techstep
Techstep (also referred to as tech and darkstep) is a subgenre of drum and … Read Full Bio ↴Techstep (also referred to as tech and darkstep) is a subgenre of drum and bass that was popular in the late 1990s.
It is characterized by a dark, sci-fi mood, near-exclusive use of synthesised or sampled sound sources, influences from industrial and techno music, and what some writers have described as a "clinical" sound.
Although described as having a "techy" feel, techstep's relationship with techno should not be overstated. It shares the technique of creating a high-energy collage from abstract, synthetic noises, including samples, bleeps and squelches: it rarely uses instruments that have not been processed by effects.
Similarly, quantized drum-machine kit and percussion sounds are favored over naturalistic human breakbeats.
However, it usually adheres to drum and bass norms in other regards, especially in terms of musical structure, with the emphasis on the "drop". Techstep saw jungle music's obsession with bass change from aiming for low and deep to exploring timbre, artists aiming to outdo each other with ever more distorted and "twisted" bass sounds.
Techstep developed from jungle music and hardstep around 1996.
The name of the genre was coined by Ed Rush and Trace, who were both instrumental in shaping the sound of techstep.
In this case, "tech" did not indicate a relation to the smoother style of Detroit techno, but to the rawer, more caustic hardcore sounds that were popular in Belgium in the earlier part of the decade. Techstep was a reaction to more virtuosic and more pop musical elements in jungle and drum 'n' bass, which were seen as an adulteration of "true" or "original" jungle.
Instead the genre was infused with a simpler & colder sound that stripped away all R&B elements, and replaced them with a more techno and hardcore sound, and ideological influences like youth anti-capitalism movements, and dystopian films.
Many of the original techstep producers matured into the neurofunk style.
Early pioneers of the style include Black Sun Empire, Source Direct, Trace, Ed Rush, The Panacea, Teebee, Dieselboy, Calyx, Counterstrike, Dom and Roland, Edgey, Hive, Ram Trilogy, Konflict, Cause 4 Concern, and Technical Itch. Moving Shadow, Metalheadz, No U-Turn Recordings, and Renegade Hardware were important labels in the development of the style.
It is characterized by a dark, sci-fi mood, near-exclusive use of synthesised or sampled sound sources, influences from industrial and techno music, and what some writers have described as a "clinical" sound.
Although described as having a "techy" feel, techstep's relationship with techno should not be overstated. It shares the technique of creating a high-energy collage from abstract, synthetic noises, including samples, bleeps and squelches: it rarely uses instruments that have not been processed by effects.
Similarly, quantized drum-machine kit and percussion sounds are favored over naturalistic human breakbeats.
However, it usually adheres to drum and bass norms in other regards, especially in terms of musical structure, with the emphasis on the "drop". Techstep saw jungle music's obsession with bass change from aiming for low and deep to exploring timbre, artists aiming to outdo each other with ever more distorted and "twisted" bass sounds.
Techstep developed from jungle music and hardstep around 1996.
The name of the genre was coined by Ed Rush and Trace, who were both instrumental in shaping the sound of techstep.
In this case, "tech" did not indicate a relation to the smoother style of Detroit techno, but to the rawer, more caustic hardcore sounds that were popular in Belgium in the earlier part of the decade. Techstep was a reaction to more virtuosic and more pop musical elements in jungle and drum 'n' bass, which were seen as an adulteration of "true" or "original" jungle.
Instead the genre was infused with a simpler & colder sound that stripped away all R&B elements, and replaced them with a more techno and hardcore sound, and ideological influences like youth anti-capitalism movements, and dystopian films.
Many of the original techstep producers matured into the neurofunk style.
Early pioneers of the style include Black Sun Empire, Source Direct, Trace, Ed Rush, The Panacea, Teebee, Dieselboy, Calyx, Counterstrike, Dom and Roland, Edgey, Hive, Ram Trilogy, Konflict, Cause 4 Concern, and Technical Itch. Moving Shadow, Metalheadz, No U-Turn Recordings, and Renegade Hardware were important labels in the development of the style.
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@jakubzamazal
Probably a bit late, but still 🤣🤣
I always have to be in a mood for Noisia. Their sound design is just specific and different. When i listen to them in that moment i don't like anything else.
My top 10♥️
Block Control
Dead Limit
Mantra
Could This Be
Hold Your Colour Remix
Moon Palace
Infusion
Arrakis Remix
Anomaly
Reptilians
@NOISIA
Watch the new music video for Tentacles: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kxstMJY2Q28
@fiddysplayground1163
that shit's weird bra
@phobosknightz3805
Testicles?
@TheMegafion
2010 : Split the Atom
2020 : Split the Noisia
@gdtevolo5862
;-;
@skaffoe_lobby
Sad:(
@broland115
fuck man i thought it will be a joke, instead you made me sad:((
@robinlukas4025
glad that they postponed the actual split for end of 2021
@TheMegafion
Makes me sad too don't get me wrong...
@drorbazer7531
Noisia's snares were always ahead of their time!