instigator said:I love dance and have always supported it...When I spin at clubs I have always been heavy house, trance ,club...Occasionaly over the years i've had to sell out and play Hip Hop sets to appease crowds..
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!
instigator said:I love dance and have always supported it...When I spin at clubs I have always been heavy house, trance ,club...Occasionaly over the years i've had to sell out and play Hip Hop sets to appease crowds..
d21ofnj said:For some odd reason, why do I see dubstep making an impact more in the hip-hop world than in dance? I mean, it can pass under the dance umbrella for the fact some of the sounds have a little cross between jungle/drum n bass at the same time the breaks and lyrics in the beat lean towards an urban feel.
I agree Jay...I'm happy to say right now dance is hot here in Philly so I don' have to touch Hip Hop unless it's remixed!!JayR said:instigator said:I love dance and have always supported it...When I spin at clubs I have always been heavy house, trance ,club...Occasionaly over the years i've had to sell out and play Hip Hop sets to appease crowds..
NOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!![]()
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instigator said:I agree Jay...I'm happy to say right now dance is hot here in Philly so I don' have to touch Hip Hop unless it's remixed!!![]()
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justpassingthough said:Bashing dubstep as not a member of the EDM family makes zero sense.
DJ_Perry said:justpassingthough said:Bashing dubstep as not a member of the EDM family makes zero sense.
EDM...Electronic Dance Music. Dubstep is definitely Electronic. Music? Perhaps, I'll bend the rules and let that slide even though it consists of distorted robots farting. But Dance is uptempo. Hell I would even bend the rules again and consider uptempo R&B as Dance if it were above 100 BPM. But Dubstep is wicked slow. No where close to 100.
DJ_Perry said:I get what you are saying. Of course I'm aware of the popularity and the continuous affiliation with Electro and other EDM. It just strikes me as weird. It doesn't have a positive feel to me. It has minor chords like Dark Industrial Rock, plus it appeals to crowds that know nothing about Dance. I believe that a good percentage of such fans are not open minded to the majority of the other Dance Genres. They would criticize that its too Disco, cheesy, or whatever.....yet that is the roots of OUR music (House / Euro). It's just like Alternative was a credible format up until Grunge became affiliated with it, then it became ignorant and appealed to posers. I would just hate for this movement to lower the bar. EDM is suppose to be somewhat intelligent. Just look at Skrillex. Call me a snob, but does he look like a good image for our format?
DJ_Perry said:I get what you are saying. Of course I'm aware of the popularity and the continuous affiliation with Electro and other EDM. It just strikes me as weird. It doesn't have a positive feel to me. It has minor chords like Dark Industrial Rock, plus it appeals to crowds that know nothing about Dance. I believe that a good percentage of such fans are not open minded to the majority of the other Dance Genres. They would criticize that its too Disco, cheesy, or whatever.....yet that is the roots of OUR music (House / Euro). It's just like Alternative was a credible format up until Grunge became affiliated with it, then it became ignorant and appealed to posers. I would just hate for this movement to lower the bar. EDM is suppose to be somewhat intelligent. Just look at Skrillex. Call me a snob, but does he look like a good image for our format?
justpassingthough said:Love it or hate it, I think the majority of people outside EDM view it as the music of drugs and promiscuity, even though it isn't any more so than rock or hip hop.
DJ_Perry said:justpassingthough said:Love it or hate it, I think the majority of people outside EDM view it as the music of drugs and promiscuity, even though it isn't any more so than rock or hip hop.
Indeed, which is why I'm not on board for encouraging such a theme, as I find EDM positive and more than just simple minded music. It has melodies and layers that are found in classical pieces. The more talented producers have such a background and are modern day composers in my eyes. I guess we just have to agree to disagree, but I really feel that this bandwagon trend of noise will eventually steer this movement into a more questionable light.
justpassingthough said:To answer the actual question posed by this thread, though, I'd have to say the most likely candidate is the Skrillex remix of Benny Benassi "Cinema", since I've actually heard it on KIIS several times over the past week. Even though it was during the lunch mix, most of the other stuff is house and/or remixes of pop/rock/rhythmic songs, so a dubstep song in the mix is definitely of note.
Irrelevant. Skrillex is getting our genre on MTV's top 10 video countdown. Dubstep is the evolution of our genre. I'm sure people that grew up listening to disco had a hard time accepting 90s house music. People who grew up on 80s freestyle might have had a hard time accepting early 00s trance music. It's all part of getting older.DJ_Perry said:I get what you are saying. Of course I'm aware of the popularity and the continuous affiliation with Electro and other EDM. It just strikes me as weird. It doesn't have a positive feel to me. It has minor chords like Dark Industrial Rock, plus it appeals to crowds that know nothing about Dance. I believe that a good percentage of such fans are not open minded to the majority of the other Dance Genres. They would criticize that its too Disco, cheesy, or whatever.....yet that is the roots of OUR music (House / Euro). It's just like Alternative was a credible format up until Grunge became affiliated with it, then it became ignorant and appealed to posers. I would just hate for this movement to lower the bar. EDM is suppose to be somewhat intelligent. Just look at Skrillex. Call me a snob, but does he look like a good image for our format?
PhDance said:Irrelevant. Skrillex is getting our genre on MTV's top 10 video countdown. Dubstep is the evolution of our genre. I'm sure people that grew up listening to disco had a hard time accepting 90s house music. People who grew up on 80s freestyle might have had a hard time accepting early 00s trance music. It's all part of getting older.DJ_Perry said:I get what you are saying. Of course I'm aware of the popularity and the continuous affiliation with Electro and other EDM. It just strikes me as weird. It doesn't have a positive feel to me. It has minor chords like Dark Industrial Rock, plus it appeals to crowds that know nothing about Dance. I believe that a good percentage of such fans are not open minded to the majority of the other Dance Genres. They would criticize that its too Disco, cheesy, or whatever.....yet that is the roots of OUR music (House / Euro). It's just like Alternative was a credible format up until Grunge became affiliated with it, then it became ignorant and appealed to posers. I would just hate for this movement to lower the bar. EDM is suppose to be somewhat intelligent. Just look at Skrillex. Call me a snob, but does he look like a good image for our format?
My wife hates dance music, mainly because she thinks it's too "prissy" (and let's face it, a lot of it is). In fact, she teases me routinely for listening to it. She has repeatedly said she will never go to a dance concert. I had on Club Land on MTV the other day (I DVR it everyday), and she saw one of Skrillex's videos. Bottom line -- she's going to a Skrillex concert with me.
I don't see how "dubstep" artists somehow represent our genre in a worse light than the bubblegum artists that turned (some of) the mainstream away from dance. If it gets our tunes in more people's ears, I don't see the problem. I don't have a problem with anything in our genre that gets more people listening to dance music.
To Tony, I think you raise an interesting point that dubstep could be getting some attention from more progressive rockers, but I don't think we should abandon the subgenre or regard it as a fringe flavor of the month. I see dubstep a progression from breakbeat (which was very popular late 90s/early 00s), which was itself a progression of latin-flavored hip-hop/freestyle. Even if dubstep gets some play on the rockers, electronica never going to replace the old fashioned guitar and drum on rock stations.
We have a real opportunity here to embrace what the public is buying. We've tried forcing product the public doesn't want down their throats for too many years. It alarms me if we are thinking (as a dance community) of doing that yet again.
I totally agree with your assessment. I was waiting for someone to mentioned the correlation with the beats and arraignments. A long time ago there was a diagram that circulated online that show how all dance/edm music is interconnected and offshoots of all subgenres.I grew up on rock myself so the heavier dubstep flows with me. Yet,I can see how a more melodic sounding track can get more exposure. In fact,last night KISS Fm Cleveland (Chr) played a dubstep song and it got a great response. So if the Midwest is in it then I can see this getting some legs.
PhDance said:Irrelevant. Skrillex is getting our genre on MTV's top 10 video countdown. Dubstep is the evolution of our genre.