Hardcore u no the score
the things is, i didn't know the score, i wasn't even aware i should
have been counting anything.
Who was playing, why was a score kept, was there any literature on the
score,who won,what was second prize, or indeed, what do you get if you
know the score.Were you left with a feeeling of inadequacy if you didn't
know the score, those that knew it, did you ever tell other people what
it was, or was it a kind of masonic handshake think, wink wink nudge
nudge etc....
yours, mathamatically challenged
p
robin wrote:
i find the use of the term 'happy' when used with hardcore a bit wierd
here.
wasn't it just 'hardcore'?
i thought the 'happy' came later, along with 160bpm four to the floor
instead of breaks
could be wrong tho as what i know as hardcore lost me when i became
more interested in house music.
robin...
On 6 May 2005, at 11:37, Dan Bean wrote:
Hardcore and Jungle/D&B share musical elements such as tempo and the
use of breaks + there was a fair bit of crossover in terms of
producers and DJs. DJs at the time would play sets either mixing the
two or have a happy hardcore set and a jungle set (e.g. Kenny Ken).
Danny Breaks was one of many producers that crossed over. In fact the
Essex jungle peeps (especially the Suburban Base crew) probably had
the closest links to hardcore, though not necessarily the happy end
of things.
Early jungle comps such as Drum & Bass Selection Vol 1:
http://www.discogs.com/release/97955
illustrate the link quite well. At the time it was marketed as a D&B
compilation, but listening back the hardcore element is pretty strong.
Suburban Base's 'The Joint' is probably another good example:
http://www.discogs.com/release/157323
Check the Sonz Of Loop Da Loop Era (Danny Breaks) track for breakbeat
madness!
Having said all that, there was definitely a distinction between the
stereotypical happy hardcore and D&B fans. The former would be pilled
up with their shirts off, jogging on the spot for hours on end,
whereas the D&B fans tended to be more into spliffs and punctuate
standing around with the occassional burst of frenetic activity.
Obviously it was more complicated than that though..
You wrote:
This thread isn't long enough already in my opinion, so I'd like to add
that I can't see much relation to happy hardcore and drum 'n' bass, (or
'jungle') although I do see how they evolved from similar origins.