grime and the hardcore continuum

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something stringent's last post made me think of though: do you ever think the "pirate sound" will swing back around to house - even obliquely? - the way it did in 97? that kind of "reaffirmation"? i don't think it's entirely out of the question, given how i doubt anyone could have predicted speed garage in 94 anymore than they could have predicted grime in 97.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 23 January 2004 05:50 (twenty years ago) link

the other part of the ethos that is continuous from 92 to 04 is the 'forward' imperative -- gotta keep advancing, reach the future faster than the other guy. which in itself explains why the 'Nuum's gone through so many twists and reinventions and reversals

yeah i think you could trace the prehistory of the 'Nuum back before '92, shut up and dance obivously, but the elements are coalescing all through the eighties--pirates etc. probably even further back -- i just read this book Bass Culture on reggae and they actually had dubplates and prerelease specials in the UK in the late 1950s!

i really think there could be a 2step reinvention soonish, the ladies massive aren't digging the Grime (judging by some things i overheard n the basement of blackmarket last summer, anyway), they will assert their Will. the fact that grime raves have no dance element just people nodding to rhymes sort of DEMANDS a return to groove at some point. whether it's 4/4 house vibe as strongo imagines or 98/99 2step we'll have to see, it's almost long enough now since 2step that it could be revived.

i dug out a 99 tape for someone the other day, and it brought a tear to my eye -- the music was so criss and glossy, it was like the scene manufacturing its own sunshine. the sheer sound quality of it was stunning, so bright and clean c.f the cruddy sonix of grime

simonr, Friday, 23 January 2004 15:56 (twenty years ago) link

speaking of that era, it's fun tracing even small sonic routes like:
Gabrielle - "Sunshine (Exemen/Wookie mix)" - - ->
Sweet Female Attitude - "Flowers (Sunship mix)" - - ->
Gabrielle - "Out Of Reach (Sunship mix)"

Paul (scifisoul), Friday, 23 January 2004 18:37 (twenty years ago) link

yeah i was thinking a lot of the rush of skepta's 'thuggin ruggin' was the startling 2step zigzag nod, how unexpectedly satisfying!

prima fassy (bob), Friday, 23 January 2004 20:56 (twenty years ago) link

yeah, i seriously doubt it will ever go back to 4/4...in the house sense anyway. because of the tempo change, if nothing else. a return to 2-step (or even straight R&B...not even necessarily the kind that fed into 2-step in the first place) seems much more likely.

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Friday, 23 January 2004 20:59 (twenty years ago) link

i work in romford, home of suburban base etc and i was having a conversation with the other young fella who works there and some of his mates who come down to keep him company. what i found interesting was that they were right at the hub of hardcore----jungle, that was the sound of romford, but they experienced 2step as the schism. they felt that conspicuous consumpion stuff, 'sexy music for sexy people' as he put it, disdainfully, ran counter to the hardcore ethos. which it did. i was arguing that those things may have applied at twice as nice (never went) and those central london places, but if you went out in stratford to those nights (which i defineitly did do) people were definetly raving. it was a rave, they might have been wearing suits and loafers, but they were fairly cheap suits. you wouldn't have seen any coke really, just lots and lots of weed. hmmm, this is not relevant any more....

', Saturday, 24 January 2004 00:15 (twenty years ago) link

simonr OTM; there is such a poignancy now to the late 90s boom years

robin carmody (robin carmody), Saturday, 24 January 2004 00:48 (twenty years ago) link

2-step will probably always be my sentimental favourite music.

Adam, "Champagne Dance" is from late '01. The Destruction Mix is an interesting version to track down because it sounds very much like common grime-pop, whereas the original was on more of a soca-beat tip a la K2 Family's "Bouncin' Flow" or the Steve Gurley mix of Zed Bias's "Neighbourhood". The Sticky mix is also tops.

Re: a potential return to house - I'm uncertain as to whether it's worth closely following the urban house scene. It's where a lot of the good times/dancing part of the 2-step fanbase have gone but I have a suspicion that it's not where the next big twist will come from if only because its leaders (Dreem Teem etc.) are unlikely to have two shots at glory. What's been true of every twist since jungle has been the generational passing of the baton: although there were a lot of ex-junglists in speed garage none of the big producers were ever *that* big in jungle (even Steve Gurley's post-Foul Play work as Rogue Unit is relatively obscure). Likewise the only big 2-step producers to have even stayed on speaking terms with grime are Sticky and DND, both of which only really "emerged" as forces to contend with in '01.

If there has been any twists and turns in urban house worth noting, it's been the major-scale revival and intensification of the Todd Edwards influence - some of the tunes have astonishingly complex crosshatching (the best I've heard being Drama's "Keeper of the Keys", which cuts up the phrase "I love raving" (!) into a thing of ethereal beauty). Who knows if this will bear fruit though?

I think fiddo is onto something with the R&B mention though, as this is where I keep hearing the female audience has gone. When I interviewed Sabrina from Mis-Teeq early last year she said that Eye Candy was more R&B/dancehall focused as opposed to garage because that's what all their friends were listening/dancing to and they wanted/needed to make an album that girls would like. But what, apart from Mis-Teeq, is this audience listening to? What music is being made for them?

What I could sort of imagine would be some sort of reconnection between this lost female audience and the slowed-down, more musical sound of half-time grime. It's timely of Prima to bring up "Thuggish Ruggish" because that's a tune which has the potential to unite a lot of different audiences: grime, 2-step, hip hop, R&B, dancehall...

Alternative: an R&B/garage/broken beat/house fusion a la Mis-Teeq's "Eye Candy" (the actual track) which strikes me as being simultaneously one of the most brazenly physical, most feminine, and most startlingly new-sounding things I heard of in '02. Although I never *did* find out who produced it (it was bizarrely and shamefully left off the Oz version of the album).

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Saturday, 24 January 2004 07:37 (twenty years ago) link

a lot of continuum talk leaves me cold because it seems to concern itself with deadening chronology and historical mapping rather than any listener excitement intensification, like foulplayificy your crit! i'm not poking ok, just wary... luka's better placed to tell but i'm interested in what hiphop catches the grime village ear, and what it's pointing to, for instance garage shops are always always trying to get in more copies of kanye's 'br right' (something to do with nasty crew, i suppose i can hear a jammer wistfulness there) and there was that 'what we do' freestyle on lord of the decks, despite 'grindin' prob still upheld as the grime overlord. i got told a great story once from someone who went to a early eskimo dance about how they unvelied 'light yr ass on fire' to huge acclaim but only played it for 2 minutes cos they realised, well... there was nothing to do. theoretically should have been love at first sight right? i guess if i take anything from all this it's that FLUIDITY is surely the main uk hardcore strand. maybe it's fluidity within singles now and not the mix, everyone needs folk heroes

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 13:03 (twenty years ago) link

(but thats a pretty obvious thing i guess)

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 13:05 (twenty years ago) link

(cos secretly i still think cam'ron 'oh boy' is the best single of the 00s, and hey maybe important too)

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 13:08 (twenty years ago) link

Tim - "Eye Candy" the song is a Rishi Rich production.

Tico Tico (Tico Tico), Saturday, 24 January 2004 13:11 (twenty years ago) link

FOR THE RECORD
i'm not hating on cam'ron's beats. (well, the beats he chooses/has chosen for him whatever) i love oh boy too.

have you heard knightz of the roundtable 'baby'? (it says baby instead of boy)

just blaze seems to be every garage bods favourite producer.
but more and more uk hiphop (new generation stuff, kalsanekoff, execution squad, rather than your talneted but slightly worthy blak twangs and tys) getting played too.

fluidity is my favourite musical quality, from those breakbeats, to twostep, to just blaze, to target, to james brown etc etc
momentum and fluidity. them two things, and yeah, light ya ass,danny weed, grindin=anit fluidity

', Saturday, 24 January 2004 13:38 (twenty years ago) link

aight cool, i'm not getting at you personally with cam whatever u might have said, there's enough... ecumenical indifference shall we say towards dipset in the world for me to rail against

(i'd say the beats and cam's chat is intrinsic tho, but this for elsewhere)

i have not heard that kotrt no, i heard 'the siege' tho cos it got onto 12. good stuff, i got my eye on them defo. new just blaze ain't what it used to be, too rigid now (that poison rmx tho, oh!) maybe all grime is secretly a kanye/just blaze tussle, i can imagine everyone riding 'encore' now

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 15:23 (twenty years ago) link

been a long time since i checked uk rap tho, so much easy bredrenization just cos u were uk was choking it dead. i used to be cool with terra firma, kyza in grove, i should see what's up. oh is that uk rap station still around! fuck what was it called, frequency in the late 100s?

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 15:28 (twenty years ago) link

is the uk rap entente a beats thing too or just a generational mutual respect tho

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 15:30 (twenty years ago) link

Very quick, heard Kode9 do a mix last sunday and a lot of tunes reminded me of rave circa 91, jungle 93. He also showed a segment of The Conflict DVD (I think it was called that, anyway amazing stuff) and Wiley was rapping over a track that really reminded me of 'Shadowboxing' (same sort of "waves of panic" kinda feel). So the continuum really made sense.

Omar (Omar), Saturday, 24 January 2004 15:51 (twenty years ago) link

itch 105.15

its still there
thats the skinny man, finsbury park axis

', Saturday, 24 January 2004 16:26 (twenty years ago) link

speaking of continuums (haha sorry zemko): i realized today the stuff plasticman reminds me of more than anything else is the stuff 4hero were doing on the second disc of two pages...the kind of neurotic clap-clap stuff they added to the two-step and the little percussion breaks that fly off into nowhere, stuff like the middle section of "we who are not as others" and "in the shadows".

strongo hulkington (dubplatestyle), Saturday, 24 January 2004 16:28 (twenty years ago) link

we who are not as others is the only thing that is has any value on that turgid mess....

ambrose (ambrose), Saturday, 24 January 2004 17:06 (twenty years ago) link

oh there was that droney cousin cockroach tune by dego last year, i'll have to dig that one out, it might sound like the missing grimey link now

prima fassy (bob), Saturday, 24 January 2004 20:19 (twenty years ago) link

Has anyone on the grime threads (Tim maybe?) talked about the dancehall-grime link? Some of the early Reggae Max Beenie tapes definitely have some grime in their beats, also some of the Ward 21 stuff...

@d@ml (nordicskilla), Saturday, 24 January 2004 20:23 (twenty years ago) link

Yeah early Ward 21 riddims are totally grime!

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 25 January 2004 02:38 (twenty years ago) link

am I mistaken in thinking the economy was booming in England during the late '90s, too, the way they were in the U.S.? because sociohistorically I've always sort of figured that to be one reason 2step emerged the way it did. if grime swings back (journeys) into the light it seems like an upswinging economy will have something to do with it, and that's not the way it's looking at all. the R&B-not-house thing is probably otm as well.

M Matos (M Matos), Sunday, 25 January 2004 03:03 (twenty years ago) link

I think theres truth in that yea, i wouldnt disagree

Stringent Stepper (Stringent), Sunday, 25 January 2004 10:23 (twenty years ago) link

But was there an economic downturn in the UK big enough to account for grime? I'm not sure cos we're still in the middle of seven years of fat cows down here in Oz.

Tim Finney (Tim Finney), Sunday, 25 January 2004 11:16 (twenty years ago) link

I dont know if you would say theres a downturn which could account for grime, but theres not a lot of jobs out there right now

Stringent Stepper (Stringent), Sunday, 25 January 2004 11:35 (twenty years ago) link

am I mistaken in thinking the economy was booming in England during the late '90s, too, the way they were in the U.S.? because sociohistorically I've always sort of figured that to be one reason 2step emerged the way it did.

2-Step did break around the time that Britpop was also at its apex, and that genre and attendant excesses are always contributed to "the Blair effect", so why not indeed?

@d@ml (nordicskilla), Sunday, 25 January 2004 16:56 (twenty years ago) link

Haha "the Blair effect" meant something very different then.

@d@ml (nordicskilla), Sunday, 25 January 2004 16:57 (twenty years ago) link

peoples lives aren't determined solely by the state of the economy. it's far too simplistic to say
dark music=downturn in the economy
happy music=upturn

i don't want to overstate the amount of people involved in crime but,it is a big thing. and if you or even some of your friends are involved in that, whether its nicking cars and selling them on to car yards or individuals, going on shopping sprees with stolen credit cards, jacking, selling drugs whatever, that means pretty much that you'll have friends go to jail, get grassed up, have the police fabricate evidence, get stabbed, or shot if you're unlucky. it means constant paranoia, police and rivals, if you're weak youll get robbed, you might see people you know get addicted to things, you'll find tht with a criminal record you can't get a job no matter the state of the economy, it's a trap in other words, a trap that even if you escape will defintely claim some of your mates if you move in those circles.
'it's just one big cycle here'
everybody involved in making grime has involvement in that world, everybody, even if just by association.

'''''', Monday, 26 January 2004 10:02 (twenty years ago) link

one, nobody's saying the economy is the sole reason for anything, and two, citing crime right after dismissing economic conditions as a contributing factor seems mighty short-sighted if not completely disingenuous

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 26 January 2004 10:07 (twenty years ago) link

I mean, the crime rate traditionally goes up during a bad economy, no?

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 26 January 2004 10:08 (twenty years ago) link

yea, but whether its simplistic to say it or not, darker music made when economic downturn, i mean, you only have to look when music got darker, it corrolates, simplistic or not.

crime doesnt go away anyway, when theres more money sloshing around, theres more to rip. look at hardcore, happy music right, but how much crime was there involved at that time? loads

i think the difference is, when theres a downturn, perhaps it strikes a wider chord, and when music succeeds, it does so by breaking out of its immediate demographic

Stringent Stepper (Stringent), Monday, 26 January 2004 10:53 (twenty years ago) link

look at hardcore, happy music right, but how much crime was there involved at that time? loads

perhaps but the difference was that the vast majority of the music's creators themselves were NOT involved in serious crime.

stevem (blueski), Monday, 26 January 2004 11:23 (twenty years ago) link

but it was around the scene, from promoters down

Stringent Stepper (Stringent), Monday, 26 January 2004 11:27 (twenty years ago) link

wasn't disco popular during times of economic troubles?

searchanddelete, Monday, 26 January 2004 13:28 (twenty years ago) link

is the economy particularly bad at the moment? i don't know much about those kind of things but i hadn't noticed a recession in progress. and if there's not (and i may be wrong, i don't read the finance pages) then it seems you have to, not reject the theory, cos i agree it certainly has an impact, but at least modify it, as i say, it's too simplisitc, it's a factor but not the sole determing factor. i think the major determing factor is crime, violence and imprisonment making a major impact on a large number of peoples lives, more so than ever before coupled with the fact, and i can't stress this enough, that grime gave a voice to a section of society which has never been heard before in this country. i really do beleive that. british reggae, jungle etc all that came from the estates but it was older, wiser people for the most part and the criminal elements of the audience were condemmed, never celebrated. that was why it was such a shock hearing riko and wiley on rinse fm for the first time. they were talking from the perspecitve of the criminal, unapologetically. talking about armed robberies and that. that was the big shift. thats my argument. i'm not saying economy doesn't matter, i just think my reason is more important.
all anecdotal evidence says its worse on the streets than it was when i was growing up. some obvious reasons for this
-larger profits to be had, crack, coke and brown in other words
-new immigrant groups meaning more people fighting over a smaller piece of pie, which raises the stakes and encourrages serious violence
-increased availiability of guns on the streets and more willingness to use them
-it's fashionable to be a criminal and the girls like it and it means you can buy xbox and wide screen tv and that.

um, i don't want to accuse the artists of being involved in serious crime, if they were they wouldn't be wasting their time making music, they'd be making serious money. (and a lot of them cease their illegal activites once the legal money starts coming in.) it;s small scale, but it still ruins lives.

luke'', Monday, 26 January 2004 13:35 (twenty years ago) link

totally agree with luke on that one. at the foundation of grime is a tight and isolated section of London society who have less and are more angry, armed and ignored than ever before. for them, the happyness of 2step just doesnt reflect their world...

martin (martin), Monday, 26 January 2004 15:19 (twenty years ago) link

oh and also re Simon's suggestion that there will be a 2step revival, my London intuition suggests there wont be. purist garage heads have headed off to the energy and warmth of 4/4 todd-aping urban house, while the music of choice for the majority of "urban" girls is overwhelmingly r&b/jiggy US hip hop...

martin (martin), Monday, 26 January 2004 15:23 (twenty years ago) link

well, there's also the "bad economy = upsurge of creativity" idea, too. but my question was a question more than anything.

M Matos (M Matos), Monday, 26 January 2004 21:34 (twenty years ago) link

who have less and are more angry, armed and ignored than ever before

is this really the case? i mean, they have mobiles, the internet, technology is generally cheaper or somehow more ascertainable - i'm alluding that generally people are better off, it seems so but of course there is still poverty and people live in it and it's quite likely that there will be SOME in that scene who fit that description but the generalisation seems too stong - it doesn't seem any more 'hard-up' or desperate than hip hop or jungle did here when they were young underground movements.

stevem (blueski), Monday, 26 January 2004 22:02 (twenty years ago) link

it's easier for younger people to cultivate their own scenes now BECAUSE of technology is what i'm saying and i think this counters luka's well made points to some effect giving some balance. he's right about things like tension and increased competition between immigrants and different ethnic groups who fall into crime (who tend to operate in areas not already covered by more established groups no?) - it does seem that guns are more accessible too - i can see that urban youths may feel less safe now than they did ten or 20 years ago which in turn could make a scene like grime stronger in a way, with technology being it's only real aid in helping to establish social and media recognition more easily than before.

stevem (blueski), Monday, 26 January 2004 22:08 (twenty years ago) link

it was surely always fashionable to be a crim tho (foundation of hip-hop really but goes way beyond that too)

stevem (blueski), Monday, 26 January 2004 22:12 (twenty years ago) link

please please please, if anyone, toby, lee, martin, ambrose, anyone taped todays nasty set, i NEED a copy of that. seriously, i need that. it was the best thing ever on deja, the best set i've heard in my life, 4 hours, nasty, NAA, highly flammable, mucky wolfpack, boundary, more fire, east co, meridian, every corner of london represented
all the east lot
nasty jack fever from west
meridian from north
NAA from south (does anyone know if these boys got kicked out the studio? sounds like they might have sparked some beef, but thats just me spreading rumours)
the intensity was ridiculous, i was listening half in rapture half tearing my hair outt cos i was working and coulnt tape it. so anyone who taped please get in touch
blungblung@hotmail.com
i don;t usually ask for favours but this is different, this is special, i'll go mad if i don't own that
i'll give you some tapes in return, i'll pay for p&p whatever i don't care, but i need it. that was crazy. kano tore it down, hyper tore it down, ghetto tore it down, narstie held his own...


yup, always fashionable to be a crim, no argument there. but i promise you, i grew up in stratford and it weren't scary. there wasn't crackheads pestering you for money, there wasn't as many muggings, and there was certainly nowhere near as many arms, and that crew/gang culture wasn't nearly so serious. if you get involved with that (and i'm not obviously) you can get stabbed up for being in the wrong territory. i know some of you will think i'm making it up, but thats what i'm trying to tell you, it's much realer than you think, when we were coming up it wasn't like that. and thats what i'm saying isn't it, i'm not saying people are poorer now, i'm saying they're scareder.

luke''', Monday, 26 January 2004 23:21 (twenty years ago) link

incidentally, luke, I want to make it clear that I don't think you're making anything up, I understand totally where you're coming from in these threads - I say this mainly because I get the feeling you have me down as part of the "some of you", and I have the greatest desire to understand and relate to all the positions held on ILM, even if I can't fully agree with them.

robin carmody (robin carmody), Tuesday, 27 January 2004 01:09 (twenty years ago) link

you don't show up enough on these threads to get included in that i'm afraid robin, although i guess i would loosely think of you as being in a kind of an 'enemy camp' (this doesn't mean i feel hostile towards you, or think you're shit or anyone else i, almost unconsciously, think of in that way). i'd stick nick southall in there too, and you two don't get on. i'd stuff all sorts of personable, sane, intelligent people into that pigeonhole actually, the whole of the freaky trigger axis for example, doesn't mean i don't think its good writing, or sloppy thinking, it's just a paper tiger i can rail against, YOU LOT, THE ENEMY!!
I love dorset though.

does everyone think like that or am i just childish? or am i just the only one stupid enough to admit to something like that?

should put somehting garage related here too now
if ruff sqwads music was a woman, i'd seek her hand in marriage.

'''', Tuesday, 27 January 2004 01:32 (twenty years ago) link

i used to think like that. at any rate, i had mental "enemy camps". it wasn't a sub-class-war thing (which is how your slant seems to me) because it was mainly people of my own background, Kula Shaker excepted, and pre-swastika i hated Oasis more than them. i had a sort of "i have reached higher than you, i've gone further outside the constraints of my background and its tribalism" slant (this was a family thing though, my mum was the only person in the whole family to go to college and probably the only one to listen to Radio 4 for decades). i used to turn up my collar a la Cantona (actually I still do this, though I barely remember the source) and at one point i used to look at my cousins (Oasis fans, lumpen proles) and say i could hardly believe i was so closely related to them (though i never said that to their face). so it was totally different to your slant because it wasn't IN ANY WAY "middle-class college kids, you're good writers and you know what you know but you DON'T GET IT", if anything it was a kind of inverted snobbery against white lumpen-proles because i thought they listened to shit music and that Men Behaving Badly was funny. now i hear cars pumping Ludacris, though, so that's alright.

of course i was 16/17 then, i think most of us are like that at that age, and a good many are like that in a class-war sense, as you are. Nick is like that, and he's from a very similar background to me after all. but - the crucial, total difference between him and me - he liked Oasis in the mid-90s.

robin carmody (robin carmody), Tuesday, 27 January 2004 02:26 (twenty years ago) link

incidentally i was born in Lambeth and lived on the Thames estuary from ages 1-14, which makes a difference - i was first into hip-hop when it was all Britpop and then Noelrock so i had an angry feeling that i'd been taken away from my true home, but i lost that years ago; partially the culture changed, partially i changed.

robin carmody (robin carmody), Tuesday, 27 January 2004 02:32 (twenty years ago) link

It wasn't 4hrs, Marcus Nasty played an extremely pleasing and nostalgic old skool UKG set, mixed wonderfully. So it ended up being more like an hour and twenty-five minutes of amassed genius - BIG SET!
Have no fear - I organise my whole Monday evenings around Deja nowadays, not a second was missed.

tinman, Tuesday, 27 January 2004 04:27 (twenty years ago) link

you're a bit patronising robin, you need to watch that, it makes you look bad. you've also misunderstood me fairly spectacularly. send me an email and i'll explain my position (it's nothing to do with class, i don't have prole credentials, oits more to do with, i bet if these people met me they wouldn't like me, they#d lok at me like i was a weirdo), this isn't the place for it.

luke'''', Tuesday, 27 January 2004 10:07 (twenty years ago) link

who was stringent stepper in the end?

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 13:44 (eighteen years ago) link

ruff sqwad are basically the heatmakers of grime
rapid used to be the swizz beats of grime, but now hes heatmakers all the way, its quite comical, and even the rhymes now are like dipset
but youre bound to get stuff like that, some overtly american stuff along with the non americanised tracks
and you could argue that even though the us hip hop influence is blatant, they still 'grimeise' it

hi, Monday, 31 October 2005 13:52 (eighteen years ago) link

grime listening to other music isnt bad in itself though, obviously. rather that than everyone waiting and aping until wiley sets the new agenda with some minor adjustment innit

but then when ruff sqwad spit over an untouched mop/heatmakerz instrumental and release it as a b-side... really what is the point.

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 14:07 (eighteen years ago) link

honestly i think RS might be one of the most overrated crews in grime
sure they have some moments of brilliance/greatness, but they usually pad it out with real sub-dipset crap
they had underground which was amazing, then on the b side they put that rubbish heatmakers-gone-grime track
i want to like them cos grime bloggers love em so much but they seem really inconsistent. i think they just want to make hip-hop really, but somehow ended up in grime (thinking about that now, that might a common dilemma)
i wonder when the next wiley agenda adjustment will come, its been quite a while.

hi, Monday, 31 October 2005 14:28 (eighteen years ago) link

sorry if this thread is going off topic. can we get it back on route? the first post from fucker had a few decent points.

hi, Monday, 31 October 2005 14:31 (eighteen years ago) link

really hi i can't complain about not taking established grime crit for granted, and yes yes ok it can get risible, but seriously you wd get more joy out of grime discourse if u didnt completely kill the vibe all the time. and ur fucking repetitive!! i dunno perhaps u find more to relish in puncturing egos

*cue all of the internet pointing and laughing at hold tight the hypocrite*

fucker's points have been done to death everywhere you look.

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 15:12 (eighteen years ago) link

ok.

hi, Monday, 31 October 2005 15:15 (eighteen years ago) link

maybe we should just talk about bump and flex now.

im up for some reactionary nostalgia a la 2001

ambrose (ambrose), Monday, 31 October 2005 15:24 (eighteen years ago) link

i am now totally convinced that the LHC is dead, and has been for half a decade

Stringent Stepper (Stringent), Monday, 31 October 2005 15:26 (eighteen years ago) link

"what makes 2004 'grimier,' economically, politically, socially, than 1999?"

more gun crime in london?
its hard to tell sometimes with grime how pronounced the influx of urban decay in london really is or if its just part and parcel of the actual genre, i.e. its de facto POV

DTI, Monday, 31 October 2005 15:28 (eighteen years ago) link

killed the vibe havent i. sorry i havent anything to say! but i guess i do still think it's interesting to try work out grime thinking backwards a little - what things that aren't grime does grime like? is there a common thread in particular or is it all, as stands to reason, whatever youngers in london like anyway? or does grime only like other thigns that are grime?

errm so:

still tippin, dipset, 'running' by the game, jamrock, summer bounce riddim, the throw-riko-a-bone dancehall mix of 'shake a leg' is on scoobay riddim, what else

i dunno

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 15:36 (eighteen years ago) link

i thought it was pretty obvious. i mean, i can run down things ive read in interviews, but grime seems to like the 'big' hip hop tunes (i dont think grime artists are HUGE hip hop obsessives per se) so stuff like still tippin (even though its well old now), but then wiley has mentioned lil jon, mannie fresh i think, dipset and guys like that too. dizzee likes lil jon, 3-6, cash money and jay-z. kano i think has mentioned the lower tier dipset members too. they all seem to mention the obvious dancehall artists like sizzla, etc. i dunno. what point are we aiming towards here?

DTI, Monday, 31 October 2005 16:07 (eighteen years ago) link

huh?

F.R.I.E.N.D. (nordicskilla), Monday, 31 October 2005 16:12 (eighteen years ago) link

station get licked

ambrose (ambrose), Monday, 31 October 2005 16:42 (eighteen years ago) link

this thread has broken contact with the sense-making continuum

sistermidnight, Monday, 31 October 2005 16:45 (eighteen years ago) link

Welcome to the world of ILX grime threads.

Alex in SF (Alex in SF), Monday, 31 October 2005 16:47 (eighteen years ago) link

i know right?

reactionary nostalgia it is then

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 16:49 (eighteen years ago) link

clearly, grime threads dont attract the right sort of people.

sistermidnight, Monday, 31 October 2005 16:53 (eighteen years ago) link

grime's a turtle / you can't step into its circle

hold tight the private caller (mwah), Monday, 31 October 2005 17:00 (eighteen years ago) link

DTI = doncaster transport interchange, right?

ambrose (ambrose), Monday, 31 October 2005 17:20 (eighteen years ago) link

oui

DTI, Monday, 31 October 2005 17:37 (eighteen years ago) link

sixteen years pass...

New Kornel Kovacs LP has some poptimist-tinged broadcasts from the continuum.

https://kornelkovacs.bandcamp.com/album/hotel-koko

Usch is some Nordic garage, works for me but maybe too polished for some. Get Goofy comes a little harder — I’m not sure the vocal totally works tho.

recovering internet addict/shitposter (viborg), Friday, 21 October 2022 14:37 (one year ago) link

A lot of chatter about the new Burial release but I it’s hard for me to get worked up about, he tends to be same-y imo.

I do think we should have the intention of reviving every different ardkore continuum-adjacent thread if possible.

recovering internet addict/shitposter (viborg), Friday, 21 October 2022 14:40 (one year ago) link

honestly i think RS might be one of the most overrated crews in grime
sure they have some moments of brilliance/greatness, but they usually pad it out with real sub-dipset crap
they had underground which was amazing, then on the b side they put that rubbish heatmakers-gone-grime track
i want to like them cos grime bloggers love em so much but they seem really inconsistent. i think they just want to make hip-hop really, but somehow ended up in grime (thinking about that now, that might a common dilemma)
i wonder when the next wiley agenda adjustment will come, its been quite a while.
― hi, Monday, 31 October 2005 14:28 (sixteen years ago) bookmarkflaglink

That's just an absolute crock. Ruff Sqwad >>>

paolo, Saturday, 22 October 2022 09:55 (one year ago) link

why is it the hardcore continuum and not the reggae continuum or the disco continuum or something else? what motivates critical attention on this lineage over others? is it something about establishing a narrative throughline for specifically british-based electronic/dance musics? and is it supposed to be prescriptive in some way (which would make sense of bizarre things like jazz influences in jungle being talked about as somehow extraneous or intrusive)?

your original display name is still visible (Left), Saturday, 22 October 2022 13:02 (one year ago) link


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