I grew up in the hard house/hard dance scene. Epic, _epic_ times. Tidy 25 this July, the _first_ post Covid event and I think it's going to be destruction.
Hate divides, music unites!! As a kid I dressed as a Skinhead. I then became a break dancer and Hip Hop head. I indulged in the Rave scene from 88-93 and was part of that pure togetherness. House music played in clubs became more standardised in production so I started drifting away. That's when Jungle/Drum and Bass came along and brought outstanding creativeness back into underground music and restored my faith!! I have DJ'd for over a couple of decades, playing eclectic sets and D&B will always feature in my heart and in some of my sets. Music is the food of love!!
I've lived in the US my entire life and jungle and drum and bass are my fave kinds of music. I was maybe 8 years old when I first heard it, it was in a movie or a game, but I rediscovered and found appreciation for it when I was 14, thanks to the internet. I'm not sure what it was, it just tickled me the right way. I'm 24 now and in those 10 years I've heard so much, both old and new, while learning of the roots. Lately I've been returning to the classics a lot more than usual. I was born in a time and place that does not appreciate this kind of music, I barely have any friends who even know what jungle is let alone feel what I feel when I listen to it. The 90's UK rave scene to someone like me is a myth, not only do I barely remember the 90's at all, but venues hosting anything like this were far away from my hometown and in big cities like New York City or Los Angeles, meaning I'd have to shell out a lot of money for travel. By the time I could even go to raves the scene had already changed. A video like this just reminds me of the grand legacy left behind, because ultimately young people like me will be responsible for carrying it one day
you sound exactly like me dude. always loved it as a child, got into it at 13 (Goldie and Omni Trio GOT ME BRUH), fucked around and found the CLASSICS in my early 20s, got smitten!! been obsessed with the culture and music since! even changed my name on social media at some point to “Horizons” after hearing Horizons by LTJ Bukem. as a kid living in in the inner city, i got teased for listening to dnb, for a long time when i didnt have actual friends i had dnb. eventually learned about the scene and frfr, i have nights where im sad as hell i cant time travel to actually experience a 90d warehouse rave. my lifelong obsession has brought me to learn how to make jungle & dnb myself. i just started releasing my own music and my goal is to drop tracks and dj enough out here in the US to eventually land an opportunity to head over to the UK to see if my sound and style hold up where it all began. what i can say dude is that in the US at the moment dnb is ramping up still and has been in the last 3 years, and scenes are poppin up all over nowadays, i hope you eventually find your tribe, as im on the search for mine as well!
I was born in Italy, came to the UK mid 96, bought my first DnB cassette outside camden town tube station, been a DnB soldier ever since Thank you so much for the documentary, brings back some memories bruv
Gregory Coleman is the mans name, he died in 2006 in Atlanta, homeless and no doubt penniless. It should be called the Coleman break after the genius that came up with it. But as usual, in the whitewashing of black culture, his name is never even sought, never mind known. RIP Gregory, we owe you everything and you asked for nothing!
@spinning debbie Cannot believe i missed that! Only been on facebook since about 2017 so that wouldn't help! Sadly 9 years too late for Mr Coleman but a great thing none the less. Maybe it should be a drive every year on his birthday to help his family? As it's still getting rinsed!
My 11 month year old son goes mental when he hears jungle / DNB / Old school Hardcore.. I’m so proud of myself for teaching him so young, when he’s older he’ll know the true meaning behind it... coming together! Never let the scene die!!!!
Jheeeze.. This hits harder than ever right now. Rave has done more for equality than any government. One nation. All together. Humans raving. That's all we need
We are lucky it happened when it did because It couldn't happen the way it did back then now, if the rave scene happened after the introduction of CCTV, it would have been impossible to hold the illegal acid house raves triggering the concurrent(rave/hardcore/jungle)scenes. And tbh, people actually went out for a laugh, not to validate themselves or top up their likes on fb and insta. there was none of this attitude like today where people do good things to make themselves more popular and to look more relevant. There were no mobiles, it was fucking hard to get to a rave back then if you missed the clues and cars(those who know know) and people wore anything, literally. You wouldn't be judged if you turned up a scruff. Having fun, meeting people, and having a great time was way more important than scoring points. Everybody in the zone, and happy and smiling. Fuck this time its grim, lets go back.
My favorite years for Breakbeat/Jungle/DnB range from the years 93-97 that I still listen to. Much respect to Bukem, Trace, Goldie, Grooverider, Nookie, Dilinja, T.Power, Potential Bad Boy, Peshay, and many more groove scientists from that era. ✌🏼 ☮️
What a great video as a 50 year old you told it right thank you I am and forever will be a junglist what a great time to be alive weekends brought so many memories never to be forgotten thank you for the video peace love and unity
To be honest, I thought this was an upload of a BBC documentary series for the first several minutes I was watching this. It just sounded so professional.
Amazing video. Gave me chills, I have to show this to my kids. I grew up in the 90s in LA I went to my very 1st rave and felt in love with Jungle. Junglist are for life!
I been djing since 11 years old (1980) love the undeground, and I still have the first original 'Jungle Techno' vinyl on Ibiza Records that to me was the defining track for jungle beginnings bridging from Rave to Jungle late 1991 - love all underground music 'freestylers' 'originators' who push the music on one love respect!
I grew up in the rave scene in Los Angeles. Early 90s. This brought such a big smile. And that's what it was back then. No colors. Just bass. Thanks for this upload. Boh! Boh! Boh!
Sub 30? You're kidding yourself. It was over before you were conceived bro. And only existed in a few UK cities. It's not there anymore. You're chasing something that doesn't exist. Nothing can explain the vibe that comes from UK black and white (mostly black) working class in same room with a sound system a that time. Historical re-enactments at student nights do not even hint at touching. The only remnants now are Grime, which is grim - and pre 2006 dubstep,
@Harry Ballzac You need the pre-2006 dubstep man. Skrillex Fukd over dubstep like Pendulum Fukd over dnb - so it became white rock just like dnb did. Obvious its heavy blaze music. th-cam.com/video/cIpc817U_R4/w-d-xo.html - coki th-cam.com/video/WHGYj1kuozc/w-d-xo.html - plastician th-cam.com/video/KOttZSnzG7s/w-d-xo.html - benga th-cam.com/video/lgqMzbcXlmE/w-d-xo.html - headhunter playlist th-cam.com/play/PLfZktDPxyQYdtwQJPlYlOz1kZY7vBuR2l.html
@Harry Ballzac It's true man. That "another planet" or whatever came out, it felt fresh but was beginning of the end. Suddenly Pendulum was in Our Price, parents buying "drum n bass" for kids christmas lists, it was busted. Never went back the same. Skrillex did that to Dubstep, but killed it off after just 1 or 2 years instead of 1 or 2 decades like Pendulum. So Dubstep now is not what it was. If you know it, fair play. Dubstep was the chilled older brother of Grime, which at the time wasn't called Grime, it didn't have a name for a long time - it was just that mad music on pirate radio. th-cam.com/video/7sJuicV0ASs/w-d-xo.html. It just got too much tho - so aggressive - and half the people in it ended up dead or in prison - like literally crazy titch and his step-dad shot dead a rival MC with a mag-10 for dissing titch's half-brother on pirate radio... like a Jeremy Kyle show with live ammo. and people took the sound more introspective and just wanted to stay inside and blaze and Dubstep was born.
they stopped the raves because people were getting high, coming together and dreaming of creating a better world. and we can't have that, too dangerous to the state. it was never about the drugs, it was about control.
After years of loving modern music labeled "jungle," I decided to finally learn what "jungle" really meant. I was lucky to find this video, it's exactly what I was looking for! Thank you.
Im Australian born in 2000 an have been listening to uk sounds like bassline, dnb etc for a few years now, it doesn't get much exposure here but its growing, stuff like this is awesome.
There's scenes here dude, Melbourne has a small scene of heads an I believe they love it over in Perth. Plus a lot of doofers like myself absolutely froff breaks an bass
@fullysic76 you got sound cloud or Spotify playlist dude, love to find me some fresh tunes. Not everyone's caught up in that shit bro, probably just work with douchebags heyy haha
@fullysic76 Yeah for sure dude, downloading tune in now might see watch can find. Keep hush on TH-cam is my favorite place for mixs, underground club in London. Dead man's chest, skeptical an dolenzs sets are wicked good check em out if ✌
Great video, I love Jungle + D'n'B so much, hearing any classic tune gets me emotional. 44 now and would still love to go out raving but not many places around here.
Spent the summer of 96 living over a bar where I worked, the whole apartment to myself, every morning I was listening to a live tape of the groove rider, never tired of it,
Loved it all growing up, I went from hardcore to jungle to house and trance, now im 44 and trance is still where its at for me from 1994 to now. Great video man!
wow , i must tell you, i was smiling ear to ear throughout the whole video ... all these familiar sounds! and its good to know that there is indeed a story behind them
@@COVbadman79 They also set up a Kool FM Midlands station. But London had tens of pirates we were spoilt for choice I was always lending my tapes to friends and family out of London.
BearingUK....Big up yourself....Respect....Outstanding documentaries 1-4, by far,far the best that are out there.....parts 2-3 bring back so,so many good times.....
94-98 and father more my experiences with drum an base to a total degree was just heaven and i never once thought different. The words spoken in the send tunes got me elevated to dance an no more!! Dreamscape and Universe Raves were epic and id love those day's to come back!!!!!!!!
DJMoley LDN Roast wasn't playing Jungle in 91. It was mainly house and hardcore at Turnmills. It wasn't until they moved to Linford Studios in 92 that more breakbeat and ragga influenced music started coming in. 91 was still hardcore.
@@BillyMustang101 91 / 92 you know your stuff, I used to go to Linford in I believe 91 but to be honest I was not of sound mind back then. It was like a dream 🎵
I was just watching passively until I heard Stevie Hyper D and it gave me goosebumps. Legend. Rose are red, violets are passive, wicked wicked junglist massive
I was there in the beginning in the US/UK and lived through the metamorphosis and splintering into many the forms we see today. The impact of this experience still pumps through my veins. Forever a junglist at heart.
The 90's UK rave scene has influenced my production style and musical tastes tenfold. I have never experienced it first hand, yet I just cannot get enough of it. Respect and love to all rave heads!
Thanks this you can tell the massive amount of work that's gone into it. Like all your videos very well researched and put together. It was an incredible time to be young. Sadly I can't see the original vibe ever coming back. It was a moment in time really glad to have been a part of it. Still we've got our memories ain't all bad
13:54 2 personal favourites of mine: Dead Dred - Dred Bass (original is amazing but so are Origin Unknown and Back 2 Basics remixes) Hyper On Experience - Lord of the Null Lines (Foul Play remix) Play either of these and you knew the roof was going to come off!
wow thank you. grew up around a lot of hip hop and grime predominantly, found passion in both of those genres. this is the first documentary ive watched on jungle and have come away with a lot. thank you for enlightening me about how the soundsystem and breakbeat culture evolved into pirate radio stations jungle and garage and then grime which im familiar with, one love
Love your documentarys, so much humanity and love to the music! I wish i could experience one of those early raves without those phones and fashion driven people around me! Oh man i got goosebumps when i saw that crowd jumping to the beat in that one end scene
Same here!! My kids are now spinning my vinyl collection. I've passed it down to them. Building a legacy for the to respect and cherish. Really proud to have lived and experienced the era. It shape my youth growing up.
I love that Jungle finally started getting big again a few years back, and not just Ragga Jungle & Darkside stuff (which seemed to revive first) but the stuff that goes straight to my heart: The DEEP JUNGLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pure feelings on the pads & chords, next level drum cuttage, and clean, pure sub bass!
The thing is everyone always says who's the best at this and that the was so many good artists bringing different flavours it was a collective where numerous legends contributed.... Loads from Essex Suffolk and Norfolk I may add....
Honestly such a good documentary!!! Thank you for it really really helped open my eyes even more. I knew about amen beats but I didnt know why it was called that haha. thanks!!!!!!!
Will be a jungle kid no matter what live i will be living. This music helped me through out the toughest moments of my life. Thanks to all musicians X May i just mention Orca - Alive n Kicking since you did reference old skool hardcore which was pre jungle :)
Seen Congo Natty live couple of years ago. It was fcking awesome, and I hope I will have another chance to party to his music soon. FaXcool is one of my favourite DJ-s, he is the reason I am into the jungle this much. Unfortunately he stopped his work and there are no new mixes for a while.
I mean I knew it bu this makes u appreciate how much the uk has contributed and given to the dance music / rave scene, of course couldn’t of been done without the impact of the West Indian/Caribbean culture blending with the UK
Was there from the beginning raving in Coventry the edge the sanctuary Milton Keynes universe tribal gathering traveled all over back in the day 🎶 the good old days 😀
That wasn't the beginning my brother.......... eclipse before the edge and a million times better......... 88 was the beginning of it all, we just joined at the appropriate time, older ones joined earlier, you younger ones carry it on. RESPECT.
Mogwai I'm 45 now and started listening in 89 90 but was too young to go raving lol but was loving the hardcore sound ratpack top buzz Carl Cox micky finn slipmatt etc and I'm from Cardiff starting going to Coventry in 93 universe triball gathering big love dreams are to one nations hysteria many many more so ravingnwas 93 onwards for me bro but avid listener from 1990 plus
@@mrbongoman100 100% LAD!!! there was a tape........of thousands bro hahaha and M.C gave a big..hello cardiff, may of been ratty or the buzz? fuck knows, but cardiff were always represented bro, met many top boys from there. I'LL FIND OUT , hahahahahaha
just clocked this - amazing mate well done. Very informative and glad some one like yourself has made a great effort. Peace, Love and Unity as always bredder! One love
I was purely hip hop from the late 70's then the rave scene kicked in and it changed my life I've met loads of safe people during Jungle/DnB nights out in Nottingham back in the day
The UK has given birth to some of the best music generes and music in general
100% spot on !!!! I'm with you there !
Happy hardcore is the best example imo, original dubstep was good as well
I grew up in the hard house/hard dance scene.
Epic, _epic_ times.
Tidy 25 this July, the _first_ post Covid event and I think it's going to be destruction.
Absolutely most definitely most certainly
I'm gonna say Jamaica trumps it. Were still catching up on what they have done. It's mind blowing.
Jungle - Its not a black thing, its not a white thing - its a unite thing.
Peace, love and unity to all junglists!
Its a London someting Dis !
Peace Brother!
Love, bruddah.
The world needs jungle now more then ever..
law5kie So so Sooooo true!!!
Hate divides, music unites!! As a kid I dressed as a Skinhead. I then became a break dancer and Hip Hop head. I indulged in the Rave scene from 88-93 and was part of that pure togetherness. House music played in clubs became more standardised in production so I started drifting away. That's when Jungle/Drum and Bass came along and brought outstanding creativeness back into underground music and restored my faith!! I have DJ'd for over a couple of decades, playing eclectic sets and D&B will always feature in my heart and in some of my sets. Music is the food of love!!
who else is watching this during lockdown and can't wait to rave again?
I'll never be able to rave again, I'm never getting vaxxed
I've lived in the US my entire life and jungle and drum and bass are my fave kinds of music. I was maybe 8 years old when I first heard it, it was in a movie or a game, but I rediscovered and found appreciation for it when I was 14, thanks to the internet. I'm not sure what it was, it just tickled me the right way. I'm 24 now and in those 10 years I've heard so much, both old and new, while learning of the roots. Lately I've been returning to the classics a lot more than usual. I was born in a time and place that does not appreciate this kind of music, I barely have any friends who even know what jungle is let alone feel what I feel when I listen to it. The 90's UK rave scene to someone like me is a myth, not only do I barely remember the 90's at all, but venues hosting anything like this were far away from my hometown and in big cities like New York City or Los Angeles, meaning I'd have to shell out a lot of money for travel. By the time I could even go to raves the scene had already changed. A video like this just reminds me of the grand legacy left behind, because ultimately young people like me will be responsible for carrying it one day
you sound exactly like me dude. always loved it as a child, got into it at 13 (Goldie and Omni Trio GOT ME BRUH), fucked around and found the CLASSICS in my early 20s, got smitten!! been obsessed with the culture and music since! even changed my name on social media at some point to “Horizons” after hearing Horizons by LTJ Bukem. as a kid living in in the inner city, i got teased for listening to dnb, for a long time when i didnt have actual friends i had dnb. eventually learned about the scene and frfr, i have nights where im sad as hell i cant time travel to actually experience a 90d warehouse rave. my lifelong obsession has brought me to learn how to make jungle & dnb myself. i just started releasing my own music and my goal is to drop tracks and dj enough out here in the US to eventually land an opportunity to head over to the UK to see if my sound and style hold up where it all began.
what i can say dude is that in the US at the moment dnb is ramping up still and has been in the last 3 years, and scenes are poppin up all over nowadays, i hope you eventually find your tribe, as im on the search for mine as well!
I was born in Italy, came to the UK mid 96, bought my first DnB cassette outside camden town tube station, been a DnB soldier ever since
Thank you so much for the documentary, brings back some memories bruv
Im glad it did 👊👊
You remember Camden Palace? That was great place to go raving in Camden. Great pirate radio scene in London in the mid 90s.
So much Yes !!!!! Big Ups Boss
The Amen break - praise the Lord for that!
Amen, brother Winston 😀
Amen
if those guys were only around to licenses the right to that tune - they'ed be beyond rich...
Gregory Coleman is the mans name, he died in 2006 in Atlanta, homeless and no doubt penniless. It should be called the Coleman break after the genius that came up with it. But as usual, in the whitewashing of black culture, his name is never even sought, never mind known. RIP Gregory, we owe you everything and you asked for nothing!
@spinning debbie Cannot believe i missed that! Only been on facebook since about 2017 so that wouldn't help! Sadly 9 years too late for Mr Coleman but a great thing none the less. Maybe it should be a drive every year on his birthday to help his family? As it's still getting rinsed!
My 11 month year old son goes mental when he hears jungle / DNB / Old school Hardcore.. I’m so proud of myself for teaching him so young, when he’s older he’ll know the true meaning behind it... coming together!
Never let the scene die!!!!
Jheeeze.. This hits harder than ever right now. Rave has done more for equality than any government. One nation. All together. Humans raving. That's all we need
Amen
👊🏾
The goverments and powers that be want to divide people.
@richard snape i like your style
We are lucky it happened when it did because It couldn't happen the way it did back then now, if the rave scene happened after the introduction of CCTV, it would have been impossible to hold the illegal acid house raves triggering the concurrent(rave/hardcore/jungle)scenes. And tbh, people actually went out for a laugh, not to validate themselves or top up their likes on fb and insta. there was none of this attitude like today where people do good things to make themselves more popular and to look more relevant. There were no mobiles, it was fucking hard to get to a rave back then if you missed the clues and cars(those who know know) and people wore anything, literally. You wouldn't be judged if you turned up a scruff. Having fun, meeting people, and having a great time was way more important than scoring points. Everybody in the zone, and happy and smiling. Fuck this time its grim, lets go back.
My favorite years for Breakbeat/Jungle/DnB range from the years 93-97 that I still listen to. Much respect to Bukem, Trace, Goldie, Grooverider, Nookie, Dilinja, T.Power, Potential Bad Boy, Peshay, and many more groove scientists from that era. ✌🏼 ☮️
The Prototype Years🔥🔥🔥
Horizons
Piano Tune etc... Electronic music was at its peak!
Yes that era was pure fire 🔥
What a great video as a 50 year old you told it right thank you I am and forever will be a junglist what a great time to be alive weekends brought so many memories never to be forgotten thank you for the video peace love and unity
Thank you mate, it's a pleasure.
Incredible, the mix of cultures has resulted in the uk music we hear today, it's amazing seeing the evolution.
This is exactly why I love jungle and drum n bass. Because this genre encompasses so much of significant historical values.
Its
Makes me proud to be British! now can we go find Theresa may and lock her in a massive bass bin
Loved the hardcore scene but love jungle too as it incorporated so many of the styles of music i grew up on, reggae, soul, funk etc
That Baby D track has stood the test of time, awesome record!
What track was that by baby d
@@paradoxz22 Let me be your fantasy. That album was maybe the best teenage year in memory, pulled so many girls in the caravan camp site! lol
I knew exactly what you meant without having to mention the track name 😄
It still is an iconic track. Hardcore was on the map.
That one break on 5:44 is revolutionary ive even heard it in video games
To be honest, I thought this was an upload of a BBC documentary series for the first several minutes I was watching this. It just sounded so professional.
Enjoying these docs. Appreciate the effort that goes in.
Amazing video.
Gave me chills, I have to show this to my kids.
I grew up in the 90s in LA I went to my very 1st rave and felt in love with Jungle.
Junglist are for life!
Anytime im bored and depressed i play a tune and think wtf is going on... Get up and dance, life is good. Music is life 🤩
"Before the drum & bass, before the jungle; there was UK hardcore..." The great leveler.
And before that was acid house
do y’kno the ID that plays right then at 0:20??
@@brianwaswrong Feel Real Good - Manix :)
Before that was House and Techno.
Chicago and Detroit stand up.
I been djing since 11 years old (1980) love the undeground, and I still have the first original 'Jungle Techno' vinyl on Ibiza Records that to me was the defining track for jungle beginnings bridging from Rave to Jungle late 1991 - love all underground music 'freestylers' 'originators' who push the music on one love respect!
soundcloud.com/mr-sh101/babylon-chilled-jungle-mix-mr
soundcloud.com/morphfx/amenndangerous
I grew up in the rave scene in Los Angeles. Early 90s. This brought such a big smile. And that's what it was back then. No colors. Just bass. Thanks for this upload. Boh! Boh! Boh!
I literally cried to this
Excellent doc! Large up all those involved.
I think this is my favourite segment of this series /film , was my era!
Every raver has their memorable time/era 💯🎶🎶
This is literally my favourite video ever
Lived it Loved it and still to this day Jungle unites us as one, peace and love throughout our stay.
Yo, HUGE HUGE HUGE ups on these docs. As a sub-30 US junglist, it's wonderful to see so much education concisely displayed here. Much love.
It's pleasure, stay blessed.
... it goes way deeper than this too.
Telepathy at Tasco Warehouse, that sort of thing...
Sub 30? You're kidding yourself. It was over before you were conceived bro. And only existed in a few UK cities. It's not there anymore. You're chasing something that doesn't exist. Nothing can explain the vibe that comes from UK black and white (mostly black) working class in same room with a sound system a that time. Historical re-enactments at student nights do not even hint at touching. The only remnants now are Grime, which is grim - and pre 2006 dubstep,
@Harry Ballzac You need the pre-2006 dubstep man. Skrillex Fukd over dubstep like Pendulum Fukd over dnb - so it became white rock just like dnb did. Obvious its heavy blaze music.
th-cam.com/video/cIpc817U_R4/w-d-xo.html - coki
th-cam.com/video/WHGYj1kuozc/w-d-xo.html - plastician
th-cam.com/video/KOttZSnzG7s/w-d-xo.html - benga
th-cam.com/video/lgqMzbcXlmE/w-d-xo.html - headhunter
playlist th-cam.com/play/PLfZktDPxyQYdtwQJPlYlOz1kZY7vBuR2l.html
@Harry Ballzac It's true man. That "another planet" or whatever came out, it felt fresh but was beginning of the end. Suddenly Pendulum was in Our Price, parents buying "drum n bass" for kids christmas lists, it was busted. Never went back the same.
Skrillex did that to Dubstep, but killed it off after just 1 or 2 years instead of 1 or 2 decades like Pendulum. So Dubstep now is not what it was. If you know it, fair play. Dubstep was the chilled older brother of Grime, which at the time wasn't called Grime, it didn't have a name for a long time - it was just that mad music on pirate radio. th-cam.com/video/7sJuicV0ASs/w-d-xo.html. It just got too much tho - so aggressive - and half the people in it ended up dead or in prison - like literally crazy titch and his step-dad shot dead a rival MC with a mag-10 for dissing titch's half-brother on pirate radio... like a Jeremy Kyle show with live ammo. and people took the sound more introspective and just wanted to stay inside and blaze and Dubstep was born.
I was getting my life this entire video!!! So good!! 🇯🇲🇬🇧
There's no race in the rave scene, that's why it's been destroyed. Long live the 90's!!
Respect to the hardcore raving crew 🤘😁
Now that's DEEP...and spot on !!!!!
they stopped the raves because people were getting high, coming together and dreaming of creating a better world. and we can't have that, too dangerous to the state. it was never about the drugs, it was about control.
@@forestsunset9617 You are so much right.
Wow man! Thats some deep shit. I mean it. No money in unity.
After years of loving modern music labeled "jungle," I decided to finally learn what "jungle" really meant. I was lucky to find this video, it's exactly what I was looking for! Thank you.
Im Australian born in 2000 an have been listening to uk sounds like bassline, dnb etc for a few years now, it doesn't get much exposure here but its growing, stuff like this is awesome.
There's scenes here dude, Melbourne has a small scene of heads an I believe they love it over in Perth. Plus a lot of doofers like myself absolutely froff breaks an bass
@fullysic76 you got sound cloud or Spotify playlist dude, love to find me some fresh tunes. Not everyone's caught up in that shit bro, probably just work with douchebags heyy haha
@fullysic76 Yeah for sure dude, downloading tune in now might see watch can find. Keep hush on TH-cam is my favorite place for mixs, underground club in London. Dead man's chest, skeptical an dolenzs sets are wicked good check em out if ✌
Great video, I love Jungle + D'n'B so much, hearing any classic tune gets me emotional. 44 now and would still love to go out raving but not many places around here.
Why did the lion get lost?
Because the jungle is massive.
What do you do if you come across a lion in the jungle? Wipe it off and say sorry
Holy shit! That was so good! Well done.
@@ludakriss9094 remember telling this joke in 93/94 hahaha :D
i wanna punch myself for this but lions dont live in the jungle
You're having a giraffe mate
Song @2:55 is “warm the nation”- fish, goat & Suffurah :)
Again.. musical electronic art from the UK. Been a junglist since 1995.. greetings from Holland
Spent the summer of 96 living over a bar where I worked, the whole apartment to myself, every morning I was listening to a live tape of the groove rider, never tired of it,
Thanks for making this BearingUK. One love.
Best days of my Life!!!
Loved it all growing up, I went from hardcore to jungle to house and trance, now im 44 and trance is still where its at for me from 1994 to now. Great video man!
Went the other way hardcore trance to DnB
wow , i must tell you, i was smiling ear to ear throughout the whole video ... all these familiar sounds! and its good to know that there is indeed a story behind them
Stellar doc. Goosebumps every time! Props from Montreal!
This era was quality thank you to everyone for making it what it was.
I remember tuning into a Pirate Jungle radio station back in the 90’s, I was at school, you could barely receive it up north.
Kool fm it was a london station
North of the river?
@@COVbadman79 They also set up a Kool FM Midlands station. But London had tens of pirates we were spoilt for choice I was always lending my tapes to friends and family out of London.
This is the best best doc I've seen about my music ... big up all crew for making it happen and doing it right.
Those where the days the '90's best time of my life no social media going from rave to rave peace love and unity 😘❤️ whistles and glowsticks memories
People wore what they liked and raved all night with not a care in the world. Just love for music. Great times!!
This is my identity, how I found my confidence. I will be a music nutter for life, it is so important to me.
BearingUK....Big up yourself....Respect....Outstanding documentaries 1-4, by far,far the best that are out there.....parts 2-3 bring back so,so many good times.....
Thank You, It's a pleasure.
It was the birth of Drum and Bass that really united everyone.
Yes yes yes . Taking me back to my youth here boys. UK man in Canada . Loving this trip down memory lane ❤
94-98 and father more my experiences with drum an base to a total degree was just heaven and i never once thought different. The words spoken in the send tunes got me elevated to dance an no more!! Dreamscape and Universe Raves were epic and id love those day's to come back!!!!!!!!
You sure it wasn't all them love dove's you was taking😂
Man it's beautiful to see how my favorite two electronic music styles (jungle/dnb) were created it brings a tear to my eye! Greetings from Mexico :D
The best era ever what an everlasting effect on uniting the cultures to be
Went to my first Jungle Rave in 91
Still getting to them today. Nice documentary, good job. 🙌🏾
In 91? 🤣
@@BillyMustang101
Yes 'Roast' Jungle is that old, I guess you believe otherwise
DJMoley LDN Roast wasn't playing Jungle in 91. It was mainly house and hardcore at Turnmills. It wasn't until they moved to Linford Studios in 92 that more breakbeat and ragga influenced music started coming in. 91 was still hardcore.
@@BillyMustang101
91 / 92 you know your stuff, I used to go to Linford in I believe 91 but to be honest I was not of sound mind back then. It was like a dream 🎵
They were playing breakbeats/ early jungle in 91..did u actually go to an event back then?
On A Ragga Tip, one of my absolute faves.
I was just watching passively until I heard Stevie Hyper D and it gave me goosebumps. Legend. Rose are red, violets are passive, wicked wicked junglist massive
I was there in the beginning in the US/UK and lived through the metamorphosis and splintering into many the forms we see today. The impact of this experience still pumps through my veins. Forever a junglist at heart.
Big up all my junglists!!!
The 90's UK rave scene has influenced my production style and musical tastes tenfold. I have never experienced it first hand, yet I just cannot get enough of it. Respect and love to all rave heads!
I'm so glad I'm getting to make drum n bass and jungle right now in 2020 and beyond!!
2019 back to old days..
Respect and give thanks to the making of this! all Jungalist Bothers and Sisters less we forget Love and Peace to all !
Great documentary. It covers so many in such a short time. Jungle is massive!
Thanks this you can tell the massive amount of work that's gone into it. Like all your videos very well researched and put together. It was an incredible time to be young. Sadly I can't see the original vibe ever coming back. It was a moment in time really glad to have been a part of it. Still we've got our memories ain't all bad
Thanks for making this, really enjoyed rediscovering some absolute gems. What a time.
Best Time EVER!!!!!
Such an epic documentary!!! 💓💓💓
Amazing well created documentary on a sound that I still play on vinyl! Big ups x
So many great tracks that bring back memories...long live jungle and drum n bass!!! BOH!
13:54 2 personal favourites of mine:
Dead Dred - Dred Bass (original is amazing but so are Origin Unknown and Back 2 Basics remixes)
Hyper On Experience - Lord of the Null Lines (Foul Play remix)
Play either of these and you knew the roof was going to come off!
Indeed!! Also Omni Trio - Renegade Snares, Origin Unknown - Valley Of The Shadows, and Atlantis - LTJ Bukem.
wow thank you. grew up around a lot of hip hop and grime predominantly, found passion in both of those genres. this is the first documentary ive watched on jungle and have come away with a lot. thank you for enlightening me about how the soundsystem and breakbeat culture evolved into pirate radio stations jungle and garage and then grime which im familiar with, one love
Love your documentarys, so much humanity and love to the music! I wish i could experience one of those early raves without those phones and fashion driven people around me!
Oh man i got goosebumps when i saw that crowd jumping to the beat in that one end scene
Two videos into the series and I'm loving it - peace, love and unity indeed
Big shout out to ska and oi music too. The Jamaican immigrant to the UK had massive musical repercussions. Lot of influence for just 1 island.
Both islands are to thank for this... Jamaicans and British people work well together
Thank you very much for all these documentaries! You deserve more recognition, lets go 2023 and forward!!
Loved the faxcool namedrop! I've been rocking out to that for years!
Been there since 94, I’m 46 now and still firing out my rare collection on the 12/10s.. huge respect to my all time favourite DJ Randall 🙏🏻
Same Bro !!!
Same here!! My kids are now spinning my vinyl collection. I've passed it down to them. Building a legacy for the to respect and cherish. Really proud to have lived and experienced the era. It shape my youth growing up.
Good lad. Keep the vibes alive!
I love that Jungle finally started getting big again a few years back, and not just Ragga Jungle & Darkside stuff (which seemed to revive first) but the stuff that goes straight to my heart: The DEEP JUNGLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pure feelings on the pads & chords, next level drum cuttage, and clean, pure sub bass!
Nice documentary proper enjoyed that . 👍👍👍
Thank You, Its a pleasure
Loved my youth partying to the sounds of Exodus in Milton Keynes. Just takes me back
Big up The Sanctuary ravers!!!
20 years later Coventry still a ghost town.....
Sadley like Glasgow....KTF BRO 🙌🤞
Cov was good back in the day used to Edge raves up there
The thing is everyone always says who's the best at this and that the was so many good artists bringing different flavours it was a collective where numerous legends contributed.... Loads from Essex Suffolk and Norfolk I may add....
Honestly such a good documentary!!! Thank you for it really really helped open my eyes even more. I knew about amen beats but I didnt know why it was called that haha. thanks!!!!!!!
Thank you, it is a pleasure. Please feel welcome to check out my other work & music.
Playing that bloody jungle music all night 💙👍
Will be a jungle kid no matter what live i will be living. This music helped me through out the toughest moments of my life. Thanks to all musicians X May i just mention Orca - Alive n Kicking since you did reference old skool hardcore which was pre jungle :)
muito obrigada por esses videos!!!
Junglist since 1997 jungle will never die
Respect!
Respect to all junglists and junglets
Went to every jungle mania , yjungle fever
junglist until the end. from the rave to the grave I'll die a junglist !!!!
BIG UPS BOI
NUTTA JUNGLIST 4 LIFE
RESPEK FROM SAVANNAH GA
Great video. My family came on a boat just like that and still live in brixton
Shouts from Deptford, South London brother
Seen Congo Natty live couple of years ago. It was fcking awesome, and I hope I will have another chance to party to his music soon. FaXcool is one of my favourite DJ-s, he is the reason I am into the jungle this much. Unfortunately he stopped his work and there are no new mixes for a while.
Hey, awesome drop at 17:19 !
I mean I knew it bu this makes u appreciate how much the uk has contributed and given to the dance music / rave scene, of course couldn’t of been done without the impact of the West Indian/Caribbean culture blending with the UK
Wherever/whenever. If you mix cultures together - you get a great sound.
Was there from the beginning raving in Coventry the edge the sanctuary Milton Keynes universe tribal gathering traveled all over back in the day 🎶 the good old days 😀
I used to LOVE The Sanctuary ❤
Platform 5 Coventry
That wasn't the beginning my brother.......... eclipse before the edge and a million times better......... 88 was the beginning of it all, we just joined at the appropriate time, older ones joined earlier, you younger ones carry it on. RESPECT.
Mogwai I'm 45 now and started listening in 89 90 but was too young to go raving lol but was loving the hardcore sound ratpack top buzz Carl Cox micky finn slipmatt etc and I'm from Cardiff starting going to Coventry in 93 universe triball gathering big love dreams are to one nations hysteria many many more so ravingnwas 93 onwards for me bro but avid listener from 1990 plus
@@mrbongoman100 100% LAD!!! there was a tape........of thousands bro hahaha and M.C gave a big..hello cardiff, may of been ratty or the buzz? fuck knows, but cardiff were always represented bro, met many top boys from there. I'LL FIND OUT , hahahahahaha
Beautiful Documentary, Peace & Blessings worldwide.
Thank you for making this video
No Problem, its a pleasure.
The tune at 13:36 - Under Mi Sensi X Project Remix (Jungle Spliff) Barrington Levy and Beenie Man - th-cam.com/video/-YQX1jnFT0I/w-d-xo.html
THIS IS, HANDS DOWN, THE BEST DAMM VIDEO I'VE SEEN ON TH-cam THIS YEAR 👌👌👌
Edit: replaced Facebook with TH-cam, sorry.. few beers down and dancing 🤣
this is the reality th-cam.com/video/5uzZB0yqHeI/w-d-xo.html
This is my childhood growing up in Hackney in the 90s ❤
maravilhoso! um salve do Brasil!
just clocked this - amazing mate well done. Very informative and glad some one like yourself has made a great effort. Peace, Love and Unity as always bredder! One love
Respect, sick documentary! Loved all of it.
I was purely hip hop from the late 70's then the rave scene kicked in and it changed my life I've met loads of safe people during Jungle/DnB nights out in Nottingham back in the day
Brilliant Video, thanks