Remember classics such as Bad Ass, Quest, Enta Da Dragon & Ding Dong Bass? Please check the Soundcloud link here and vote for your favourite.
A reblog would also be lovely!
And what better way to celebrate the original female veterans birthday than with the classic tune ‘I’m So’
DJ Rap & Da Boss - I’m So - Urban Gorilla - 1995
Hear are some words from the great Uncle Dugs himself..
On Friday 19th October between 11:00-14:00 GMT on www.rinse.fm I will be exclusively airing the brand new Stevie Hyper D audio documentary ‘Junglist Soldier’ for the whole world to hear..
This documentary has been put together by Matt at Audio Compound with help from Stevie’s nephew Darrell and features the full story of Stevie’s life and career.. The documentary has the full blessing of the family and with nephew Darrells input has been able to seek out interviews with some real key people from Stevie’s life and career from both family circles and musical circles.. As well as telling the story of Stevies life through narration and interviews you can also hear exclusive clips of Hyper D at work from the sound system era right through to acid house times into the rave world where most of us ending up finding out about him..
Check out the trailer for the Junglist Soldier audio documentary here :http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fqvjOx-Yx4U
Check out a 5 min preview here : http://soundcloud.com/drum-19/stevie-doc-5-mins-for-dnba
Check out the Drum & Bass Arena blog piece here : http://drumandbassarenablog.com/2012/10/04/junglist-soldiers-uncle-dugs-on-stevie-hyper-d/
Please help spread the word by using the picture below as your profile picture on facebook, twitter or anywhere else you can to help spread the word so everyone can hear the story of a UK microphone legend..!!
Friday 19th October will be known as #StevieHyperDDay on twitter so please tell a friend to tell a friend and let’s see if we can get this trending for the world see.
Facebook event page to share with all your friends : http://www.facebook.com/events/354704584622649/?context=create
Thank you guys, see you all on the 19th for #StevieHyperDDa
1993 - the UK Rave scene at its finest
The Drum & Bass Arena forum collective have very willingly compiled a list of their favourite tunes from this era containing some absolute gems.
DJ Modus kindly compiled a YouTube playlist so you don’t have to wade through the pages to find hours of classics. So sit back, turn up the speakers and press play..
Link here
Dream Magazine presents - Blazin’ Bass Mixed by DJ Swanee
Given away from with Dream Magazine issue 28 this was a nice introduction into the world of Collusion Records and some other well known bits from the likes of Trend, Adam F and IQ Collective.
Download here (download is all 12 tracks, add them into iTunes together)
DJ SY - The Scratchmaster’s Obsession (1995)
For those up to date with the UK Hardcore scene you will no doubt know of the legend that is DJ SY and his bouncy, hands in the air anthem filled sets. However, this wasn’t always the case and back in the early 1990’s DJ SY was an incredibly versatile DJ, covering a huge spectrum of genres ranging from House to Jungle.
SY was a resident at Obsession for many years alongside MC Scratchmaster Techno, some say this was the first and possibly the last time he went head to head with DJ Hype in a scratch battle. For a good few years this was a battle fought out verbally among ravers across the globe - who was the best scratcher, was it Hype with his itched up dog barks or SY with his array of vocal snapshots?
This triple CD collection showcases everything that was great about UK House, Jungle and Happy Hardcore/4 Beat in 1995. The Jungle CD especially doesn’t draw for anthem after anthem but showcases tracks from the likes of School of Hard Knocks and Flatlines. Some obvious tunes of the moment feature but it was nice to see a compilation not filled with anthem after anthem.
My personal favourite out of the three CD’s has to be the House mix, if you think House sounded like the current offering in the Top 40 then think again. House in 1995 was exactly that - no dressed up pop riffs, no 3 keys on repeat but tracks made for the dancefloor. No pretentious autotune rubbish in this mix!
The download folder can be found here
If you would prefer to buy it, pick it up from Discogs here
The Jungle Council, probably one of those undisclosed subjects only to be talked about in secret locations or at the back of your local record shop. A name the majority of under 30’s currently into the upfront Drum & Bass scene will probably never come across and a topic that nobody really knows too much about.
Cast your mind back to the glorious days of Jungle, where quality control was pretty high, record shops were in abundance and only a handful of producers, DJ’s and MC’s existed. It was this controlled environment that everyone seemed to thrive on, the ravers knew the big name artists, the bedroom DJs knew the labels to buy and large scale event promoters could be counted on one hand. The Jungle scene had pretty much exploded soon after its evolution from the Hardcore scene and while some DJ’s were still fusing the two styles it was clear which paths artists were going to follow. But the big question was, who was actually in control?
I think this is where the idea behind ‘The Jungle Council’ came in, that’s if the event actually happened but this is how I assume it went..
M-Beat featuring General Levy released ‘Incredible’ on Renk Records in the summer of 1994 which proved to be incredibly popular, both with the Jungle ravers and an unsuspecting commercial crowd. But who is this General Levy and why is he on a Jungle track? Why did he then go on to break the top 40 sales chart and remain in the top 10 for 3 weeks? What was he doing on Top of the Pops? These questions surely need answers?
The story starts with members of the Jungle elite arranging a meeting to discuss General Levy, this probably happened around the time when he proclaimed, or so they say, that he ‘ran Jungle’. I picture the scene something along the lines of Rebel MC, Grooverider, Fabio, Shy FX, Goldie, Ray Keith, DJ Rap, 5ive-O, Moose and others getting together to bring down this ‘Incredible’ tune.
This was the first time that Jungle had seen commercial success, granted the likes of Smart-E’s rocketed the rave scene into the charts in 1992 with a rip off of the Sesame Street theme tune but in terms of Jungle music this was something unseen. Levi’s track was banned from sets across Jungle raves, even promoters were roped in on the act to ensure that ‘Incredible’ wasn’t played. You would be hard pressed to hear the track being played by any of the assumed members of the Council during the summer of ‘94.
5ive-O in true fashion famously ranted about General Levy at a Roast event in July 1994, the set can be found on Youtube here. Moose joins in on the action on the full set but 5ive-O is clearly dedicated to the cause of burying Levy as far into the ground as possible. It’s superb in some respect to hear the passion in his voice, his dedication to the cause as such - you have to give him credit for his public service announcements, even the one about the stolen jacket will go down in Jungle history.
It was documented in All Crews that the main grievance with ‘Incredible’ was that it gave Jungle to the wrong people, providing access to what was once a undiluted underground movement to the mainstream.
General Levy’s biggest downturn was probably signing an autograph “Maximum Big up, From De Origigional Junglist - General Levy”. Considering he was about as original as a ‘classic Jungle’ set by DJ Phantasy it was no wonder that this caused the problems it did.
I remember reading about the mass overload of Ragga influence in Jungle around and shortly after the release of Incredible. At first I think this was probably welcomed until the likes of every man and his dog was pushing out ‘Ragga Jungle Hits Volume 250’.
You have to give Shy FX and UK Apachi credit, considering they released Original Nutta in the same year and the track literally blew up. The reason why this track wasn’t also banned was probably because Shy FX did the groundwork releasing his first tune in 1992 and signing to SOUR shortly after, in 1994. This is the key difference between Shy FX and General Levy - he earned the respect and probably why Shy FX got away with releasing more commercially acceptable tunes such as Shake Ur Body and Don’t Wanna Know years later. That or the fact that by this point nobody seemed to care about foundation or understand where Shy FX came from.
‘Incredible’ reared its rinsed to death head in 2002, this time featuring on Ali G’s - Ali G Indahouse. This then led to the youth of that era incorrectly repeating the lyrics as “Jungle is massive” and spawned even more ‘Jungle’ compilations.
Kool FM’s Maddness interviewed DJ Rap in March this year and briefly touched on the subject.
During the interview, Rap is adamant she strongly opposed the movement and even offers to make a tune with Levy. The World Dance New Years Eve beef with Ray Keith also gets a mention, I am certain that if ‘The Jungle Council’ existed then, the actions at New Year 2000 are connected.
Download the interview via Mediafire here
Rumours come and go and from time to time new pieces to the story are added - pieces that are potentially made up on forums to add some spice to certain events, like the tale of the council meeting around the start of the millenium to force producers to slow down the BPM of the music they were making. Did this ever happen? I have no idea but I suspect Fabio & Grooverider had something to do with it and Clipz had absolutely nothing to say on the subject!
This is how it should be done #vinyl #jungle (Taken with Instagram)
United Dance The New Frontier (full pack download)
http://www.mediafire.com/?4gx5cffm8iytd
Recorded on 18th April 1997 at Stevenage Art’s & Leisure Centre this was one of the last United Dance events I remember attending.
I have some other rare United Dance packs I really need to convert, this one was converted last year but I think I forgot to post it on here.
A diverse line up of the following:
SY
Vibes
Vinylgroover
Brisk
Dougal back to back Hixxy
Hype
Slipmatt
Swan-e
Force & Styles
SS
Billy ‘Daniel’ Bunter
Ramos & Supreme
Kenny Ken
Darren Jay
MC’s included Fearless, Freestyle, Junior (RIP), Charlie B (sadly), Magika and a very young Whizzkid
Live Monday 13th February MC Linden D on Jamie’s Return to the Jungle show on Rapture FM from 8pm GMT.
Expect some big Jungle tracks to be laid down alongside some of Jamie’s favourite tunes from the last 20 years. The combination of Jamie’s selection and Linden’s vast array of lyrics is sure to be something you don’t want to miss.
The show will be recorded live and hosted for download on Tuesday 14th February.
Tape Crackers: An Oral History Of Jungle Pirate Radio
I stumbled across this fantastic looking documentary via the DNBA forum, probably the only worthwhile bit of information to grace the website since 2001.
Surprisingly I have never heard of this DVD, it’s existence has sadly gone unnoticed until now so the anticipation of actually watching and reminiscing is stupidly high.
You can pick up a copy for yourself here
I’ll write a proper review after I have watched it 100 or so times.
Here’s the blurb from the website:
‘Tape Crackers’ is a vital documentary focussed on one guy, Michael Finch, and his amazing tape collection of pirate radio recordings made in the mid-late ’90s. The premise is basic: place Michael and some of his most prized c90s in front of the camera and let the man talk. The result: a punters’-ear recollection of an amazing period in UK music culture, charting the shifts between Happy Hardcore/Jungle/D&B/Garage, or what has contentiously become known as the ‘Hardcore Continuum’ thanks to Simon Reynolds.
Michael is a passionate and thoroughly endearing orator, spilling profuse knowledge on MCs, the variety and breadth of the junglist FM bandwidth, the raves, the clothes, and most importantly, the vibe. Although this era only occurred little over 15 years ago, the fact that it was all pre-internet (or at least widescale internet use) gives some sharp contrast to today’s fingertip cultural reach and some context that many older heads will relate to, while youngers are recommended to watch for educational purposes.
Although the period covered falls a little bit later than the golden era - 1990-1993 - the anecdotes and Finch’s compelling delivery basically render that almost irrelevant . You can just see memories wash over him with each tape he puts on, and you’re reminded of the absolute frustration and euphoria of hearing a track on pirate radio that you would never ever get to find out anything about, or know who it was by, or ever get to hear again - save for the worn out cassette copy you just made. Apart from all the anecdotes and recollections - including a really nice overview of London’s Junglist pirate radio scene of the mid 90’s (even touching on the birth of Rinse), what you really get from Tape Crackers is a snapshot of a bygone era and one man’s obsession with it - and it just makes for utterly compelling viewing.
Don’t miss.