Breakbeat Deconstruction: From hip hop to drum & bass and beyond | Loop

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 10. 06. 2024
  • At the 2016 Loop summit, Dr. Jason Hockman gave a fascinating talk about the evolving role of breakbeats in electronic music, from their initial usage in hip hop into a second generation appropriation in genres including jungle and drum & bass. He also presents recent ethnographic and technological research in breakbeat oriented electronic music.
    See more from Loop:
    www.ableton.com/blog/categori...
  • Hudba

Komentáře • 364

  • @manugira-gym
    @manugira-gym Před 4 lety +311

    2:18 The Winstons - Amen, Brother
    2:56 N.W.A - Straight Outta Campton
    3:14 Renegade - Terrorist
    3:42 The Jungle Band - Marvellous
    4:08 Icons - Third Eye Vsion
    5:03 Michael Viner's Incredible Bango Band - Apache
    7:59 Professor Longhair - Tipitina
    9:12 James Brown - Funky Drummer
    17:16 Manix - Oblivion (Head in the Clouds)
    18:06 Origin Unknown - Valley of the Shadows
    18:38 DJ Hype - The Trooper
    19:25 D'Cruze - Lonely
    20:40 Omni Trio - London Step
    21:47 Alex Reece - Basic Principles (Dillinja Remix)
    22:52 Chameleon - Links
    23:30 Tango - Understanding
    25:03 Dom & Roland - Dynamics
    26:24 Head High - Hex Factor
    27:10 Special Request - Mindwash
    28:00 Fracture and Deft - I Just

  • @DAMATRIX
    @DAMATRIX Před 4 lety +297

    90s d&b is still one of the best music genres of all time 💯

    • @sau7710
      @sau7710 Před 3 lety +5

      I would say it's like the most awsomest but not the best since thats where it started all the popularity and jungle d&b shit. But yea its lit

    • @TheWaynelds
      @TheWaynelds Před 3 lety +21

      @Lil Yeet what’s “www no” supposed to mean?

    • @concretederek8055
      @concretederek8055 Před 3 lety +6

      Agree 💯, at the time, nothing else was pushing boundaries, wicked time to be partying ✊

    • @69babilonia
      @69babilonia Před 3 lety

      @@concretederek8055 Florida (orlando/Tampa) breaks were a good experiment back then. Great sound with vocals.

    • @ansonpayne1410
      @ansonpayne1410 Před 2 lety +4

      Very True, 1996-97 was the Golden Era of DnB.

  • @apoplexiamusic
    @apoplexiamusic Před rokem +70

    That moment at 24:00 is a testament to the power of the music. Even when you’re a doctor that spent you career studying this, its power will still entrance you, no matter what

    • @jdm2651
      @jdm2651 Před rokem +3

      I think that's because that particular segment has a sophisticated construction which appeals and resounds with who also know, or at least has been exposed to contemporary 'high' music. Unfortunately for their authors the latter has always miserably failed to get any popularity over multiple decades.

    • @magnopere
      @magnopere Před rokem +2

      ​@@jdm2651 could you give some examples of this so-called "high" music?
      What substances is it abusing?

    • @Anjous
      @Anjous Před rokem

      @Numpty 1 for the money, 2 for the better green

    • @Rufusdos
      @Rufusdos Před rokem +3

      Rest in peace Tango!

    • @jdm2651
      @jdm2651 Před rokem

      ​@@magnopere Contemporay classic music. They abuse high education and disdain for the masses.

  • @jdstarek
    @jdstarek Před 5 lety +68

    A 50-year anthology of the most iconic breaks ever. I love this.

  • @davidreichert9392
    @davidreichert9392 Před 3 lety +27

    On the face of it I thought that the idea of a university style lecture on breakbeats was ridiculous, but then I watched it, and it was fantastic. Thanks for this.

  • @benjamink7105
    @benjamink7105 Před rokem +100

    Feel like I've been looking for an overview like this forever and it's been up for 5 years.
    Anyway, it is so insane that these little snippets of what could have been forgotten recordings ends up really creating entire music genres. I grew up loving these beats and never knew how to describe them. I remember trying to explain to my friend why I felt like I loved the band Nirvana because these beats, rhythms whatever they are sounds lot like rap beats and then years later Dave Grohl was like "yeah, I just copied a bunch of disco beats."
    Breakbeats!

    • @skeennah1927
      @skeennah1927 Před rokem

      All this information I already, but this was put together so well

    • @R1davies
      @R1davies Před rokem

      Here today whenever that is Easter I think

  • @_ls6772
    @_ls6772 Před 7 lety +90

    Please more of this. I've been waiting years to hear someone talk like this about the breakbeat.

  • @ElisandroDeLeon
    @ElisandroDeLeon Před 3 lety +30

    "With limited technology comes amazing technique:" . I feel like this is what Uncle Ben shouldve told Peter Parker .

  • @matth1854
    @matth1854 Před 4 lety +36

    that Tango track is sick

  • @gostling
    @gostling Před 6 lety +22

    I freaked out when he mentioned happy hardcore.

  • @gostling
    @gostling Před 6 lety +336

    I want to go to university to study rave music wow.

    • @Milolucerox
      @Milolucerox Před 4 lety

      hahaha

    • @joshuahelmeke
      @joshuahelmeke Před 4 lety +21

      Go for it lady: the scene already well documented. Black music will NEVER die. From the cultural exchange between U.S. and Europe to the Re-use of outdated tech: there’s a whole world of possibility to immerse yourself in.

    • @brianvaci6213
      @brianvaci6213 Před 4 lety +9

      You can! I'm from Argentina. I'm making my final research about the electronic music (techno). You can see the work of the Dr. Mark J. Butler to see what is about.

    • @touristinfo6947
      @touristinfo6947 Před 4 lety +5

      @@joshuahelmeke People now a days can learn it all on CZcams bro and the user manuals. Like you said.It is all documented on youtube anyways lol.The key is not just learning the tech.Its how you will create in it.

    • @juStb4u
      @juStb4u Před 4 lety +2

      Brian Vaci amazing, and Argentina has such a rich electronic culture so I’m sure it’s very supported there.

  • @StephenCoorlas
    @StephenCoorlas Před rokem +22

    Feeling you on Tango's "Understanding" - Never heard it. Instant new fav. Thank you for this presentation. It looks like many others on this thread agree that this topic needs to be better shared with the music community to reinforce the importance of the evolution of sampling, sequencing, and genres of music. 🤘

  • @mattierenton701
    @mattierenton701 Před rokem +13

    23:30 Tango was a an absolute legend in the game along with Ratty it was unstoppable, but Tango in his own right was an insanely talented producer, and you can see how much respect Dr. Hockman has for him, RIP Jamie Giltrap (Tango) you were a huuuge influence

  • @Disco_Breakin
    @Disco_Breakin Před 3 lety +8

    I used to run the AKAI sample library back in the day. You'd order your discs, i'd duplicate the sets you wanted and mail them out to you. In that job I got a tricked out S1100 with 16MB of ram and 500MB HDD

  • @Jiepers
    @Jiepers Před 7 lety +66

    I would say that upload more from this guy if you can.

  • @dpalaoro
    @dpalaoro Před rokem +5

    That Tango cut....damn...🎉🎉🎉

  • @noahsamuelsen
    @noahsamuelsen Před rokem +2

    Who else was admiring the theatre he was giving the talk? Looks super comfy

  • @PUSH4LIFE
    @PUSH4LIFE Před 7 lety +23

    I have been waiting for this since I saw it last November live in Berlin... I LOVED this talk.... so insightful!

  • @qebo_a.retsis
    @qebo_a.retsis Před rokem +8

    Great lecture and video! One note about the loop resequencing techniques that was left out:
    There is also the sample offset technique, that was heavily used in Amiga / Protracker breakbeats since the software was introduced, where you could specify a different start - trigger position of the loop sample, thus adding variation and resequencing. With this approach no slicing / chopping / editing was required. You figured out the offset points for let's say the snare or the hihat etc, and just trigger the sample starting from that specific sample offset.

  • @DjNikGnashers
    @DjNikGnashers Před 3 lety +3

    So glad I was around and old enough to enjoy the start of HipHop in the Uk, the Acid House scene, and then the Hardcore Jungle / Rave scene.

  • @loopmong
    @loopmong Před 6 lety +17

    R.i.p tango .. genius ..

  • @jeremylavallee9154
    @jeremylavallee9154 Před 4 lety +1

    This was amazing!!!! HUGE MERCI for your work Jason !!!!

  • @ClouthIsKite
    @ClouthIsKite Před 3 lety +42

    How does one have a history of breakbeats and not mention Venetian Snares. I had a contemporary music composition class spend a lecture on the likes of Aaron Funk and modern break use.
    Still, more history like this is amazing to have access too. Really appreciation Ableton for uploading this.

    • @kurokurokuro9152
      @kurokurokuro9152 Před 3 lety +2

      is that course/class publicly available? id be interested to read the accompanying material

    • @keithklassen5320
      @keithklassen5320 Před 2 lety +9

      Nobody from Winnipeg deserves to be mentioned, lol.

    • @natiezclement4400
      @natiezclement4400 Před 2 lety +14

      Because for some reason he only focused on Jungle and Drum & Bass side, without looking at the Breakcore side which is a whole universe in itself so it would probably have required his talk to be 3 times longer if he did :^)

    • @nsg23
      @nsg23 Před rokem

      i was confused by the "genres" here. nothing sounded like drum and bass to me. maybe its just me.

    • @enijize1234
      @enijize1234 Před rokem +1

      @@nsg23 21:47 Dillinja and Metalheadz is to DnB what Snoop Dogg and Death Row is to Hip Hop. If you don't hear it you're colour blind.

  • @izzytorres6217
    @izzytorres6217 Před 4 lety +5

    I've expanded my music library, thanks.

  • @stuad70
    @stuad70 Před 3 lety +6

    Big respect to Dr Jason Hockman and his published works within music informatics, machine listening and computational musicology. Moreover this presentation is very well researched and for me personally touches on the era I was lucky enough live within and I'm currently revisiting whilst locked down during my 2nd mid life crisis of "unknown origins" ;-) Allways look to the light at the end of any dark tunnel but watch out for trains behind you ;-) Stay safe

  • @kamsandhu7772
    @kamsandhu7772 Před 7 lety +11

    This is great all the way through - Fabulous.

  • @timcooper140
    @timcooper140 Před 2 lety +6

    Would love to see/hear an updated talk by Jason / Dr Hockman, deconstucting the influence(s) on newer and evolving genres including trap and its UK progeny, grime and drill.

  • @Markel_A
    @Markel_A Před rokem +4

    This was a really cool talk. I happened upon this video when trying to look for people playing breakbeats on drums so I could see what was going on, and found this and ended up watching the whole thing, very fascinating and well presented stuff!

  • @Grumptr0nix
    @Grumptr0nix Před 7 lety +4

    Amazing Dr Hockman!!

  • @AP-Design
    @AP-Design Před 2 lety +8

    My takeaways:
    -Very nice presentation. I'm floored by the influence of the Amen Break, breakbeats, and sampling in general.
    -That "Understanding" track was great. It got me just like it got the presenter.
    -The cutting of the Amen Break at the end was both endlessly fascinating and sad at the same time.

    • @GK-pm5sf
      @GK-pm5sf Před 2 lety

      Can you elaborate on why you might have felt sad?

    • @AutPen38
      @AutPen38 Před rokem

      All of music is being reduced to ones and zeroes. That research project that used machine learning to separate out the constituent parts of the Amen break led to stem-splitting tools that mean any song can be broken into its constituent parts and reassembled by a computer as a kind of pastiche of what music used to be.

  • @Jthe5th
    @Jthe5th Před rokem

    Awesome compilation of songs, loving to see these get their shine.

  • @sdn1528
    @sdn1528 Před rokem +2

    By any means necessary. Dj trace . Wicked breakbeat tune from back in the day. The birth of intelligence

  • @minerfreak88
    @minerfreak88 Před 7 lety +6

    love this talk, he did a great job!

  • @Cylonatreides1975
    @Cylonatreides1975 Před rokem +2

    I looked up Tango off the back of this and found that he sadly died in 2018 :(, He was clearly a genius though. R.I.P. sir! your music will live on.

  • @okbrown
    @okbrown Před rokem +1

    Ahhh maaan... I was in school tuned in to Kool FM listening to this same evolution in real-time. Such a dope time!!

  • @neildunford241
    @neildunford241 Před rokem +2

    "With limited technology, comes amazing technique" - ain't that the truth. I can remember using Octamed for my Amiga - squeezing as much as you could out of the limited sample time, was part of the fun!

  • @juStb4u
    @juStb4u Před 4 lety +1

    Love hearing this history. I’ve always loved breaks and play them often in my sets. Particularly loving the atmospheric breaks & dub/d&b. Super cool talk 👌🏻

  • @jennifernorman9655
    @jennifernorman9655 Před rokem

    A masterpiece of work. Really enjoyed this, thank you 😊

  • @ElisandroDeLeon
    @ElisandroDeLeon Před 3 lety +22

    As a music creator / musician who loves all EDM genres including house and techno, this is mindblowing stuff . I didnt know how essential sampling was to the whole 90's sound.

    • @AutPen38
      @AutPen38 Před rokem +4

      Every music genre arises because of the availability of (cheap) technology. Rock n' roll arose because of electric guitars and amps, heavy metal because of louder amps and guitar pedals, hip hop because of turntables and the 808, synth pop from analogue synths, house/acid/techno because of the 909 and 303, jungle/DnB because of Akai samplers, Dubstep because of Massive, Trap and modern hip hop and pop from Autotune and FL Studio, and EDM because of DAWs like Ableton, VSTs and CZcams. The next big genre will come from the use of AI.

  • @mcgruffmo
    @mcgruffmo Před 7 lety +1

    Great talk, put up more like this!

  • @sarasvatinath3527
    @sarasvatinath3527 Před rokem

    thanks! great workshop and also the music examples are mindblowing

  • @shineshowreels263
    @shineshowreels263 Před 4 lety +1

    thanks for all of this. Very useful and comprehensive.

  • @wyldcardmusic
    @wyldcardmusic Před rokem

    Thank you, this is one of the best things I've ever seen.

  • @brijnich
    @brijnich Před rokem +1

    Great lecture surely goldie worth a mention for time stretching breaks

  • @joshuahelmeke
    @joshuahelmeke Před 5 lety

    THE ILLIST VLOG ON CZcams TO DATE. So much love for this video.

  • @davidjackson4843
    @davidjackson4843 Před rokem

    I have to take my hat off to the og pioneers. Thanks for all your incredible work!
    And Dr Hockman this lecture helped me understand the key characteristics and techniques they used.
    The moment you highlighted the Propellar Heads innovative midi sampler, I knew all I needed to do was open Ableton, load a funky breakbeat sample in simpler, slice it up and convert it to midi. After making a few adjustments I felt the joy that these pioneering producers must have felt when they were breaking new ground! 🙏

  • @richardwilliams4669
    @richardwilliams4669 Před 3 lety

    Phenomenal presentation.

  • @praestantia1
    @praestantia1 Před 5 lety +4

    The bit at 32m28s where he removes elements from the amen. Mind blown!!

    • @AutPen38
      @AutPen38 Před rokem +1

      That must have been done with an early form of the stem-splitting tools that are now used quite commonly. I think the technology started off as part of some AI/machine learning research. It's kind of fitting that that kind of tech is now being used to reinvent sampling, as producers can now sample parts of tracks that weren't isolated, like the Amen drum break itself. Using AI you can sample sounds that are buried in the mix.

  • @AFRoSHEENT3ARCMICHAEL69
    @AFRoSHEENT3ARCMICHAEL69 Před rokem +6

    This was a great presentation. I wish there was more stuff about electronic music's history and how sound designers approach sounds and how electronic music producers approach songs. There's too many amateurs teaching like they know what they're doing. Wish Skrillex handlers would let him make tutorials.

    • @MrSyNRG
      @MrSyNRG Před rokem +4

      Theres never been as many top level producers making production content on youtube as right now, you just have to find them but yeah Disclosure for example …

    • @waynewalker6314
      @waynewalker6314 Před rokem

      Don't want to hear from skrillex about any of this kind of stuff he's a baby when it comes to this thing even this guy and his lame generic research he need to research and come again thicker and heavier than this.

  • @Tracks777
    @Tracks777 Před 7 lety +2

    Lovely content! Keep it up!

  • @erinalexandra3983
    @erinalexandra3983 Před 5 lety +1

    what a talk!! so good

  • @hart3172
    @hart3172 Před 3 lety +3

    Man I got so freaked out when Christmas adverts started playing with breakbeat midway through wtf Google

  • @spacetaco048
    @spacetaco048 Před 2 lety +9

    Breakbeat is 100% my favorite kind of beat.
    I can't wait to learn this on FL studio :D

  • @bobbell3989
    @bobbell3989 Před 7 lety +1

    V. Interesting 👍 Got me even more excited for the new Special Request too. Cheers :)

  • @alanladdseinekatze859
    @alanladdseinekatze859 Před 6 lety +15

    What a great overview on the history of break beat sampling, but a few things to argue about.
    1. the transitional era, letting Marley Marl defined editing of the break beat evolve into the Jungle years is missing completely. The UK Rap scene in the late 90s lead to artists like Silver Bullet, Hijack, and the true originator (and I know some of you would never admit) Rebel MC. Those were influenced by the street riots during carnival, thus inventing a radical, faster approach to the movement, making them figure out ways of a higher paced usage of breaks without pitching.
    Especially Rebel MCs second album is to be considered the spark on Jungle music.
    2. the late 90s and 2000s are missing. Grounbreaking artist, such as Photek and Squarepusher should have been mentioned.
    3. the influence of Alec Empire on usage of the Amen as the signature break in Hardcore/Jungle should have been mentioned.

    • @darrenrozier7000
      @darrenrozier7000 Před 6 lety +6

      Definitely agree on the first point regarding Marley Marl, I was literally waiting to hear the name mentioned during the one second sample time section as it was Marley who thought to separate the kick and drum.
      I think UK Rap quickly morphed towards the rave scene as it was homegrown and supported and thus basically follows the path of early hip hop/electro to hardcore. Some specific things are not necessarily relevant in the context of what he was saying, though of course important in themselves. I agree that Rebel MC could be called the Godfather of Jungle.
      I think more mention should have been made regarding the huge effect that Recycle had, the timestretching/pitchshifting example should have of course been Goldie's Terminator. :) This was the first track to use it as a prominent effect.
      However, count me completely puzzled about your mentioning of Alec Empire, I am not sure what influence he had, if any. You will have to educate me on that one, but in late '91 everyone was chasing Amen from signature appearances in a) Lenny Dee Ice's We Are IE & 2) Carl Cox's Let The Bass Kick (sampling of Success 'n' Effect) and 3) I want You (Forever) among others. Amen usage over '92 increased exponentially (after everyone got over recycling Run DMC's - Run's House courtesy of Urban Shakedown's Some Justice in the spring/early summer of '92), culminating in the spring/summer of '93 literally being an Amen fest which only carried on into jungle, which took Amen, Think, Sesame Street & Soul Pride as its staple breaks (later additions being Kurtis Blow's Do the Do & Paris' Make Way For A Panther). Amen also remained a staple in Happy Hardcore until that genre shed breakbeats completely.

    • @AutPen38
      @AutPen38 Před rokem +2

      I'd forgotten how early it was that Rebel MC brought out 'Comin on Strong' and 'The Wickedest Sound'. I bought those but was more invested in the house/ravier stuff of the same time being put out by Shut Up and Dance and the Ragga Twins, 4hero, and Rob Playford's label. I kind of drifted away when it started going above 135bpm though, never mind the 170bpm is seemed to settle on. FWIW, I thought it was a bit weird that Goldie, LTJ Bukem, Doc Scott, and Fabio & Grooverider didn't get mentioned in this lecture.

  • @moagnor
    @moagnor Před rokem +2

    I wonder if any of those producers still have midi files and sample disks for old samplers lying around their bedrooms. Would be amazing to see them fire up old A950s and Amiga 500s and play from the original equipment!

  • @ekoofficial3298
    @ekoofficial3298 Před 6 lety

    Top lecture and really enjoyed this 10/10

  • @UnoDat
    @UnoDat Před 2 lety +3

    Tango made some damn fine tracks throughout the 90s RIP

  • @steppinrzr8396
    @steppinrzr8396 Před rokem

    Excellent

  • @matthawes4395
    @matthawes4395 Před 4 lety

    Wow brilliant stuff

  • @bebenzomusic
    @bebenzomusic Před rokem +2

    sounds from 90s,20s are still hard to redesign. So machine and real ;)

  • @kadiummusic
    @kadiummusic Před rokem +2

    Miss hearing new songs with intricate melodies, different tempos, different rhythms, solos, lyrics with depth that are akin to poetry.... and so on. ☹

    • @forfold
      @forfold Před rokem +2

      they still exist, you're just not looking hard enough

  • @Captivatebeats
    @Captivatebeats Před 7 lety +1

    Really good!!

  • @davebroughton73
    @davebroughton73 Před rokem

    this was great! so interesting (and dope).

  • @harrisonbrooks7451
    @harrisonbrooks7451 Před 3 lety +6

    This was a fun watch. I was under the impression that a lot of the edits and processing done to breaks in old school jungle and drum and bass was in large part due to the use of the amiga / tracker programs that were used for sequencing?

  • @devilzelink
    @devilzelink Před 4 lety

    Very
    insightful!

  • @NonBinary_Star
    @NonBinary_Star Před rokem

    29:07 wOw 👌🏿 this automated analysis is super cool! i didnt know such a thing existed, at least in a visual assembly line tree like this!

  • @gamblemadman
    @gamblemadman Před 3 lety +9

    On his little diagram of the various breaks genres evolving into/influencing later genres (10:47) it doesn't show a direct connection between UK Garage and Dubstep. There was a definite connection there.

    • @echosoul8696
      @echosoul8696 Před 2 lety +9

      a lot of drum and bass heads tend to lean towards thinking dubstep is just slow drum and bass when it actually came directly from weird garage producers. obviously there is jungle influence in the early stuff and drum and bass influence in the later hardcore american bro sound. but yeah it came from garage.

    • @AutPen38
      @AutPen38 Před rokem

      It's also amusing that if you follow the line from disco to house to hardcore to jungle to drum n' bass to dubstep, you can't help but notice that with each evolution, the music gets less and less melodic and more like random noise made by computers. I can't wait for the unlistenable genre that gets made with AI.

    • @funnythings4u
      @funnythings4u Před rokem

      ​@@AutPen38dubstep has so many melodic tracks

  • @ianrohrback
    @ianrohrback Před rokem +1

    Man you really know your shit. Was excited to see an Exit Records track on there, Darren has been pushing DnB in such interesting directions for years now.

  • @gremiis4083
    @gremiis4083 Před rokem

    SEMPER FI BRO THAT WAS AWESOME SEE IN THE NEXT 1. GOD BLESS .

  • @OrganicBeats1
    @OrganicBeats1 Před 7 lety +3

    Top notch stuff

  • @iron_buddha
    @iron_buddha Před 7 lety +1

    very cool

  • @tobinakatarx
    @tobinakatarx Před 9 měsíci

    That was so good

  • @rossnoble6364
    @rossnoble6364 Před rokem

    Great documentary. What a label moving shadow is by the way

  • @alexandermccarthy
    @alexandermccarthy Před rokem +2

    Where was this class when I was in school?
    Amazing presentation by someone who obviously loves the subject matter!

    • @py_a_thon
      @py_a_thon Před rokem +1

      On internet forums and comment sections and books and documentaries.

  • @NN-vs2eg
    @NN-vs2eg Před 3 lety

    Brilliant.

  • @terrywilliams3741
    @terrywilliams3741 Před rokem

    Very much informal...

  • @francisbiloo1955
    @francisbiloo1955 Před 7 lety

    Intéressant tout ça.

  • @stuartsmith5146
    @stuartsmith5146 Před rokem

    Left out of this breakbeat demo is Grateful Dead “Eyes of the World” and nearly every other song of theirs as well as most all songs of the jam band era from ‘69-‘99

  • @rickthomson7740
    @rickthomson7740 Před 3 lety +2

    Amen to the amen break 🙏🏻 this is decent thank you 👏🏻👏🏻

  • @mrmustard1633
    @mrmustard1633 Před rokem

    love this love this love this

  • @DRAMENSY
    @DRAMENSY Před rokem

    thx for this video

  • @tutorsurrey
    @tutorsurrey Před 4 lety

    fascinating

  • @skbevila
    @skbevila Před rokem +2

    How many folks have sampled a section of this talk in 2023?

  • @bewhereyouareimhere6425
    @bewhereyouareimhere6425 Před 7 lety +9

    sweet, a list of the tracks played would be good:P

  • @andresfuentes9545
    @andresfuentes9545 Před 6 lety

    thank!

  • @beatsbyfrugi
    @beatsbyfrugi Před rokem

    Thanks for this

  • @hanselmansell7555
    @hanselmansell7555 Před rokem

    That prof longhair is amazing for 53 😮 thanks mate 👍 🇬🇧

  • @hammondified
    @hammondified Před rokem +1

    Nope ... Can't continue without finding understand and waxing out... Boss tune 👍

  • @ChristopherCricketWallace

    Tango. And Dom and Rowland... Takes me back.

  • @adamvoid555
    @adamvoid555 Před rokem +2

    "Talking about music is like dancing about architecture"

  • @tomwells4899
    @tomwells4899 Před rokem

    kool lecture professor, having grown up in the 90s rave era I was always aware of the 80s influence and listen back to the 40s and rock n roll from the beginning of breakbeat kreation and wonder what iut would be like to wander back into jazz and blues .... would you find Hardcore Drum n Bass Rhythms deep in military or handel?

  • @Noises1444
    @Noises1444 Před rokem +1

    I can imagine now with all the ai developments recently the stuff he was talking about at the end will drastically improve

  • @gabrielpline7490
    @gabrielpline7490 Před rokem +1

    Would have loved to see a side-road into jungle raga and it’s development. I know very little of electronic music but, as a drummer, jungle/dnb has always made my booty wiggle.

  • @soeneido443
    @soeneido443 Před rokem

    Tango - ‘Understanding’ is such massive banger. Haha he wanted to jam out to that one so bad

  • @Clubberize
    @Clubberize Před 6 lety

    wicked!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @DaryllConway
    @DaryllConway Před rokem +2

    It says Dubstep started in the late 1990s but Dubstep wasn't a thing until 2005-6, I remember going to FWD at Plastic people when it started to get played for the first time amongst Grime music

    • @taggerung_
      @taggerung_ Před rokem +2

      dubstep has been around in the uk since late 1990s

  • @lordflatworm
    @lordflatworm Před rokem

    Dope

  • @z_yt_96
    @z_yt_96 Před 6 lety +4

    Its a shame there was no example of neurofunk or halftime, those sounds are really interesting for the future drum and bass sound

    • @KH_1
      @KH_1 Před 4 lety +3

      I think Neurofunk are focus on the complex bass sculpting, the drum part is not that interesting.

  • @bobeyes3284
    @bobeyes3284 Před rokem

    I grew up on this. Good time to party.