[313] West London sound???

2001-07-27 Thread Max Duley (ARCart)
'scuse me, but what is the West London sound? I live in west London and I
have never heard of it. Are you talking about 2-Step, or UK Garage as it is
now more commonly known, or something completely different?

Max
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http://www.ARCart.org


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Re: [313] West London sound???

2001-07-27 Thread Dan Sicko
It's kind of a misnomer ... from what I understand there was a 
cluster of record stores and distributors in that general area?


Also commonly described as Broken Beats

-d

At 5:42 PM +0100 7/27/01, Max Duley (ARCart) wrote:

'scuse me, but what is the West London sound? I live in west London and I
have never heard of it. Are you talking about 2-Step, or UK Garage as it is
now more commonly known, or something completely different?

Max
---
http://www.ARCart.org


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RE: [313] West London sound???

2001-07-27 Thread Rob Theakston
www.goyamusic.com is one of the main distributors. www.groovedis.com also
carries alot of their stuff.
if i recall correctly, goya is housed in the old trojan records pressing
plant on kensal road. but i could be wrong, as i don't have any of that info
in front of me.

top five goya music tearjerkers (for me at least):

neon phusion : the future aint the same as it used to be (laws of motion)
plutonia : forever (visions)
seiji  : second nature (bitasweet)
afronaught : transcend me
mark de clive lowe : better days (people)

313ers can find that stuff at DJ Supply. Gillespie makes sure it's in stock
constantly

np: two minutes to midnight : iron maiden




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Re: [313] west london sound - Nubian Mindz

2001-04-06 Thread Matt MacQueen
 Sorry if this has been mentioned already:  There's an interview with Dego
 and IG Culture in last month's XLR8R.  I would have liked more, but it was a
 decent introduction.  The article includes sidebar with a rundown on other
 key figures.

I'm playing catch-up on this thread, but I've been surprised not
to hear mention of two amazing contributors to this scene.  Neon
Phusion!  Their Future Ain't THe Same As It Used 2 B double LP
is a GREAT starter record for someone getting interested in this
genre.  I consider it one of the cornerstone albums that helped
kick it all off, and raise awareness of that west london team of
collaborators. Very diverse too.  One of their best  tracks
called Timeless Motion is on the Co-Op vol.1 compilation, which
is another great place to start if you're interested in this
sound.

Also: Nubian Mindz!  Brilliant stuff by Colin Lindo, some is more
future-electro-ey and faster broken beat than is typical from his
peers.  He also does some 4/4 stuff. Check the stuff on Archive
(this little italian label has magnificent quality control - hey
they even put out a Theo Parrish record), esp. the track Black
Science, and the 10 he did is great too.  He also did an early
4-tracker 12 on 2000Black and a whole bunch of 12's on Archive.
Quite futuristic and definitely electronic.  

The last Nubian Mindz 12 on 2000Black (Check da vibe) was the my
first disappointment w/ that (otherwise knockout) label.  It had
to happen sometime.  ;)  My personal feeling is if you have the
guts to put out a 1-sided record, that track better be KILLER.  I
think it's only average -- but I guess I just had higher
expectations, it's more of a distorted Alpha Omega jump-up
affair, more of a harder dnb vein and too fast for my tastes. 
But still I have nothing but respect for Colin Lindo's weird
offshoot projects, keep em coming.

The Nubian Minds double LP called new world chaos (also avail.
on CD!) is also strong, one cool thing I noticed, to tie back to
the Detroit influence of his tracks. On the back of the LP jacket
is says:  Special Thanks to U.R. But the letter U is from the
Underground Resistance logo, and the letter R is from the
Reinforced logo.  ANd that really sums up well the sounds and
ideas that come through in his music:  you can hear the Mad Mike
and Dego influences, but Nubian Mindz are definitely working
their own sound in un-charted territory.

peace
-- 
Matt MacQueen  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
archived radio shows -- http://macqueen.com/radio


FW: [313] west london sound

2001-04-05 Thread Mann, Ravinder [CCS]
 OK...who remembers IG Culture from Dodge City Productionsthat was back in 
 the day...
 Also recording as Likwid Biskit...I think...
 
 
 2. not only is 4Hero to be credited, but I find IG Culture and Phil Asher 
 also to be founding fathers behind the movement. ESPECIALLY Phil Asher, as 
 he is the one who brought many of these artists together. 


Re: [313] west london sound

2001-04-05 Thread K Hawkins
Sorry if this has been mentioned already:  There's an interview with Dego 
and IG Culture in last month's XLR8R.  I would have liked more, but it was a 
decent introduction.  The article includes sidebar with a rundown on other 
key figures.

_
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