Bristol, UK dubstep kingpin Joker comes through with a video for “Back in the Days” featuring verses from grime MCs Buggsy, Scarz and Double as well as a hook from Shadz aka Javeon McCarthy, the same dude we’ve heard before in songs from the likes of L-Vis 1990 and Julio Bashmore. This track is taken from The Vision, Joker’s debut LP that is due out November 7th via 4AD. If you like to get grimey every once in a while like we do over at the LFTF offices then put this video on and rinse the fuck out of it.
OG dubstep guru Caspa just dropped this fiery new gem over on his soundcloud: a 30-min mix he made this past June for BBC Radio 1′s MistaJam Show. What’s cool about Caspa and what you’ll hear in this mix, is that the dudes been able to hold onto predominately the same sound and style that he birthed back in the mid-2000′s when dubstep was first getting its rise. Even through all the popularity–in his own successes and in dubstep as a whole–Caspa has stayed true to himself, and that’s definitely a rarity in these modern times. In a genre that’s gotten so polluted with trying to find that new unheard sound, it’s nice to see that someone can stick to age-old tricks and still flourish. Download Caspa’s June MistaJam Mix now below. Caspa Live Mix For MistaJam June 2011
TRACKLIST:
Caspa — Fulham 2 Waterloo
Caspa — Champion Skank
Caspa — Hot Shoe Shuffle
Redlight — Source 16
Caspa — Check Your Self
Caspa — Bang Bang
Trolley Snatcha — Nasty
The Others & Trolley Snatcha — Break Your Neck (Feat. Dread MC)
Subscape — Universal Benga — Any Steppah's
Girl Unit — Wut
Subscape — Screw Up (Matty G Remix)
D1 — Sub Zero Caspa — Sir Rock A lot
Emalkay — The World (Trolley Snatcha Remix) Feat. Lena Cullen
Emalkay — Transpose
Buraka Som Sistema — Hangover (Ba Ba Ba) (Caspa Remix)
Von D — Maximum Boost (feat. Foreign Beggars & Spyda)
Foreign Beggars — Still Getting It (feat. Skrillex)
DJ Fresh ft Sian Evans — Louder (Flux Pavilion & Doctor P Remix)
Panjabi MC — Mundian To Bach Ke (True Tiger x Nihal VIP)
Chase & Status — Hitz (feat. Tinie Tempah) (16 Bit Remix)
After cookin’ up “Wut,” last year’s anthem of the UK underground, Girl Unit delivers again. This time with a HUGE remix of Breton‘s “RDI.” Stream the tune below and don’t be afraid to plug your computer into some proper speakers in order to feel the sub-bass weight that comes along with this one.
SIDENOTE: Is it safe to say Girl Unit is the U.K. version of Lex Luger? We say BOW.
From hip-hop, to metal, to trance–we’ve seen MPC producer and now renowned dj AraabMuzik conquer it all, flipping any and every type of genre into something uniquely his own. Thus far, his work has been undeniably impressive, but things just took a major push into downright revolutionary. This past weekend at the electro music label Dim Mak’s studios, Araab took his MPC skills to the demented world of, that’s right folks, DUBSTEP. The video, featured below, speaks for itself…but if we could advise you to do anything this summer, it’d be to catch this guy in concert. You won’t be disappointed.
Back in 2006, dubstep legend Kode9 wrote a profound piece in the sleeve notes for Dubstep Allstars 3 about the art of making a good mix. When talking about song selection he wrote that, “the selection…defines the range of emotional spaces likely to be encountered along the way.” He also wrote about the subtlety of beatmatching, the sonic space that occurs when a DJ mixes between two tunes, by saying, “beatmatching is an imprecise science, the iterative art of aligning two tracks by ear in realtime.” Earlier this month when asked by XLR8R whether or not he has ever had aspirations to produce his own music, Steve Bishop aka Oneman responded by saying, “I’m not bothered. My heart is in DJing.” And rightfully so. When it comes to the two main facets of DJing, song selection and beatmatching, there is no DJ who does it quite like Oneman. Oneman is a DJ that doesn’t confine himself to any one specific genre of music. Although he has a weekly show on London’s Rinse FM, the pirate radio station that gave rise to genres such as grime, dubstep and UK funky, Oneman plays whatever he likes and has a knack for mixing tunes together like no one else in the game.
This week, in anticipation of tonight’s TURBOTAX® in Brooklyn, NY, Oneman stepped into the mix for the TABLE TENNIS show on NYC’s WNYU. Like any of his other mixes or live sets, this one features everything from sultry R&B to hip-hop to UK funky and everything else in between. Every Oneman mix is a treat and this one is no exception. Stream/download the mix below and if you are in NYC tonight be sure to catch him DJing alongside Ben UFO at TURBOTAX®.
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Here’s a treat for all of our readers out there. This is a very rare studio mix by Skream from January 2004. It’s all his own tracks, but only a 4 track EP of them was ever released. This mix used to be hosted on a site called Big Apple Records, which was the first ever exclusively dubstep online record store (back before digital downloads were the norm), and really the only place you could get most of the early tracks on vinyl. Big Apple also pressed some of the really early dubstep tracks including the first releases by Benga, Skream & Loefah and was the only place you could really buy many of the dubstep records at the time from the dozen or so producers that were pressing it. The store closed down around 2005, because there weren’t enough people buying dubstep records to make it worth it. This is also the reason why much of the earliest dubstep was never released, but just handed around between producers & DJs who knew each other. There wasn’t a dubstep forum or anything, so you couldn’t even DJ dubstep successfully without knowing the guys in the UK. As a result, there were very few DJs in the US playing dubstep in their sets.
This mix doesn’t (and never did) actually have a name or a tracklist (which makes it even harder to find these days). The tracks that appeared on the Acid People EP on Big Apple Records were the only tracks that saw a release from this mix, and it’s too bad because there are some great tunes on here. This mix perfectly showcases the period when people were just beginning to make tracks that were half speed throughout the whole track (yes, there was dubstep before there was 70bpm dubstep), and Skream was the first producer to really start experimenting heavily with that. This mix showcases a far different direction than the direction that Skream eventually took with his music, and we feel that it’s a lot better in many ways. Download/stream the mix below.
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Мишка is proud to present Keep Watch Vol. XXV, created by Flinch. Adam “Flinch” Glassco is all about throbbing bass sickness backed by intricate, twisted melodies, as heard in his remix of Hussle Club’s “Loose Tights,” and his Keep Watch mixtape is no exception. His infectious, beat-oriented tracks have made him a favorite of heavy-hitters like Drop the Lime, Busy P, Skream, and many more names in the dubstep and dance communities, and this 42-minute mix of grinding outer-space electro will definitely show you why.
1. Kastle – I Know
2. Atlantic Connection -Take My Number
3. TRG & MATT U – One
4. Document One – Clap
5. 12th Planet & SPL – Lootin’
6. Flinch – World On Fire
7. Pendulum – Set Me On Fire
8. Flinch & Villains – Let Me Go
9. Freestylers – Frozen (Cookie Monster Remix)
10. Flinch & SPL – Untitled
11. Zeds Dead – Adrenaline
12. RUN DMT – Hold Up
13. Vaski – Storm Chaser
14. Dom and Roland – Punish Me (Digiraatii vs. Hot Mess Bootleg)