Google
jueves, 04 de diciembre de 2008

Nuestro Nuevo Portal

on-movie-160x600.gif

CB Online

House - ProgressivePnau - With You Forever [ETCETCD003]

article thumbnail Hussle Recordings nos presenta el EP del track más famoso del grupo o dúo australiano de moda es decir " PNAU ",con su tema With You Forever.La reseña de este...
+ Full Story

House - ProgressiveGlenn Morrison & Zoo Brazil - A Lament / Maximizer

article thumbnail A Lament / Maximizer es la última apuesta del sello Morrison Recordings a los mandos del propio Glenn Morrison que para esta producción a llamado al dúo de moda Zoo...
+ Full Story

House - ProgressiveTilth Music present Max Demand - 200d [TIL028]

article thumbnail El sello digital Tilth Music con base en Hungría lanzó hace poco menos de dos semanas "200d" que es su reseña número TIL028 en la que vemos a Max...
+ Full Story

+ Artículos
Minimal - TechnoModeselektor - Happy Birthday Remixed Part 2

article thumbnail Hace mas de una año que Happy Birthady, el magnifico disco del dúo francés, Modeselektor, fue publicado, y sus temas siguen dando coletazos por doquier, especialmente en forma de...
+ Full Story

Minimal - TechnoMarc Antona - Simple Venus (MOBILEE044)

article thumbnail Marc Antona toma el mando del sello Mobilee por segunda vez para presentar "Simple Venus",con número de catalogo MOBILEE044 y dos temas en su interior plasma un vinyl que...
+ Full Story

Minimal - TechnoJose Bolumar - Sweet Case (MOTIV 002)

article thumbnail Sweet Case es el nuevo EP dentro del sello Motiv Records,su número de catalogo es (MOTIV 002),que para esta ocasión cuenta con los servicios de nuestro colega Jose...
+ Full Story

+ Artículos
Foros
Bienvenido(a), Invitado(a)
Por favor Ingresa o Regístrate.    ¿Perdiste tu contraseña?
FabricLive.42 mixed by FreQ Nasty (1 viendo) (1) Invitado
Ir al fondo Publicar respuesta Favorito: 0
TEMA: FabricLive.42 mixed by FreQ Nasty
#744
admin (Administrador)
Administrador
Publicaciones: 780
graph
Usuario fuera de línea Haz click aquí para ver el perfil de este usuario
Género: Hombre Skullz-Group kundof@hotmail.com Fecha de nacimiento: 1977-02-19
FabricLive.42 mixed by FreQ Nasty hace 1 Mes, 3 Semanas Karma: 4  
FabricLive.42 mixed by FreQ Nasty



Born in Fiji and raised in New Zealand, breakbeat pioneer FreQ Nasty grew up listening to his father’s stories about his rowdy rock shows (“I remember him saying when he was 14 or 15, he was earning more in a week than his dad was in a month from playing in bands!”) and dreamed of bigger possibilities. He decided at the age of 14, while working his first manual labour job, that he didn’t want to succumb to mundanely being a cog in the machine. That very same boundary breaking sensibility has always transcended through his music, from his scene-shaking classics like ‘Boomin Back Atcha’ and ‘Move Back,’ to his remixes of pop icons like Fatboy Slim, Kelis and KRS One. At the same time, he’s always been very receptive to all that surrounds him, especially when he made the move to London and immersed himself in its developing scenes. His seminal releases on Botchit & Scarper for example, forward thinking and progressive, were a sign of the fast-moving times.

“I remember one of my roommates’ boyfriends worked in a vinyl shop on Edgware Road and I used to go up there around ’93, ’94 – just at the point where the rave scene had kind of split into happy hardcore and darkcore. Literally, you’d walk into the store and one side would be happy hardcore and the other would be darkcore! I liked the darkcore stuff that was heavier and darker with reggae samples - I guess that was the beginnings of jungle. Through a friend of a friend, I managed to join up with Sour Records, which put out UK Apache and Shy FX’s “Original Nuttah.” Then Botchit & Scarper started doing the early beats and breakbeat stuff as a sister label to SOUR/Emotif and amongst others Matt (MJ Cole) started out engineering there before he moved onto his garage stuff. It was interesting because that one studio was an intersection for the burgeoning jungle scene, speed garage scene and breakbeat scene, and so many seminal artists came out of it…. Shy FX, T Power, MJ Cole, BLIM and more. I think that’s why some of the early Botchit & Scarper releases were so varied, because people were making half time jungle records, because it was the same engineers that would be making the jungle records.” – FreQ Nasty

No matter what new genre or new scene steals the media spotlight these days, FreQ Nasty has the wisdom and experience to see it for what it is. After all, the cycles have spun around countless times within his vast, expandable career. Continually shape shifting under the wide umbrella of bass culture, FreQ Nasty forever stays one step ahead of its ongoing hype-fuelled evolution.

“London still seems to have this thing of spitting out a genre – a distinct genre – every 18 months. I think it’s as exciting as it ever was; there’s loads of good new music out there and it’s interesting to see where those things come from. If you look at the Garage side of things, there’s that bumpy four-on-the-floor Bassline/Niche stuff coming out and there’s Dubstep, which draws its roots from Garage as well – so there’s two radically different, distinct scenes that have branched off from the same place. And there are some great records that came out in-between 2 Step Garage and dubstep. I remember when Tempa were putting out those Horsepower records of these crazy, chopped-up drums and mental syncopations - not really on the double time, but not really on the half-time, like dubstep, either. I thought they were really interesting phases in themselves; they never took off into a scene but who knows, if some journalist had picked up on it and gone, ‘Hey, you know those mental syncopated rhythms that sound like a jazz drummer on amphetamines, I’m going to call it such-and-such genre’ – perhaps that could’ve been a scene in itself! So at every stage in the evolution of dance music, there’s really interesting points that maybe don’t get the hype to become a scene as such.”- FreQ Nasty

Bridging the gap between the most current scenes in London’s bass culture, FreQ Nasty rumbles with underground thunder on FABRICLIVE 42, a staggering showcase of some of the rawest breaks-led beats around. Evading the pitfalls of a genre-controlled mix, yet at the same time avoiding the stop-start feel of a “mash up” mix, on FABRICLIVE 42 he’s imaginatively arranged a flowing, tightly-connected blend of FreQ-y tracks. With the bass heavy stomp of L-Vis 1990’s UK take on Baltimore house, the blistering shatter of TRG and several of his own storming productions, including his Santogold hit ‘Creator,’ the mix is a terror to bassbins worldwide. Buckle up.

“It’s balls-to-the-wall from the very beginning! But that’s the way I’m playing these days – there are so many good, full-on tracks out at the moment, I just come out and go BAM!…and then think about chilling out. I ended up finding that the relationship between the tunes in this mix wasn’t about genres – it wasn’t “it’s a breakbeat tune” or “it’s a dubstep tune” or “it’s a Baltimore tune” or whatever else – it was more about the feeling of the tune, the intensity of it. It’s odd because really, there isn’t a straight up breaks tune on the mix, but that wasn’t intentional. It’s bassline and breaks all the way through, just different permutations of them.” – FreQ Nasty

Tracklist:
01 Saul Williams – Not In Our Name - Pledge Of Resistance
02 Santogold – Vs Switch & Freq Naty - Creator
03 Freq Nasty Vs Propa Tings – Peacemaker
04 Madox – Duckalicious [Baobinga’s Thugalicious Remix]
05 Leon Jean-Marie – Bring It On [Rusko’s Granny Smasher Remix]
06 Reso – If You Can’t Beat Em
07 Cadence Weapon – House Music
08 L-Vis 1990 – Change The Game
09 ZTT – Lower State Of Consciousness [Original Munich Version]
10 Rob Sparx – 2 Faced Rasta [Reso Remix]
11 Lee “Scratch” Perry Vs. The Moody Boyz – God Smiled [Remix]
12 Tayo – March Of The Soundbwoyz
13 Freq Nasty – Come Let Me Know [Acapella]
14 Baobinga - State of Ghetto Jackin (Ft. DJ Nasty)
15 Epydemix – Thunder Gutter [Dub]
16 Backdraft - Living Like A Hustler Ft. Sporty-O
17 KRS One – Sound Of Da Police [Freq Nasty Breakbeat Bacon Mix]
18 The Beat Monkeys - How You Like Me Now ? [Rico Tubbs Gangsters Mix]
19 Buraka Som Sistema - Kaslemba Wegue Wegue (Reso’s Aguadente Mash Mix)
20 Freq Nasty Vs Heavyweight Dub Champion - Snared (Freq’s Donkey Kong Mix)
21 TRG – Oi! Killa !
22 Freq Nasty Vs Bassnectar [Dub]
23 Radioclit Vs No Surrender– Godda Get It
24 Nate Mars Ft. Jahdan– Above & Beyond Dem

Label: Fabric (London)
Format: CD, Compilation, Mixed
Country: UK
Released: 03 10 2008
Genre: Electronic
Style: breaks, 2 Step Garage and dubstep
Size: 170Mb


Download:

Debes logearte para ver este contenido!
 
Reportar al moderador   Reporte guardado Reporte guardado  
 
  El administrador ha deshabilitado la escritura pública.

Aqui salen los que nos PAGAN por TUS CLICKS

Ir al inicio Publicar respuesta
Patrocinado por FireBoardObtén las últimas publicaciones directamente en tu lector RSS
toolbar powered by Conduit