@@smartgenes1 no one you’d know. But I heard this song in high school I believe I was in 11th grade which would have been in 1995 . So this song is sentimental to me. I think of that person who lent me the cd this song was on. He died in 2006
I wish I'd been old enough in 95/96 to witness the likes of Trace, Nico, Ed Rush and Fierce spawning techstep. Still jungle, but this rumbling thunder bassline is prescient of No U Turn. I love how the drums come in like a flying dropkick out of nowhere too.
It was pretty amazing when the beats were fresh, and clubs generally small so the music just seemed to swarm and swirl around you with really defined sounds. The coolest thing was the mix of styles and some ambient track could be an intelligent roller or change into something really devastating..
Steve McGarry I think there's actually a pretty good variety of dnb events in London at the moment, but I'm only 26 and there's no groundbreaking originality now. It must have been something else to be at The End or Blue Note and witness the first play of a dub in a completely new style.
Piercing Amen breaks. That knocking drum sample is also cherry. It makes the snare in a rock'n'roll track seem sissy. The other drum sample at 5:10+ is also rumbly. DJ Ash (Venom) came out with mililtant tracks like "Torn Fury". The Boymerang remix of "Technology" is savage. There's a track called "Germ code" but I forgot who made it. This is the greatest amen break era, bar none. Love this stuff. Twisted Anger pounded the fierceness out.
Guns Cars and Digits It's funny you say that about making rock'n'roll seem sissy. There are so many people out there into heavy/thrash/death metal music who probably think it's the baddest, most evil stuff on earth but they'd shit their pants if they had to walk home after dark listening to the Torque album.
All of the 90's were wicked! The music was evolving so quickly. Every week, it seemed like people were pushing boundaries. The old school producers broke the ground that the new school walk on today.
Heard this on the original Ishkur's guide when I was in high school. That thing was a big influence on me
Maybe my favourite jungle tune ever. Masterpiece.
RIP Danny . I remember this song was on a compilation CD you lent me… Breakbeat Massive
What, who died? 😪
@@smartgenes1 no one you’d know. But I heard this song in high school I believe I was in 11th grade which would have been in 1995 . So this song is sentimental to me. I think of that person who lent me the cd this song was on. He died in 2006
So much layering and caring went into this track. A D&B banger forever!
Uploaded on my 20th birthday. Great track. DJ Trace will always be my favorite.
Nikki Samek check out DJ dextrous if your into this style, he's one our finest from here in London!!
Best Trace one!
I wish I'd been old enough in 95/96 to witness the likes of Trace, Nico, Ed Rush and Fierce spawning techstep. Still jungle, but this rumbling thunder bassline is prescient of No U Turn. I love how the drums come in like a flying dropkick out of nowhere too.
It was pretty amazing when the beats were fresh, and clubs generally small so the music just seemed to swarm and swirl around you with really defined sounds. The coolest thing was the mix of styles and some ambient track could be an intelligent roller or change into something really devastating..
Steve McGarry I think there's actually a pretty good variety of dnb events in London at the moment, but I'm only 26 and there's no groundbreaking originality now. It must have been something else to be at The End or Blue Note and witness the first play of a dub in a completely new style.
Piercing Amen breaks. That knocking drum sample is also cherry. It makes the snare in a rock'n'roll track seem sissy. The other drum sample at 5:10+ is also rumbly. DJ Ash (Venom) came out with mililtant tracks like "Torn Fury". The Boymerang remix of "Technology" is savage. There's a track called "Germ code" but I forgot who made it. This is the greatest amen break era, bar none. Love this stuff. Twisted Anger pounded the fierceness out.
Guns Cars and Digits It's funny you say that about making rock'n'roll seem sissy. There are so many people out there into heavy/thrash/death metal music who probably think it's the baddest, most evil stuff on earth but they'd shit their pants if they had to walk home after dark listening to the Torque album.
All of the 90's were wicked! The music was evolving so quickly. Every week, it seemed like people were pushing boundaries. The old school producers broke the ground that the new school walk on today.
This track is fucking stalwart!!!
Lovely remix, but the London mix on the original press is *the one* though! Luckily, I bought both BITD. The flip of this is wicked as well!
Do you know Cells, I like both versions of that.
Tune!!!
I get like asian China vibes off this one
Thank you 🌞
охххх музыка школьного периода!!