Home / Tag Archives: 2-Step/British Garage

Tag Archives: 2-Step/British Garage

Ironik

Definitely the first and most likely the last hip-hop artist to sample Westlife, the multi-talented Ironik is among the rising talents from the U.K.’s urban music picture. Delivered Michael Laurence in 1988, Ironik began DJing at age 13 at his uncle Steve Gordon’s TwiceasNice celebrations and later gained a support …

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Two Fingers

Two Fingers may be the creation of Brazilian-born electro-jazz/breaks/jungle trailblazer Amon Tobin and U.K. drum’n’bass musician Doubleclick (Joe Chapman), as well as several visitor MCs whose efforts are integral towards the project. Both producers, who initial fulfilled when Tobin was surviving in Brighton, U.K., met up in Montreal in 2007 …

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Toddla T

Sheffield-born DJ/producer Thomas Mackenzie Bell (aka Toddla T) fuses an eclectic mixture of digital styles, ensuring great vibes are felt about dancefloors and airwaves similar. Bell’s journey started at age group 14 when he used DJ’ing for the very first time, quickly securing models at local pubs and night clubs. …

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Hot City

Hot City can be an anonymous digital dance music manufacturer from Britain whose commercial saving debut in 2008 generated considerable hype. Citing influences including hardcore rave (e.g., the Prodigy’s “Charley”), United kingdom garage/2-stage, and NY garage/home, the twentysomething manufacturer made his industrial saving debut in 2008 using the Yeah!/Mind Work …

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Redlight

With an eclectic style that encompassed from lush house and two-step garage to dubstep and minimal techno, Bristol-born DJ and manufacturer Hugh Pescod became a potent force in the U.K. graphs in the first 2010s. Raised over the growing ’90s Bristol digital scene, Pescod began in music beneath the alias …

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Hyetal

Growing from Bristol’s nascent dubstep scene through the 2000s, producer Hyetal (David Corney) was credited to among the more talented and forward-thinking producers from the intended “post-dubstep” generation. Hyetal honed his fusion of analog dystopian consumer electronics with contemporary and sharp productions when he was an adolescent in Southampton. Tinkering …

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Katy B

The versatile London, England-based Katy B (aka Baby Katy, Baby Katie), a dance-oriented electronic pop artist inspired by famous brands Mary J. Blige, Trust Evans, and Gwen Stefani, gained see with “Inform Me,” a 2006 solitary made by DJ NG. Some other features adopted, including lead becomes on Jelly Jams’ …

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Duke Dumont

Adam Dyment, aka Duke Dumont, surfaced in 2006 having a buzzing, whip-cracking remix of Mekon’s “Yes Yes Y’All.” The London, England-based maker and DJ, influenced by “fidget home” figure Change (M.We.A., Main Lazer), continued to improve his publicity through remixes for famous brands Late from the Pier (“Bathroom Gurgle”), Bat …

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The Streets

Mike Skinner’s recordings as the Roads marked the initial attempt to include a degree of public commentary to Britain’s party-hearty garage area/2-stage (and later on grime) motion. Skinner, a Birmingham indigenous who afterwards ventured to the administrative centre, was an outsider in the garage area picture, though his preliminary recordings …

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Double 99

Two times 99 scored a large dance strike in the U.K. in 1998 with “R.We.P. Groove.” Common of the acceleration garage sound well-known in the U.K. at that time, the track finished up on Ministry of Sound’s Annual collection for 1998.

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