dubs Up
Snoop Dogg has decided to go British and release a Dubstep mix tape with the help of the pioneer of Dubstep DJ MistaJam (has his own show on BBC 1xtra at 8 - 10 pm. Always gives the latest of Dubstep)
Click Here to download
Click Here to download
Saturday, 27 August 2011
Delilah - Go
TeamUK!!
Her voice is banging! She was also in one of the chase and statuses songs I can't remember which one though.
Tell me this song is not SICK
Her voice is banging! She was also in one of the chase and statuses songs I can't remember which one though.
Tell me this song is not SICK
Friday, 27 May 2011
SBTRKT - Wildfire
sorry but I had to re-blog this again
this is a tuuunneee
sounds more Grimey that Dubstep. It like Grime but painted over with Dubstep
this is a tuuunneee
sounds more Grimey that Dubstep. It like Grime but painted over with Dubstep
Monday, 23 May 2011
Katy B — Easy Please Me (Official Video)
THIS GIRL IS TOO FUCKING MUCH
AND SO IS M.I.A
I wish I was them man :'(
AND SO IS M.I.A
I wish I was them man :'(
Sunday, 22 May 2011
DJ Fresh ft. Sian Evans 'Louder' or better known as the "Lucozade advert" song probably
SO for all you wondering what that amazing Lucozade song, this is it!
I LOVE LOVE LOVE LOOOOVE HOW DUBSTEP HAS SPREAD NOW
I always was proud to be a Souf Londonah (said in the south London/ghetto accent) but this just makes feel like "...B) you know!"
I LOVE LOVE LOVE LOOOOVE HOW DUBSTEP HAS SPREAD NOW
I always was proud to be a Souf Londonah (said in the south London/ghetto accent) but this just makes feel like "...B) you know!"
Sunday, 9 January 2011
Clare Maguire - Ain't Nobody (Breakage Remix Official)
I don't know whether I already but the remix on here but what a sssoonnnggggg esp the piano bit
Wednesday, 5 January 2011
James Blake - Limit To Your Love
Honestly I cannot be bothered to do the 'Next Big Thing in 2011' if your big on music you'll prob have a idea if not click on this >> to go to the BBC website where the people I had in mind are there.
But for the first song of 2011 for me. This song is :O
It has so much soul it unbelievable. Someone said on the Youtube comments:
reminds me of london, that feeling you get when you walk around the suburbs around it, got that urban feel to it. so eerie
thescatterbrain123 3 hours ago
Couldn't agree more.
James Blake is also tipped off on the BBC radio hot 4 2011 (well, well)so who knows what will happen.
I also have a feeling that Dubstep will become HUGE this year, well in the UK anyway, not so underground. BBC 1extra did a 12 hour takeover of Dubstep and I must say it was delightful. You may think BBC radio don't know anything about music but trust me they know more about the underground scene more than the next person.
how beautiful is this?
Oh and the orginal is by Fiest it has a different but equally magnificent feel to it.
But for the first song of 2011 for me. This song is :O
It has so much soul it unbelievable. Someone said on the Youtube comments:
reminds me of london, that feeling you get when you walk around the suburbs around it, got that urban feel to it. so eerie
thescatterbrain123 3 hours ago
Couldn't agree more.
James Blake is also tipped off on the BBC radio hot 4 2011 (well, well)so who knows what will happen.
I also have a feeling that Dubstep will become HUGE this year, well in the UK anyway, not so underground. BBC 1extra did a 12 hour takeover of Dubstep and I must say it was delightful. You may think BBC radio don't know anything about music but trust me they know more about the underground scene more than the next person.
how beautiful is this?
Oh and the orginal is by Fiest it has a different but equally magnificent feel to it.
Saturday, 4 December 2010
Chase & Status - End Credits ft Plan B PRE-ORDER
WANT TO WATCH THIS MOVIE SOO BAD
HARRY BROWN :)
At work experience (lucky enough to work at Film London) he was making a movie call ill manors
I was going to go on the film set but flipping chavs were making the crews job really hard >:/ so pissed off read the script though hmmm...
anyway the movies coming out in September can't wait to see if what I saw in my head is better or worse.
this track is fucking EPIC more drum and bass thab dubstep but you know
HARRY BROWN :)
At work experience (lucky enough to work at Film London) he was making a movie call ill manors
I was going to go on the film set but flipping chavs were making the crews job really hard >:/ so pissed off read the script though hmmm...
anyway the movies coming out in September can't wait to see if what I saw in my head is better or worse.
this track is fucking EPIC more drum and bass thab dubstep but you know
Mt Eden Dubstep - Sierra Leone [HD]
My friend showed this to me about 2 years ago
first dubstep song I ever heard
turn up the motherfucking bass!
first dubstep song I ever heard
turn up the motherfucking bass!
NEW TRACK ALERT: Kano - Spaceship
What do you think
staying with the roots with the dubstep feel (its switching mainstream now fur real)
Kano one of the orginal of Grime :D (yeah yeah)
I think it might grow on me, right now though, I'm just loving the bass DOOF!
Oh and it's Chase and Status produced B)
Urban BRITAIN'S SoundTrack (types of music that came from Britain) part 1
Kk
So my nationality is British (born and bred) and I love music so why not mash those together to create a tribute to British music? ey? One of the things I LOVE about London in particular is that anything is acceptable and welcomed. Britain is not only diverse in people (in the main cities it sure is) but in type of music, art, theatre etc. There are just as many 'underground scenes' that are going on as well as the mainstream. For a lowdown check out the reliable ;) wiki: Music from UK
Garage
What: you could say the mother of UK underground genres
Quite underground but known widespread. Loved form BNP skinheads to ghetto black boys from South London. If your British you SHOULD remember this song it was MASSIVE.
When: Probably been around before I was born :S (which is 1994) but was big in the early 2000s.
Where: England I think :/
best example:
my uncle was in this pack :D
Bassline:
What: Big box, Little box, cardboard box. Hehe I'm messing but baseline does what it says on the tin. A heavy Heavy bass line bouncing all over the gaff. Happy and fun but with a mix of garage glitches to keep it darker.Not to get it mixed with Garage mind you, big mistake I made. Sounding like an intro to a CBBC program set on an estate.
When: Midlands, apparently Sheffeild? Oi Oi Sheffield! Citizens must of been happs when this music got big.
Where: Well up in the oh so happy ends of England as everyone not form the South LOVES to remind everyone in the South. In the town centre, after getting a pill of the mandy and heading off to the one of five clubs in the city (okay this is me being an uppidity Londoner now, you lot might have a couple more.)
pow pow pow B) this song reminds me of year 8 or 9 (aged 13). Those were the days man shit was less complicated.
GRIME (DONE KNOWWWWWWWW)
What:Pow yeah you don't know about me :D. Grime WAS/IS the rudeboy/ghetto boy/girl music. The godfather of Grime? still disputed but in my opinion Wiley fam. Dunknow.
When: Don't knwo when it started but to ghetto kids I remember it been played in the back of the buses in year 8 ( aged 13) times so blew up around 4 years ago? I know to many songs because they were played round me all the time.
Where: London, South and East
Grime is not so grimey now but this was the song
stereotype people who listen: ANY age. Little urban ghetto youths who is in a gang who like weed and girls and money who talk slang, got kicked out of school. Prob stabbed someone. Or two. Peckham, Brixton etc. Majority Black people listen.
DUN KNOW UK REPRESENT AAAW I'M GETTIN A LIL BIT GASSED STILL(<---london :s="" a="" am="" big="" br="" getting="" headed="" i="" little="" m="" now="" oh="" representing="" slang="" speak="" the="" translate:="" uk="" yeah="">
Dubstep
What: One of the undergrounds that is now going into mainstream over here (thanks to the omg talented and beautiful Katy B from the BRITS) is Dubstep..
When: Started in a South London Bedroom somewhere, Dubstep developed from garage music at the end of the 1990s and in the early 2000s, using elements of drum'n'bass, techno, and dub (<---i be="" bothered="" br="" can="" explain="" t="" those.="" to="">Where: South London.
stereotype people who listen:
think 16-35 maybe more, in a little dingy room at a house party in South London (where the music originated from)with LOADS of weed smoke EVERYWHEREand alot more drugs and even more alcohol. Everyone just going crazy basically. Bass mind blowing. Floors vibrating. Neighbors getting pissed. Yeaaaah.
BEST EXAMPLE:
UK funky house (TIME TO GET FUNKY!)
What: yeaaaah. Its all about Funky.
Where: It wasn't orginally from the UK I think from NY by a artist called Dennis Ferrer but UK adopted with a smile and made it a bit into their own but not straying to far. Soulful house with the main ingredient: AFRICAN BEATS! AYYYE JAAYHOO.
When:Around the late 2000 so I remember hearing it around 2007?
stereotypes of people who listen: was pretty much black people at the beginning but spread to all. If you loved raves/ parties you listened to it. ANY AGE. AT ALL.
There are two distinctive types I think theres the mellow like this song which made it come on the radar. If your British you should remember this. If your from London and don't remember this then you should be ashamed of yourself. THIS WAS HUUUUGE.
and what it more or less evolved to:
If you were at a party/rave and you didn't know the dances or words...you were a fail.
with a large population of Africans in urban cities like London were it the popularity SKY ROCKETED. It was/is loved off.
Bashment/Dancehall
What: is the more recent loved music although it has always been loved.
Where:Music that originates from Jamaica mostly also other Carribean places too. When:Since I was in primary school so aaahhh.... like before I was born.
stereotypes of people who listen:
Jamaican people, African people. If you know Jamaican or african people. You'll heard it. ANY AGE. Let me give you a example my mum who is 35 bangs it out of her car and that's normal.
Again if you don't know the dances or the words...you are a fail.
ATTITUDE GYAL!
more or less changed into this..
Gazza me seh!
Now vybz is coming with all his love songs
now this song has just come and taken EVERYONE. I remember when a quarter of the London youth population decided to go to Hyde Park one rare HOT summer's day and my friend decided to bring her radio play all these bashment songs VERY LOUDLY from her bag. We went into McDonalds on Oxford Street this song came on every black person no matter where they were from was singing this :D. It was such a good day even if there was fights and police vans and everything else there. But that's London for ya, never a dull (boring) day.
then Nicki Minaj decided to slip herself in :D.
In part two I will do the Nu, Indie and Rock types.
By god I love London---i>---london>
So my nationality is British (born and bred) and I love music so why not mash those together to create a tribute to British music? ey? One of the things I LOVE about London in particular is that anything is acceptable and welcomed. Britain is not only diverse in people (in the main cities it sure is) but in type of music, art, theatre etc. There are just as many 'underground scenes' that are going on as well as the mainstream. For a lowdown check out the reliable ;) wiki: Music from UK
Garage
What: you could say the mother of UK underground genres
Quite underground but known widespread. Loved form BNP skinheads to ghetto black boys from South London. If your British you SHOULD remember this song it was MASSIVE.
When: Probably been around before I was born :S (which is 1994) but was big in the early 2000s.
Where: England I think :/
best example:
my uncle was in this pack :D
Bassline:
What: Big box, Little box, cardboard box. Hehe I'm messing but baseline does what it says on the tin. A heavy Heavy bass line bouncing all over the gaff. Happy and fun but with a mix of garage glitches to keep it darker.Not to get it mixed with Garage mind you, big mistake I made. Sounding like an intro to a CBBC program set on an estate.
When: Midlands, apparently Sheffeild? Oi Oi Sheffield! Citizens must of been happs when this music got big.
Where: Well up in the oh so happy ends of England as everyone not form the South LOVES to remind everyone in the South. In the town centre, after getting a pill of the mandy and heading off to the one of five clubs in the city (okay this is me being an uppidity Londoner now, you lot might have a couple more.)
pow pow pow B) this song reminds me of year 8 or 9 (aged 13). Those were the days man shit was less complicated.
GRIME (DONE KNOWWWWWWWW)
What:Pow yeah you don't know about me :D. Grime WAS/IS the rudeboy/ghetto boy/girl music. The godfather of Grime? still disputed but in my opinion Wiley fam. Dunknow.
When: Don't knwo when it started but to ghetto kids I remember it been played in the back of the buses in year 8 ( aged 13) times so blew up around 4 years ago? I know to many songs because they were played round me all the time.
Where: London, South and East
Grime is not so grimey now but this was the song
stereotype people who listen: ANY age. Little urban ghetto youths who is in a gang who like weed and girls and money who talk slang, got kicked out of school. Prob stabbed someone. Or two. Peckham, Brixton etc. Majority Black people listen.
DUN KNOW UK REPRESENT AAAW I'M GETTIN A LIL BIT GASSED STILL(<---london :s="" a="" am="" big="" br="" getting="" headed="" i="" little="" m="" now="" oh="" representing="" slang="" speak="" the="" translate:="" uk="" yeah="">
Dubstep
What: One of the undergrounds that is now going into mainstream over here (thanks to the omg talented and beautiful Katy B from the BRITS) is Dubstep..
When: Started in a South London Bedroom somewhere, Dubstep developed from garage music at the end of the 1990s and in the early 2000s, using elements of drum'n'bass, techno, and dub (<---i be="" bothered="" br="" can="" explain="" t="" those.="" to="">Where: South London.
stereotype people who listen:
think 16-35 maybe more, in a little dingy room at a house party in South London (where the music originated from)with LOADS of weed smoke EVERYWHEREand alot more drugs and even more alcohol. Everyone just going crazy basically. Bass mind blowing. Floors vibrating. Neighbors getting pissed. Yeaaaah.
BEST EXAMPLE:
UK funky house (TIME TO GET FUNKY!)
What: yeaaaah. Its all about Funky.
Where: It wasn't orginally from the UK I think from NY by a artist called Dennis Ferrer but UK adopted with a smile and made it a bit into their own but not straying to far. Soulful house with the main ingredient: AFRICAN BEATS! AYYYE JAAYHOO.
When:Around the late 2000 so I remember hearing it around 2007?
stereotypes of people who listen: was pretty much black people at the beginning but spread to all. If you loved raves/ parties you listened to it. ANY AGE. AT ALL.
There are two distinctive types I think theres the mellow like this song which made it come on the radar. If your British you should remember this. If your from London and don't remember this then you should be ashamed of yourself. THIS WAS HUUUUGE.
and what it more or less evolved to:
If you were at a party/rave and you didn't know the dances or words...you were a fail.
with a large population of Africans in urban cities like London were it the popularity SKY ROCKETED. It was/is loved off.
Bashment/Dancehall
What: is the more recent loved music although it has always been loved.
Where:Music that originates from Jamaica mostly also other Carribean places too. When:Since I was in primary school so aaahhh.... like before I was born.
stereotypes of people who listen:
Jamaican people, African people. If you know Jamaican or african people. You'll heard it. ANY AGE. Let me give you a example my mum who is 35 bangs it out of her car and that's normal.
Again if you don't know the dances or the words...you are a fail.
ATTITUDE GYAL!
more or less changed into this..
Gazza me seh!
Now vybz is coming with all his love songs
now this song has just come and taken EVERYONE. I remember when a quarter of the London youth population decided to go to Hyde Park one rare HOT summer's day and my friend decided to bring her radio play all these bashment songs VERY LOUDLY from her bag. We went into McDonalds on Oxford Street this song came on every black person no matter where they were from was singing this :D. It was such a good day even if there was fights and police vans and everything else there. But that's London for ya, never a dull (boring) day.
then Nicki Minaj decided to slip herself in :D.
In part two I will do the Nu, Indie and Rock types.
By god I love London---i>---london>
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