funky house sceptics, let me draw your attention to this

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Anyway, focusing on good vibez:

Amazed at how fabulous Marcus Nasty and Bassboy's "Let's Get Nasty" is, such a brilliant tune for MCs too. This was the tune that I was thinking of when I was comparing Rankin and Majestic's flow, though I have to apologise to Rankin' as I was listening back to a December set and he jumped on it perfectly.

It's like an even funkier version of "Turbulence".

Tim F, Thursday, 21 January 2010 12:26 (fourteen years ago) link

Also I wanted to mention, one thing I really like about both "People Keep Dancing" and "Tribal Day Dream" by Devine Collective is how ambitious they are, esp. from the guys that made "House Girls Pt. 1" - "People Keep Dancing" is like "Party Hard" somewhat only with all these eerie animal sounds and deep synth chords and flickers of horns and really gorgeous rolling percussion, not to mention great (albeit repetitive) vocals. They should release it as a double a-side with "Tribal Day Dream" - that'd be unstoppable.

"We inna jungle / and we out to make money inna bundle / that's why we play our bongos / 'cos there's nothing that we can't handle"

Tim F, Thursday, 21 January 2010 12:54 (fourteen years ago) link

Tim said:
>>It's like saying that, say, Piracy Funds Terrorism comprehensively rendered the differences >>between R&B, dancehall, reggaeton and funk carioca meaningless.

I think that is just plainly wrong Tim and typically curmudgeonly of you. You are overcooking you authenticity argument yet again for polemical purposes. Its more like a DJ playing east coast hip hop, crunk, west coast and a bit of R&B. Oneman's set is all or mostly from the same country which has several interrelated scenes, some of which clearly rank higher than others in your estimation.

Jon B (bass), Thursday, 21 January 2010 13:17 (fourteen years ago) link

There's a difference between saying "these are interrelated scenes" and "the divisions between these scenes are rendered meaningless".

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Thursday, 21 January 2010 13:40 (fourteen years ago) link

x-post

Yes and then I made a less dramatic comparison using Bugz in the Attic. That Bugz in the Attic is in my top 100 albums of the 00s so it's not like I think that sort of genre eclecticism is a bad thing.

I don't see why it's curmudgeonly of me to note that these are different scenes whose divisions are porous rather than "meaningless".

The fact is that 90% of funky DJs don't play "FACT music" (to use shorthand) and the DJs that do play that music don't play 90% of funky. There's nothing wrong with Martyn or OneMan, both of whom I really like, but pretending that there's no meaningful distinction between their sets and those played by the vast majority of funky DJs - granted, perhaps not funky DJs you listen to - is willful blindness.

And yeah, it's a bit like being wilfully blind to the divisions between east coast rap and southern rap. People saying "oh the divisions between these sounds are meaningless" when talking about sets which are 90% East Coast rap (albeit southern influenced) plus a few carefully selected southern tunes that go well with the former would also be pretty off-the-money in my opinion.

Its not about authenticity. I was just talking upthread about how quintessential of funky it is that the Nick Holder dub of "Oassis" is a hit on the scene. There's no geographical or sociological basis for my distinctions here, it's purely based on who plays what, and the stylistic distinctions that those choices reveal.

Tim F, Thursday, 21 January 2010 13:41 (fourteen years ago) link

Also how long has this track been knocking around? I've been hearing it on various mixes and only just cottoned onto how great it is.

Wanted to go back to and cosign Matt's comment here re Major Notes' "Friend of Mine", it's really creeped up on me too, one of my favourites now.

Tim F, Thursday, 21 January 2010 14:40 (fourteen years ago) link

tim f otm. you can actually make the divisions pretty easily in terms of whats out there so this party line about 'oh the lines dont matter, its all uk bass music' which is what fact and ra seem to promote is actually just an easy way of saying oh well we will cover all the technoy stuff we like and respect and by doing that we dont actually have to spend so much time on such and such whos strictly funky or grime or whatever. im more of a purist though and although i love oneman, i prefer sets which have a bit of identity. and i like the fact marcus nasty doesnt see much in untold or whoever to start playing them (even though i think he did play some ramadanman tune, dont know which one though) as then everything is just a big extremely dull blur. tbh if i dont want to hear one more person or read another journalist talk about how the borders are down, the divisions are blurred, and how its all just so absolutely fantastic (see: the recent issue of the wire with a piece about this, and god knows how many other commentaries). eclecticism/blurring just means exactly that = something indistinct.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 21 January 2010 15:56 (fourteen years ago) link

actually listening to that fabric elevator music cd, i think its probably time to label this stuff more conclusively. cos a lot of it isnt quite as hard to label as some people would make out.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Thursday, 21 January 2010 18:36 (fourteen years ago) link

I do generally agree that the eclecticism thing is getting a bit dry (the recent RA piece is awful), and that generally distinction and tunnel vision are good things, but I also tend to agree with Reynolds that the hardcore continuum's not what it used to be, so the argument that might have worked 5/10/15 years ago about tunnel vision is not necessarily as powerful. Lets face it, funky is not 2step, it hasn't yet achieved the kind of crossover's ukg did, and in fact the post garage world of funky, grime, dubstep and bassline is much much more niche oriented. Tunnel vision used to be great because you could get everything you wanted from one tunnel, and I'm just not sure that is as much the case as it used to be. Whether you agree with reynolds or not that the continuum has degenerated a bit, I don't think you can automatically assume that his other argument against eclecticism which Tim F and Titchy are supporting can function in exactly the same way. Of course this is not to detract from Tim's line that he prefers funky as funky, instead of funky not funky.

Jon B (bass), Friday, 22 January 2010 11:38 (fourteen years ago) link

My problem with funky-not-funky, especially when dubstep influences and slick loud production come in, is that it all blurs together into a kind of sound that just isn't very distinctive. It sounds bassy and boshing but only really in a way similar to a lot of breaks stuff that's been generally ignored for much of the decade. That recent Bok Bok mix is a case in point, there's a lack of femininity or bounce there and it feels just... not very much fun.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:28 (fourteen years ago) link

Also as people have been saying time and time again on this thread, funky is ridiculously eclectic *as it is*. My problem with a lot of the Jam City-esque mixes is that they dispense with the eclecticism in favour of a kind of monochrome womping.

Space Battle Rothko (Matt DC), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:31 (fourteen years ago) link

tbh i dont really care so much for a lot of what guys like bok bok and whoever seem to be deeply into. not even greena or untold or whoever (like i need anyone clumsily/goofily revisiting old wiley beats). maybe its too subtle for me, but its all just so BLAND. and monochrome. and grey. all so well put together and nicely smoothed over but nothing that really jumps out at you, which is its biggest crime. its all so fucking NICE. these guys are in many ways just like a new sort of idm, its just that the borders are a bit more blurred and everyones sort of working with each other, on a certain level, its just that where before the 'mainstream'/proper inside of these nuum scenes didnt really need any push or attention from the idmers or 'eclectic' home listening guys, now they do.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:40 (fourteen years ago) link

i even find that martyn fabric mix a bit dull - all very artfully done but god it just seems so samey.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:41 (fourteen years ago) link

actually i suppose the thing that makes them idm-not-idm is that theyre kinda dancey arent they. not just about lovely melodies for listening on headphones at home or whatever (though afx and them had dance tunes too if course). i dont want to just slot them into the nu idm thing though, thats prob a bit lazy. really though this stuff just fits into house or techno. post dubstep shmubstep. its just techno/house. yawn.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:45 (fourteen years ago) link

Titchy said:
>> i even find that martyn fabric mix a bit dull - all very artfully done but god it just seems so samey.

Apart from the fact it doesnt have any vocal tunes, which i can understand some people might miss, its certainly no more samey than any funky mix.

Jon B (bass), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:51 (fourteen years ago) link

perhaps samey is the wrong word then. i suppose i find it all too understated. maybe im just into trad techno-textured stuff. i dont think funky sets by say, marcus are samey though, theres such a variety of diff styles in all the rhythms he plays.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:53 (fourteen years ago) link

*just not into

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 12:53 (fourteen years ago) link

I don't think Marcus' sets are samey either. Just think, whether you are into the Martyn one or not, samey wouldn't really be the apt diss. A bit too euro in places is my problem with it.

Jon B (bass), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:07 (fourteen years ago) link

Obv there are quite a few people who think that you can't "everything that you want" from funky qua funky, and instead prefer the idea of funky as an one tool in a tool box. But whereas the line I've seen put out to explain this is that eclecticism is the go, really it's better to think of this as one big genre etc,I tend to think "maybe this person just isn't that into funky."

Which is fine, you know. And it makes sense that - given dubstep and funky and grime and bassline all do share certain similarities - that the kind of person who is/was quite into dubstep and what has emerged from it would also like at least some funky (and some bassline and etc.), and enjoy DJ sets and productions that meld these influences into some kind of coherent vibe - usually a kind of dark, percussive serious-but-fun thing, though of course there's room for a lot of diversity in that space.

But equally there must be lots of people who don't want or need to conceive of funky in this fashion, who feel that it sounds best and most itself in the context of DJ sets like Marcus Nasty's, in the form of productions like those of Devine Collective or Funkystepz or Donaeo or Fuzzy Logick or Naughty Raver or Scotty D - else there wouldn't be a scene, I wouldn't be able to count literally hundreds of funky tracks I loved last year. For me, and for what I have to assume are many listeners like me, funky is enough of a world by itself, it has the same depth that UK Garage had (and I followed garage as closely as I do funky now from late 1999 onwards, and in terms of depth-of-affection and the number/quality of great tracks I see them as about equal), and sounds great when mixed with itself - this being less about some notion of tunnel vision and more about what feels right.

Turning this issue into a question about "the continuum" gets this entirely backwards - ultimately everyone's just trying to justify liking the music they happen to like, so they twist and turn this notion the continuum to suit that. I think, Jon, you think I'm a curmudgeonly purist in part because my position on "the continuum" is that it only makes sense with respect to a particular population (i.e. based around London radio, MCs, etc.) - but this is not an insistence on the superior quality of the music made by that population; rather, I think that making its meaning any less restrictive turns it into something too meaningless and waftingly qualitative, like pipecock's notions of soul. Contrary to that, I think whether something = part of "the continuum" has little if anything to do with whether it's good music. Similarly, if a particular instance of eclecticism is good or bad, it has nothing to do with whether "the continuum has degenerated."

What annoys me is this attempt to objectivise funky's perceived inadequacy. The two most common critical arguments I see with respect to this music are "funky is insufficient on its own" and of course the post-XLR8R line, such as when URB say " Overall, it’s been tough to gauge a concrete grasp of what’s artistically and creatively fruitful in the genre of UK Funky. However, certain DJs and producers are giving the genre a backbone along with the pop cheese. Producers like Roska (or Mentor Roska, as he’s affectionally referred to), Cooly G, and Geeneus have all been pivotal in the shake-up of UK Funky, providing intrigue, depth, and necessary weight to a genre dominated by percussion and diva vocals."

Given the failure of any such writings to ever demonstrate anything beyond the most cursory familiarity with the genre I can't help but feel people are turning a subjective "I didn't feel this was worth investigating further" into an objective "there's actually nothing to see here, folks."

Which strikes me as much more curmudgeonly than me offering the occasional sideways jab at the same tendencies.

Or perhaps what's even more depressing is that the most politely framed jabs on my part will immediately call forth people telling me how wrong and unfair I am, never mind the (again, literally) hundreds of enthusiastic tl;dr recommendations of tracks I've made here, the vast majority being greeted with the sound of tumbleweed and crickets.

Whereas - and I don't mean this to be snide Jon, it's more of an exhortation for participation - I don't think you've ever even mentioned a funky track you like on this thread aside from Hard House Banton and Kode9.

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:10 (fourteen years ago) link

Possibly I exaggerated, but I reckon I have individually recommended at least 100+ tracks on this thread by this point.

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:22 (fourteen years ago) link

i think the crickets might be b/c so many of the tracks you mention are only found in the middle of some 4-hr rinse set. seriously if it's not available as an mp3 you can't expect anyone to track it down. i'd pretty much never heard of the devine collective until just now. idk it seems like you're the one policing the funky boundary a bit too heavily here ("proper" funky???) and reducing it to "stuff marcus nasty plays", and pretty much misrepresenting every artist who makes what you call "fact magazine music".

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:26 (fourteen years ago) link

Seriously if you wait for funky tracks to emerge as standalone mp3s then you're missing out on 95% of what's good.

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:32 (fourteen years ago) link

But here's "House Girls Part One", a massive anthem for over a year now. And not just with Marcus Nasty - with Mak10, with Crazy Cousinz, with Majesty, with Roska, with Ill Blu, with Hard House Banton, with Shox, with Dapper, with Il-Mana...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=POe6EjRA0wI

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:33 (fourteen years ago) link

thx! am in montreal right now but will listen when i get back.

i mean, i just don't have the time to listen to 4-hr sets, or indeed the inclination to listen to anything at the shockingly poor bitrate rinse sets are uploaded at.

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:37 (fourteen years ago) link

and in naming crazy cousinz, roska, ill blu, illmana and hard house banton you've named producers who are lynchpins of funky-inclined "fact magazine music" sets!

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:39 (fourteen years ago) link

i mean, i don't get where your impression that those producers are being unfairly dismissed or maligned comes from, even that urb para you quoted isn't actively negative (and tbh i've never heard of urb so can't really care about whatever they say).

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:40 (fourteen years ago) link

rinse sets sound better if you play them on a proper system (i sometimes burn them on to cd).

house girls is MASSSSIVE. never knew who it was by til just now though lol.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:40 (fourteen years ago) link

oh shit "house girls" is amazing yes, can't get enough of that organ sound - am sure i've heard it out before actually. probably at night slugs, in fact

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:45 (fourteen years ago) link

night slugs = home of fact funky.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:46 (fourteen years ago) link

Ha ha well aside from roska and 2 out of a billion Hard House Banton tracks, I'd note that pretty much none of those DJ sets that emerge as downloadable internet MP3s in fact do have all the vocal funky tunes these guys play when you see them live.

I mean you can't seriously tell me that the Smoke Less Fuels sets or FACT sets would keep you up to date with tunes like "Friend of Mine" or "Kiss", to name the two biggest vocal anthems at the moment. That's not a criticism, but let's not pretend there's no difference there.

In the same way that I wouldn't expect any of the above DJs except Roska to play "Nike", as great as it is.

The very fact that everyone immediately recognises "House Girls" but have no idea who Devine Collective are kinda proves my point! You'd immediately recognise "Tribal Conga" too, trust me.

Lex are you really saying you can't see how describing Scratcha DVA/Cooly G/Roska as adding a "necessary weight" to the scene is a slight???

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:49 (fourteen years ago) link

yeah, but it's fairly mild and non-specific - incredibly lazy of course but it's hardly singling out [insert "proper" funky producer here] as a lightweight.

also half the djs you favour over "fact music" have actually djed at night slugs so... [i don't know how to do that shrug emoticon that jordan always does :( ]

لوووووووووووووووووووول (lex pretend), Friday, 22 January 2010 13:54 (fourteen years ago) link

Sure, and I never said the borders aren't porous, but there's a difference between asking "isn't Roska still a funky DJ when he plays at Night Slugs?" (answer: of course) and saying "there's no meaningful division between Martyn and Geneeus' funky tracks"

yeah, but it's fairly mild and non-specific - incredibly lazy of course but it's hardly singling out [insert "proper" funky producer here] as a lightweight.

That's because no-one who ever adopts this position ever actually listens long or hard enough to find out who might be lightweight.

it's like how minimal skeptics used to say "oh yeah, villalobos is great, but everyone else just sounds like insects copulating under a microscope, it's all the same." And if you asked them they could never say who exactly fit into the "all the same" category.

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 13:58 (fourteen years ago) link

Also Lex I would have thought you'd be all over Screama's funky productions by now given his producer tag sample is a woman saying "Complex Simplicity!"

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:07 (fourteen years ago) link

"Obv there are quite a few people who think that you can't "everything that you want" from funky qua funky, and instead prefer the idea of funky as an one tool in a tool box. But whereas the line I've seen put out to explain this is that eclecticism is the go, really it's better to think of this as one big genre etc,I tend to think "maybe this person just isn't that into funky."

@Tim: Well, beyond the fact that you might need to accept that not everyone loves funky in its entirety and as wholeheartedly as you, “getting everything you want from funky” is very dependent on what you want. If you're a writer who lives in Australia, then naturally what you want is to hear music that excites you more than pretty much all other genres. However if you're a producer or DJ in London, your needs aren't the same. Core pillars of the nuum are ownership and the power to change yet if you're Untold or Shortstuff, "owning" or properly participating in UK funky is less of an option than if you're Marcus Nasty or Supa D, because there are cultural barriers that inhibit or at least slow down this dialog, ie if you're not from the ends, you're not from the ends, and the ends invented and owns UK funky.

Much of this 130 funky-inspired music of oneman, bok bok, me n dusk, kode9, needs to be seen in this context, and I think its healthy that there's a musical dialog going on, primarily through Rinse, and yet also inevitable that it will be two parallel paths rather than one big whole, due to the nature of the backgrounds of the two groups.

The pros and cons of mono-genre purism v multi-genre eclectism depend massively on the health and breadth of the genres at a given time. Much of the discussion around funky-influenced ex-dubsteppers like oneman should be far more of a reflection of the state of dubstep now (narrow in breadth and universally noisy and rigid) than the state of UK funky. You may want to say that "unifying concepts like "UK Bass"' are "frankly awful" but I would at least commend people having learnt that sonic and creative diversity in a scene - which you now commend in funky but is broadly lost in dubstep - is healthy. Using a term "UK bass" has advantages because it seeks to define as little as possible, leaving room for creativity, while not attempting to be a genre of any kind.

@titchy: "eclecticism/blurring just means exactly that = something indistinct."

Not necessarily. The devil's in the details on this one. The pros and cons of "eclecticism/blurring" depend massively on the state and the sonic distances between the genres that you're blurring at a given time. Eclecticism rightly has a bad name because at worst sets are erratic and incoherent. but at the other extreme lies monochrome purist sets, where you're not sure if the DJ has changed the record yet or even if he even has more than one in his box. So I would argue that eclecticism between related styles can sometimes produce very interesting mutations, especially when you consider the relationship between DJing and production (DJ finds new blend, producer re-engineers unrelated elements to form new mutation, DJ plays that, mixes it with third record....). Both eclecticism and purism can be done very well and very badly – and I think people should be judged upon the results they produce, not the methods they use to get there.

Finally Tim, you need to let that XLR8R feature go. I was asked to do it, turned it down and sent them your name. I don’t know why you didn’t end up writing it but it’s clearly ignorant and over-reaches itself, rise above it fella!

Martinclark, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:08 (fourteen years ago) link

Well, beyond the fact that you might need to accept that not everyone loves funky in its entirety and as wholeheartedly as you

I do! All I'm saying is, people should say "I'm not so into funky" rather than tying themselves into knots redefining it into something they can like, or pretending that they do like funky, really, just not the lightweight stuff that deserves to be dismissed.

If you're a writer who lives in Australia, then naturally what you want is to hear music that excites you more than pretty much all other genres. However if you're a producer or DJ in London, your needs aren't the same. Core pillars of the nuum are ownership and the power to change yet if you're Untold or Shortstuff, "owning" or properly participating in UK funky is less of an option than if you're Marcus Nasty or Supa D, because there are cultural barriers that inhibit or at least slow down this dialog, ie if you're not from the ends, you're not from the ends, and the ends invented and owns UK funky.

Yes, I get this. Again, I'm not complaining about Untold or Shortstuff - who both make pretty great music. I'm questioning the erasure of any stylistic distinction between them and Supa D by people talking about funky.

Much of this 130 funky-inspired music of oneman, bok bok, me n dusk, kode9, needs to be seen in this context, and I think its healthy that there's a musical dialog going on, primarily through Rinse, and yet also inevitable that it will be two parallel paths rather thanone big whole, due to the nature of the backgrounds of the two groups.

I agree with this. The only point I'm making is the one you make right here. In fact I challenge anyone to point to somewhere where I've even rubbished OneMan, Bok Bok etc. except saying that I thought the Bok Bok/L-Vis Night Slugs 2009 Dubs set was a bit drab.

Much of the discussion around funky-influenced ex-dubsteppers like oneman should be far more of a reflection of the state of dubstep now (narrow in breadth and universally noisy and rigid) than the state of UK funky.

Totally agree with this also.

Finally Tim, you need to let that XLR8R feature go. I was asked to do it, turned it down and sent them your name. I don’t know why you didn’t end up writing it but it’s clearly ignorant and over-reaches itself, rise above it fella!

I'm quoting from the Urb piece now Martin. It's more difficult to rise above when people keep making the same mistake over and over again. And as I've said before I appreciate you putting my name down, even if on paper it appears even more counter-intuitive!

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:24 (fourteen years ago) link

Oh I see how you misread me now Martin - my comment about the toolbox perspective wasn't meant to refer to DJs and producers like Shortstuff - more other listeners who say "I'm not so into listening to funky on its own." Obv your point about producers and DJs having less freedom in that regard than listeners is totally correct.

Generally speaking, I think people here imagine I'm making much more controversial claims than I am in fact making.

And really, if people aren't prepared to make the investment of listening to radio sets and the like, then they're... not doing anything wrong obviously, but they're missing out on the most exciting music in the world. Keeping up with funky is a hell of a lot easier than keeping up with any of its 90s equivs would have been - as I think my example demonstrates to the point of excess.

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:31 (fourteen years ago) link

Anyway, fabulous Ill Blu BBC set from last month here:

http://dunknowdablogspot.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/01-ill-blu-mix-bbc-1xtra-16th-dec-09.mp3

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:34 (fourteen years ago) link

'truthful' is a great track. i wouldnt sign up for the uk funky branch davidians just yet though....

Michael B, Friday, 22 January 2010 14:38 (fourteen years ago) link

this post amused me:
http://www.dissensus.com//showthread.php?10353-New-Dancehall-mix-by-Unknown-Soulja&p=218091#post218091
i will say this... its much more worthwhile for you to download this mix than the 100000th amateur mashing together of the same old boring tunes that people keep doing. one token funky tune, some shit dubstep, some stupid 'wonky' and a token grime track.
those mixes are boring. that bollocks needs to stop now. this one is better. happy now U.S?

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 15:49 (fourteen years ago) link

I don't see why it has to stop more than anything else. Yeah, that guy luka is a bit of cock.

Jon B (bass), Friday, 22 January 2010 16:08 (fourteen years ago) link

i thought he was kina otm tbh. i was listening to that recent ish rankin set with seb chu where rankin was mcing over a load of diff stuff from old ukg to trudgestep and some other 'eclectic' bits and while it was cool to hear rankin on some other styles, it wasnt nearly as fun as when marcus is backing him. though that might be to do with seb chu rather than anything else. i wouldnt mind hearing oneman do some sets with more mcs just so see how the vibe flows.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 16:19 (fourteen years ago) link

Well, Luka never liked dubstep in any form whatsoever.

So if he thinks that dubstep is garbage, I could see where that would lead him to hate on eclecticism that revolves around dubstep with some token grime and funky thrown in.

I'm totally with Tim when he says that there is a very clear difference between mainstream Funky and between the whole Notts style, even if that difference is primarily in its audience and not necessarily in the music. But I live far far way from LDN, so how would I know for certain?

quiero un lobo domesticado (Siah Alan), Friday, 22 January 2010 16:23 (fourteen years ago) link

Notts style? what like spamfoot n littechop?

Martinclark, Friday, 22 January 2010 16:33 (fourteen years ago) link

Its what Boomkat has been calling Shortstuff and Brackles.

Call it whatever you like, I don't care.

quiero un lobo domesticado (Siah Alan), Friday, 22 January 2010 19:13 (fourteen years ago) link

I'll think you'll find that out of the people who post on this thread I'm not one of the ones who has any financial interest in it. I don't write for any zines, work for any shops, or say own a successful label.

And that wasn't a dig at Luka, he doesn't like dubstep, its not a negative character trait its just his taste. Now I'm going to stay out of this thread, and Dissensus.

quiero un lobo domesticado (Siah Alan), Friday, 22 January 2010 19:41 (fourteen years ago) link

i dont have any financial interest in funky either. fwiw. but my mates dont write for fact, run night slugs or anything like that, i dont run fact, nor night slugs, or write for urb or whoever. id like to though. wouldnt mind a record label either. labels holler at a poster.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 21:15 (fourteen years ago) link

webzine owners too for that matter lol.

titchy (titchyschneiderMk2), Friday, 22 January 2010 21:16 (fourteen years ago) link

i thought he was kina otm tbh. i was listening to that recent ish rankin set with seb chu where rankin was mcing over a load of diff stuff from old ukg to trudgestep and some other 'eclectic' bits and while it was cool to hear rankin on some other styles, it wasnt nearly as fun as when marcus is backing him. though that might be to do with seb chu rather than anything else. i wouldnt mind hearing oneman do some sets with more mcs just so see how the vibe flows.

I think this was maybe Seb Chu more than anything else - a bit disappointing as I think he's an amazing producer ("You Got Me" 4 eva!).

Tim F, Friday, 22 January 2010 22:30 (fourteen years ago) link

Illmanna & Oziah ft. Doctor - Wind For Me

Banger.

http://www.sendspace.com/file/9706r8

Tim F, Sunday, 24 January 2010 06:22 (fourteen years ago) link

Ach, if you're around:

You know that track you snipped back in July and asked if it was Devine Collective's "Gotta Have It"? Well, right group wrong track, it's actually called "Night Train".

Tim F, Sunday, 24 January 2010 12:37 (fourteen years ago) link


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