Wednesday, 1 July 2009

Remi/ Rough latest show



This Saturday is the LAST chance to see Remix/Rough's exhibition! The Gallery will be serving cold beers and soft drinks on Saturday between 1 - 3pm.
He's got some truly dope original artwoek for sale. I'll be taking my cheque book for sure!

He also did the artwork for our latest single - Ramadanman "Revenue" on 2nd Drop Records. Buy here

Urban Angel Gallery
41-43 Redchurch Street, London E2 7DJ
http://www.urbanangel.com

Wednesday, 3 June 2009

Magnetic Man Interview




Starting life as a tremor, a shaking floor board, a repetitive throb emanating through the feet of skulking red-eyed loafers in a dingy east London basement club, Magnetic Man aka Artwork, Skream and Benga played their first gig at seminal dubstep night FWD in Summer 2007. Those 200 odd people in attendance will remember the rather bizarre screen; more toilet window than mysterious see through shield. But most will remember, through a tangy fug of sweat and cigarette smoke, the unforgettable strains of ‘Everything Cool?’ striking out across the heaving dancefloor, whilst afro-topped shadows and lanky forms bled through the barrier screen.

July 2008, Roskilde Festival, Denmark, Magnetic Man are again behind another screen. Yet this one is much bigger and being pummelled by a gigantic oscillating white laser, seemingly beaming straight out of the Magnetic Man trio’s machines in time to the gruelling bass and synth barrage. This is dubstep on a massive scale.

The dubstep super group have been friends since the legendary Big Apple record shop days, and Skream and Benga’s friendship is well known. Yet, the lesser known, but equally important figure, indeed the glue that holds the collective together, is Artwork. The knowledgeable, calmer big brother character in the trio, Artwork is also a seasoned producer, a pioneer of the dubstep sound through the monumental classic record, ‘Red’, on the Big Apple label in 2003. As a trio, they form a kinetic, dynamic sabre of energy, enthusiastically reshaping and mutating their music through a combined vehicle of sound and light. Magnetic Man works on the big stage by letting the music do the talking; egos are replaced by an incendiary light show that skilfully taps into a deeper rave aesthetic. In an attempt to get behind the screen and discover what batteries power the trio, Mark Gurney managed to track down Artwork and Benga to talk about million pound light shows, technical failures and dwarves wrapped in foil.

Markle: Describe Magnetic Man to a layman.
Artwork: It’s supposed to be three people coming together, with different ideas to make something...
Benga: …Superb. It captures what we do individually, live. I don’t think on our own we could have done that.

When was the genesis of Magnetic Man?
A: These guys (Skream & Benga) had been DJing that kinda of sound, and me, Benga and Skream were starting to make tracks together. So we started making tracks that could mix together, then mixing them with other tracks that had already been done.

So ‘Everything Cool?’ and ‘Soulz’ were the first tracks that you thought, specifically, these are tools, rather than just music?

A: They were done very, very quickly, because we didn’t have much time, so we blocked them out and they were just to be played in a set. And to take them apart, and build something and mix stuff up and do it live.
B: Yeah. It was more about automation and what we could do live.

Are they ever coming out? Or are they lost dubs?
A: We said they were never coming out, but you never know, they were just to be played, so you’d come and see the show.
B: ‘Everything Cool?’ is still one of my favourite tunes.

Getting into the group’s dynamic. Artwork, does your greater experience and years mean you play a specific role within the group?

A: Yeah, I try and get them out of bed, to get them places on time. It helps to have seen a lot of it before, playing out lot, and standing back and seeing how things can work, like the live show.
B: I wouldn’t have a clue where to start. I remember thinking when we first started, ‘wow, we are gonna be just like three boys on laptops shaking our heads’. But it does look a lot more than that when you’re out in the crowd.
A: We are lucky; we’ve linked up with this guy called Eliot from Novak, who’s a super brain. He designed it so that the music would link to the visuals. So he has made some special little tools, so when a new sound comes in, a new pattern comes up with the lighting, to change the mood of everything. He’s a bit of a genius.

When you guys are playing do you each have a role to play?

B: We are like his children on each side, he holds us in headlocks.
A: It works as this, the middle computer is the master, so it sends out a midi click to the other two to make everything run in time. All three computers are running the same set, but it’s all interchangeable. It just worked out that we happened to stand that way. And I know if Benga’s got the bassline, I can look to him, and if Skream’s got the top line or doing the drums, everyone knows where everyone is standing.

It must be nice for you to add that variety into your music as opposed to DJing records all the time.

B: That’s the thing; it brings excitement to the other. When I come back from doing Magnetic Man, I’m happy to DJ again. And when I DJ for while, I’m looking forward to Magnetic Man. It’s perfect.
A: I have DJ’d for years and years, but this is a totally different experience. When you are DJing on your own, you are playing records. But if you know there is three of you, and you know he’s pulled the drums out or he’s pulled another drum loop in, and you think, Ah, that’s brilliant. And you think, right, he’s done that, Fair enough. Now, try this!

How do you manage to make time together when each of you have such hectic DJing and studio diaries?
A: How the music is made is pretty much just where and when. Which is good as it falls in funny sort of times. Maybe I’ll come up with something, or Skream will, and say what do you think of this? Just a very basic idea and then pass it over. Someone else can have look at it and pass it back. Native Instruments have just given us loads of plug-ins, so now we are getting the same plug-ins you can use drop box and share files, and then get together. So, it’s not like, get into the studio, sit down, and then maybe something doesn’t come out or maybe it does. You bounce stuff between each other until you find the time to say, ‘that’s good, we can finish that’.
B: I’ll do that a lot at my house, I’ll make something, but I can’t think of what to put with it, so pass it onto the next man, phew, there you go.

Any tracks that have been a really nice collaboration?
A: ‘Cyberman’. That’s brilliant. It just started three different places and got passed around.
B: When you think about ‘The Cyberman’, I think about us being on tour, we done it live and decided to make it into a song.
A: That was just one day, we had the riff, messing around with it live, Beni’s got the vocoder and just doing the keys and came up with ‘The Cyberman’. We were laughing about it, but it stuck so we go in the studio and made it.

So what’s the inspiration behind ‘The Cybermen?’
B: You know what, they asked me this at Radio One, ‘Are you a fan of Doctor Who?’ I said ‘Sorry mate’ (laughs). The thing is, when you’re live you’re playing keys and you do random shit, on the spot. When you’re in the studio you can change it, and at the time you go, ‘you know what, I’m going to edit that and make it sound like this’, so you lose a bit of the creative side of things. But now, instead of saying ‘The Cyberman’, I say, ‘The Gingerman’.
A: We did change it to ‘The Gingerman’ coz the lighting guy Elliot is ginger, very ginger. So at a couple of the gigs we did change it to ‘The Gingerman’. It changed at Glastonbury to, ‘The Ciderman’, when Beni discovered cider...
B: Ah, that was such a mess, I’m telling you, that was one of the messiest two days of my life!

Does Elliot get on the lash with you as well?

B: Yeah, he’s part of the group.
A: Yeah, Elliot is definitely part of Magnetic Man. Without him it would be just three geezers with laptops.
B: I don’t think you could change the guy either. It’s like a band, if he was to go....
A: It’s kinda weird, when people talk to us about Magnetic Man, you’ve got to understand, a lot of it is the visual side as well. And you’re the first person to ask about this guy. No interviewers ask us about who the lighting guy is and he’s such a big part of the group.
B: The unsung hero.

You are developing the light show quite considerably, from quite a basic set up at the start to massive festivals, Roskilde being particularly impressive with three screens.

A: Yep, three screens and each one cost £1,500,000 each! That’s a big fucking tele.

What do you feel this brings to your show?

B: That’s the thing. When you get to that sort of level, and I don’t think we are that far off, when we can bring our own lights, we are clear. That brings such a vibe in a dark tent.
A: It’s brilliant to hear when you’ve got a bassline and some drums and the topline sound comes in (sings) ‘beuu beuu, beuu beuu’ that is brilliant, that’s good enough. But if you’re got black room and low lighting and then a shape come up on a screen for that sound, that’s where we are at.

Is it true your light show costs triple the amount of your fee?

A: Yep, yep. We haven’t earnt any money at all.
B: That’s part of it, it’s almost like when you’re a band starting out playing all these gigs and doing warm ups.
A: To be honest the lighting guy does take home more money than us, but then he deserves it.

Have you had any serious technology failures?
A: Oh yeah. The best one, we were in Newcastle, and as we have the three Apple Mac laptops facing the crowd and the big labels are sticking out. This guy had put these bass bins right underneath us that were so fuckin’ loud the USB lead out to the master clock just fell out, so dead silence. So we’re looking at each other, ‘is it the mixer, is it the ...’ so dead silence for two minutes. Until some geezer from the front in a broad Newcastle accent says ‘Wi ay man, you should have got PC’s’. And the whole fucking place pissed themselves. You could do nothing but laugh.

What can we expect for the summer festival? Big stages? Bigger light show? Dancers in hot pants?
A: Skream wants dwarfs.
B: Dwarfs is the nice way to say it, you can’t say midget anymore.

Benga being politically correct, love it.

A: Ollie wants dwarfs wrapped in silver foil, and he keeps going on about it. I’m worried someone is going to take him seriously in a minute.
B: It would be funny to do it.
A: Maybe they could run the light show. They could run the light show and put Elliot out front wrapped in silver foil.

How are you getting around? Do you have a dodgy tour bus?
A: Nah, we’ve got Graham, the hardest tour manager in the world, and a big silver coach that we call Moonraker. One that these guys manage to fuck up with disgusting crisps and food everywhere, within a day.
B: It’s lovely.

How are the festival soundsystems standing up to the audio requirements of dubstep?
A: Yeah they are. Some have been not quite right, but they have been more geared to bands. But we have been very surprised. The technology that’s there now, these rigs can handle it.
B: Things like Roskilde, I have to keep going back to it. It was perfect
A: That was the sickest soundsystem. You couldn’t focus on the screen, I was trying to hold onto the screen and hold my hand underneath just to focus on it.

Have you had any disagreements with sound engineers who don’t understand what you are doing?

A: Yeah, the funniest one, we played at Bestival (Benga starts to wet himself) and it was pissing it with rain, absolutely hammering it down, they almost had to shut it down as there was so much rain and mud. And so, I decided just near the end, for a laugh – everyone was crammed into the tent, it was the busiest the tent had ever been and so I thought everyone’s up for it now - I stopped the set two records before the end and played ‘Singing in the Rain’. Benga looked at me and sussed what I’ve done and started laughing. And Skream had thought the fella had stopped the set and was playing some other music and started to go and attack the bloke. So he’s screaming at the bloke, ‘turn this fucking shit off, we haven’t finished yet’, so the bloke’s going, ‘I’m not doing nothing mate’. The poor bloke. It was a good moment.

The Cyberman EP is out now.
www.myspace.com/magneticmandubstep

Thursday, 7 May 2009

Ramadanman Interview



My latest interview for the mighty Media Contender music portal is up!

Check Hessle Audio's very own Ramadanman talk about effective wood block deployment and the nuances of drinking milk in France! Plus there is a free download of his first release on 2nd Drop Records never before available!


Media Contender interview here


I wanted to pop the interview below too, if you can't be arsed to go to the other website.

Some say he‘s a musical terrorist. Wild rumours suggest he makes his music in a cave. Others mutter behind cupped hands that he’s a clean living Dorset lad. But what we do know about Ramadanman is that he has an almost biblical talent for making critical beats and running one of the finest labels in dubstep. Middle eastern inspired (although nothing to do with to fasting, prayer and the Prophet Mohammed) non-de plume aside, 20-year-old David Kennedy, got hooked early on the raw energy of UK Grime which helped kick start his production career. But you’d be hard pressed to find the rudimentary elements of the most urban of genres in his output these days. Having carved out a stripped back, skeletal integrity on labels such as Soul Jazz, 2nd Drop, Tempa and his own imprint Hessle Audio, which he runs with Ben UFO and Pangaea, for 2009 Ramadanman is delving deeper into his musical artillery, drawing on house and techno with a distinctive, yet off kilter, tribalism to take on dubstep’s stereotypes and take the music world to its knees. Markle catches up with him to talk wood blocks, milk drinking and 2008 being a killer year.

Markle:
How is living in France working out? Is it having any impact on your music?

Ramadanman:
I suppose it has an impact on my music as I am in a different production environment so it has taken some time to adjust. Also I don’t have all my equipment with me so I am working with a basic setup. I do have more spare time out here, and I don’t go to a lot of nights so I guess maybe subconsciously it is affecting my music. I did sample some local accordion players on a recent tune so there a few overt influences coming into my music!

M:
I can often hear playground noise and atmospheres lurking in the background of your music (Carla, Dubwar podcast). Is this some regressive tendency, or a sonic nuance you think is particular evocative?

R:
I think adding extra ambience adds a huge amount to a tune, taking you right to the place or recreating the mood of where the ambience was recorded. I record a lot of ambience myself now (not the blimey samples!) and I think as you say it can be very evocative. If anything it’s more for personal reasons to remind me of a particular place, or otherwise to add some texture to a tune where I think it needs it.

M:
You have a fierce percussionist trapped inside of you that is unleash on many of your tunes, none more so than Revenue, which feels like Blimey’s steroid dependent brother. Where is this stripped down tribalism emanating from?

R:
I don’t know, but I am into rhythm and I always wanted to play the drums. I often find myself tapping out rhythms on the tabletop when I am bored and stuff like that, so maybe it’s the repressed drummer in me? Most of my favourite music is just beats and bass, so I guess it’s a continuation of that.

M:
Never afraid to diverge from the proscribed templates of dubstep, give us an insight into what drives your creativity and vision, and the need to offer such excellent left of centre music?

R:
I often don’t feel 100% happy with a tune if I can hear that it sounds like someone else, so I think I am keen to make sure my stuff sounds like me. When I first got into the ‘dubstep’ sound, its definition was very loose, and in my mind it still is. So for me as long as the tempo is in the right region (for mixing), anything goes. People can spend too long pondering whether something is or isn’t dubstep, but that doesn’t really bother me anymore. I remember Skream being asked in an interview ‘what is dubstep’, and he replied ‘I don’t know’.

M:
I would have to say 2008 was a pretty good year for you. Not least Hessle Audio becoming one of the must have labels. What has it been like from your perspective?

R:
2008 has been cool, it was nice to see quite a few of my tunes make it to vinyl. It has been great as well to travel a lot, and meet lots of interesting people. I really enjoy travelling to different cities and meeting people from over there – a lot of people are on a similar vibe and it is cool to see what they are doing to push interesting music in their cities. It is an honour to be asked to go somewhere to play!

M:
Your own productions have been gathering some deserved attention; support from across the scene, but more importantly the cross over with Technophiles and the likes of Villalobos. Has this been a surprise to you in any way?

R:
Well there was quite a lot of excitement about this whole dubstep techno crossover malarkey, and for a while it was perhaps kinda trendy and exciting, but yes it was a surprise to have someone send me a video of Ricardo Villalobos opening with two of my tunes at some techno festival in Germany. I have never met the guy, and it was really bizarre to be watching a video on the internet of my tunes, being played off vinyl that I had seen been mastered, through the same speakers and computer that I made them on a few months earlier. Much respect to the guy, he comes across as a very interesting guy, and I’d hope to meet him sometime, just to say thank you!

M:
You are kinda fond of the odd wood block.

Ramadanman:
Never been a fan of rip your ears off super snares, so I quite often use a woodblock! I was discussing woodblock EQing with Pangaea earlier today as it happens….good times.

M:
Are we going to see a Ramadanman album this year?


Ramadanman:
No plans for an album nah. This year should be quite exciting. My tune Humber should be out by the time this magazine is published on Appleblim’s label Applepips. Other than that, I have just remixed the Ragga Twins for Soul Jazz. I have made a couple of tunes with Appleblim, which should come out this year. Also I have tunes under different names which should be coming out, including an EP at 170 bpm, a 140 bpm 12” and perhaps some funky stuff… other than that I have been working on collabs with Alix Perez and Brendon Moeller, and I am working with a filmmaker to provide music for a documentary about an amazing martial arts family in Brazil!

M:
I know there is talk of you starting a funky label. Can you tell us a little more? Are you making Funky?

Ramadanman:
Haha, I’m not sure where you heard that one. I am interested by some of the stuff in this new ‘funky’ vein, especially the tougher stuff which is more percussive, with lots of sub bass – such as Lil Silva, Apple, Roska etc. I have been making some myself, and it has been really fun to try my hand at something new. I am pleased with the results too, and Marcus Nasty has been dropping some of my bits and bobs.

M:
I heard Ben play nearly an hour of funky and house on your Ruffage show on Sub FM. Is this an indication of a change of direction or just adding found sounds to your armoury?

Ramadanman:
I see it as another mutation of garage and it all fits into the history of new UK music and I think rather than a change of direction, it just fits with what we enjoy! I think variety is very important

M:
What does the future hold for Ramadanman?

Ramadanman:
Just trying to make more music really, and visit more places in the world, as well as trying to link up with more of the interesting people I have met over the past few years. I am very excited for 2009, it seems like musically everyone is moving in very exciting directions.

M:
Are you addicted to Milk?

Ramadanman:
A certain friend does call me ‘milky boy’, but recently I have toned down my milk drinking to be honest. Also I’ve switched to semi skimmed, and it’s just not the same. Oh and finally, UHT milk is not the one, it is difficult to find fresh milk in France

Wednesday, 22 April 2009

Sub FM 20/04/09



Markle on Sub FM 20/04/09

http://www.subfm.com/archive/Markle20Apr09SubFM.mp3

Jamie Woon -Night Air - Live at The Royal Opera House (Unreleased)
Jamie Vex-d – In System Travel (Planet Mu)
Rustie - Bad Manners (Wireblock)
Mobb Deep – Survival of the Fittest (Loud)
Keith Murray – Get Lifted (Jive)
Snoop Dogg – Gin & Juice (Death Row)
Paul White – Hustle - Bullion Remix (One Handed Music)
Prince Hammer – Orthodox Rock (Crazy Joe)
General Leon – Bad Boy A Go Feel It (Techniques)
Horace Andy & Ashley Beedle – Watch We – Pinch Remix (?)
Spectralsoul – Organiser – Ramadanman Remix (Critical)
Falty DL – Paradise Lost (Planet Mu)
Db – Grot Bags (Unreleased)
Kito – Cold (Disfigured Dubz)
Jakes – Calypso (Hench)
Slaughter Mob – SwitchBoard (Halo Beats)
Dubkinetik – Angry (Eight Fx)
Distance – Night Vision – Skream Remix (Planet Mu)
Tunnidge – Higher Force (Boka)
Mr Lager ft Alys Blaze – Tell Me (Subfreq)
Cotti ft 2 Face – Warrior Charge (Studio Rockers)
DJ Madd – Flex’d (Unreleased)
Silkie – Planet X (Deep Media Musik)
Calibre – Stolen Shadow (Deep Medi Musik)
Ramadanman – Revenue - Untold Remix (2nd Drop)
Gemmy - Supligen (Planet Mu)
Joker – Do It (Kapsize)
LV ft Erroll Bellot – Don’t Judge (2nd Drop)
Shaggy – Bad Man Don’t Cry (Big Yard)
Lady Saw – Bad Mon Goin Cry (Big Yard)

Monday, 6 April 2009

Hatcha interview & Mix


Pic: Cleveland Aaron

“Sitting there flicking through tunes, picking out ones that were all similar, I started piecing all these together into sets and at the same time, while I’m doing that you’ve got Benga and Skream bringing their own interpretation of it. So yeah, I was piecing together everyone’s stuff and trying to form something.” That ‘something’ turned out to be dubstep.

Hatcha’s story is a classic one: a young gun calls up a pirate and through shear chops gets a set DJ playing garage on south London pirate. A job behind the counter of the legendary Big Apple Record shop in Croydon fuels his obsession for the dark garage coming from the likes of EL-B, Zed Bias, Oris Jay, Arwork and Benny Ill. A flock of local, freakishly in tune, yet brutally raw producers feed their latest creation to him, which he in turn channels through a residency at new underground night Forward, providing the perfect platform to forge the nascent sound of esoteric, no frills garage coined dubstep. Mark Gurney braves the noxious wind of a one-year-old Pitbull called Oscar to catch up with Hatcha, better know to his mum as Terry Leonard, to talk belching, launching his new night and why he thinks dubstep has much more to come.

A lot of importance is placed on the Big Apple record shop as the incubator for dubstep. Do you have any fond memories from the shop?
It’s heartbreaking it’s gone. That shop was so funny. Had some of the best days in my life in that shop. We’d get all the boys in mixing up records. Skream and Benga were like 13 at the time. l think I took Benga to his first party and his first gig, he was still at school at the time.

Your radio career has been a classic tale of from illegal to legal. You were on Upfront first, and then the first dubstep show on Rinse. What attracted you to Kiss FM?
When you aim to be a DJ in life, if you can be a DJ on a Legal station and get paid for it, surely it’s a dream come true. Rather than paying to play on a station, fuck that. But it’s a circle, they’ve got to do it, to help it run, and to help push themselves (as DJ’s).

Whilst researching this interview I stumbled back across a Blackdown blog post which had two photos of the dubstep scene circa 2001 & the class of 2006. You were in both of them. Do you think you will be in the 2011 shoot?

This is me, for life. Forward and upwards man. I’ve got no intentions of fading away. I can only get stronger.

Who do you think is gonna be in the next picture?
Well, you’ve always got the youngers coming through. It’s what makes the scene evolve. It’s still fresh, whoever is here now is still representing. You just have to raise your game.

Skream broke through with Midnight Request Line, Benga & Coki with Night. What do you think is the next thing to blow?

I don’t think these guys have even bust yet. Benga, Skream, Digital Mystikz, Distance, Jakes, these are talented people. And every month I get more tracks from them, they improve. Yeah, Night and MRL laid the foundations, but they have a lot more to come yet.

Do you agree with the view that the sound has essentially polarized into grotty jump up vs techno x?
Yeah, you have got the different sounds, which is good. That’s why it’s always gonna be interesting. You’ve got jump up; you’ve the grotty, hard industrial sound, which is my sound. I’m not really into the jump up stuff, but it works. If we all played the same it would be repetitive, and would end up like every other scene out there. You can have Benga, Caspa, Kode 9, Digital Mystikz, put them on the line and you not gonna hear the same tune twice in one night. It’s good there is a spectrum of sounds within dubstep, that’s why it’s fresh.

Rusko is working with Katy Perry, Benga with Rhianna. Is this dubstep selling out or just realizing its potential?
It’s just about the potential. Without a doubt.

You’ve also recently started up your own night with N-Type called Sin City @ Herbal. How’s that going?

It’s nice to have another dubstep outlet. We wouldn’t be doing it if FWD was still on a Friday. It’s brilliant; we get all our friends down there mixing. Next one is 20th March. Upstairs we have Funky House and old skool and downstairs we have dubstep. Every night we’ve done has been rammed!

What’s coming on the Sin City label?
A new double pack, we’ve got Benga, Chef, Coki & N-Type, Lost, Crazy D, Kutz. I’m waiting for the vinyl to come through now. Should be the next couple of weeks.

Do you have any odd habits?
Every time I burp I say bollocks. How funny is that. It’s terrible. I shouldn’t have told you that. What else? I get up in the middle of the night, every night of the week, I will get up between 2 and 5 in the morning and semi conscious go down to the kitchen and feast. Wake up chocolate all over me and biscuits on the floor. It’s a scary.

For Hatcha DJ bookings contact opa@wma.com
www.myspace.com/djhatcha
Catch Hatcha on Kiss FM, Tuesday night/ Wed Morning from 1am-2pm.

Exclusive mix for ATM Magazine by Hatcha.
Download it here: ATM Mag Hatcha Mix *

* important note! You need to enter these 5 digits: 01482

Track by Track - -

Mala - Eyes
Brilliant track. Proper Deep Medi material, you can hear Mala sound in it perfectly. Lazer style synths with plenty of twisted soul; It was the perfect track to set the vibe for the mix.

Skream – Rollin
Brand new Skream biznezz. Not sure when this is coming out on as it’s a freshly cut dubplate. A good bouncy track with plenty of stomp to keep the mix moving.

Kutz – Freak
Right, time to get aggy and rough it up. Kutz brings the ruckus and starts putting on the pressure and heating up the heels.

Jakes – Justice
It’s not all about Croydon on this mix, and Jakes brings his Bristolian touch. This track is doing it for me at the moment.

Distance – Twilight
This is murdering the dancefloor. When I speak to Greg every couple of days and he says he’s gonna throw over another track, I think yes, coz I know it’s gonna be messy.

Jakes – 3K Lane VIP
This one is a nice little special for me. Another twist on a massive track, just giving it a new angle.

Distance – Menace
More Distance pressure with Menace. Distance is getting a lot of feedback right now, and I’m loving his metal sound. A massive dancefloor worker.

Benga – Transform
Stepping up the tempo on this one. Speaks for it self.

Chimpo – Pump Action
Chimpo is from Manchester and we’ve signed this for Sin City Recordings, so expect to see this out soon. Big tune.

Lost – Slaughtered
A Croydon young gun coming through. I met Lost through Kromestar, keep your eye on this guy.

Benga Vs Kutz – I’ll Kut Ya
This one is tearing through the crowds at the moment. Wicked collaboration.

Benga vs Distance – Untitled
Bangin track, I’ve been playing this for months on dubplate. It goes off!

Benga – He He He
Good little bubbler that really comes into it’s own on a big system. You can hear the typical Benga sound on this one.

Coki – The Shizbiz
Coki Madness! Welcome to Coki’s mad little world. You can’t listen to this shit on a walkman!

Skream – Metal Mouth
A nasty, brutal peak time monster that will getting every set of feet moving on any dancefloor, anywhere.

Jakes – Rock The Bells
Again, this one blowing up the dancefloor. Sampling some old hip hop records to maximum effect. Killer.

Proxy - Dancin in the Dark

Blimey, not posted for a while. Better make ammends....

Benga said this was one of his current favourite tunes. Electro meets dubstep. BOOM!