Is Dubstep A Fad?
Home 2023 › Forums › The DJ Booth › Is Dubstep A Fad?
- This topic has 23 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 13 years, 9 months ago by
Phil Morse.
-
AuthorPosts
-
June 17, 2012 at 12:26 pm #1006338
Tony Youll
MemberIn my eyes, all music is a fad. It has it’s ‘boom’ period (excuse the pun) then is overshadowed by something else. It will never go away, and people wont stop listening to it, the same way people have never stop listening to people like Elvis, Buddy Holly etc. I just think in about 10 or so years, a new, similar kind of music will be the thing to listen to.
June 17, 2012 at 2:15 pm #1006341christophe thiago
MemberTony Youll, post: 22280, member: 577 wrote: In my eyes, all music is a fad. It has it’s ‘boom’ period (excuse the pun) then is overshadowed by something else. It will never go away, and people wont stop listening to it, the same way people have never stop listening to people like Elvis, Buddy Holly etc. I just think in about 10 or so years, a new, similar kind of music will be the thing to listen to.
You are absolutely right…,all music is a fad. I have however noticed that house and deep house have allot of staying power.
The style changes but the music seems to resonate with a larger audience over time.June 17, 2012 at 2:23 pm #1006342Tony Youll
MemberTotally agree. House has been one of the few which has actually just got to a certain level and just stuck there. I suppose as far as Dubstep is concerned, it’s just a wait and see scenario. Right now, Dubstep is the thing to listen to, the music craze. Just have to wait and see if it stands the test of time.
June 17, 2012 at 2:55 pm #22143synthet1c
Memberthe fashion conscious crowd won’t like if for much longer as something new like moombahcore will take over as it’s a friendlier sound than brostep being half dutch half wobble. but I think the underground will always remain as it’s a very distinctive sound and feeling behind the deeper stuff, but brostep will go the way of hardstyle which was once a melting pot of creativity and was fairly experimental now it’s just the same patterns in every track with slightly different sounds, it’s become a formula.
Every music fad has a time limit as after a while it all sounds the same because everything influences everything else and money and fame push people further down the same road which limits their creativity.
June 17, 2012 at 5:21 pm #1006346backtothefront
ParticipantIf by fad, we mean entering mainstream, pop music, particularly in the US, then I agree Dubstep is a sort of fad. Although bear in mind Dubstep has been around for around a decade-ish from it’s birthplace in London, UK, it’s not new (it’s a sub-genre developed out of UK Garage). Also Drum and Bass is still huge as an underground sound as well as having a large mainstream audience – again, in the UK, from where it originates (from around 1993-94, possibly earlier as sped up breaks were used in hardcore in the very early 90’s).
Both of these genres have developed over time and as others have said, continue to do so; along the way a sub-genre may break out and create it’s own underground scene, which has always been the evolution of dance music, in fact, all music.
June 18, 2012 at 6:47 am #1006359Terry_42
KeymasterThe thing is that while I like UK dubstep as it has been and also some of it hip-hop’isch variants, the commercial dubstep that is now, is getting really old fast. Everyone that wants to make a fast buck is listening to a Skryllex song and trying to do the exact same wobble and bass-syn samples over and over again.
Then there is the crowd that is starting to mix the “usual pop-song” with a wobble and there you go… extra credit for effort. Sad really, but it was the same with all genres and it will go away again and sometimes the genre persists and has great creativity in the underground.June 18, 2012 at 6:49 am #1006360Terry_42
KeymasterThe thing is that while I like UK dubstep as it has been and also some of it hip-hop’isch variants, the commercial dubstep that is now, is getting really old fast. Everyone that wants to make a fast buck is listening to a Skryllex song and trying to do the exact same wobble and bass-syn samples over and over again.
Then there is the crowd that is starting to mix the “usual pop-song” with a wobble and there you go… extra credit for effort. Sad really, but it was the same with all genres and it will go away again and sometimes the genre persists and has great creativity in the underground.June 18, 2012 at 7:51 pm #1006394Steelo
ParticipantDubstep won’t disappear but brostep and all the other commercial variants of it will. The mainstream is very fickle and will find something else to like. I feel like its already fading out.
June 18, 2012 at 9:31 pm #1006396longmover
Memberyes it is a fad and a shit one as well.
also see drum and bass.
June 18, 2012 at 9:46 pm #1006400backtothefront
Participantlongmover, post: 22342, member: 1361 wrote: yes it is a fad and a shit one as well.
also see drum and bass.
woah, woah, woah and woah 😉 Steady the Buffs, old chap, Drum & Bass a passing fad?!! Each to their own and all that but I wouldn’t say D&B has been/is a fad, not many mainstream pop releases over the years I would say, great popularity at points but never the mainstream pop takeup that Dubstep is currently having I wager.
June 18, 2012 at 10:15 pm #22205longmover
Memberi’ll give you that pruely for steady the buffs
June 18, 2012 at 10:30 pm #1006402synthet1c
Memberlongmover, post: 22342, member: 1361 wrote: also see drum and bass.
How dare you Sir, drum and bass it the most musical and the most versatile of any dance music genre with a rich history and healthy crossover and underground scenes…
brostep & complextro is a one hit wonder…
June 19, 2012 at 6:54 am #1006420backtothefront
Participantlongmover, post: 22349, member: 1361 wrote: i’ll give you that pruely for steady the buffs
🙂 😉
June 19, 2012 at 4:31 pm #1006441Hee Won Jung
Participantlongmover, post: 22342, member: 1361 wrote: yes it is a fad and a shit one as well.
also see drum and bass.
DnB a fad? are u freakin kidding me….DnB was freaking MASSIVE back in the 90s…it was the goto rave music along side Hard/Psy trance….thats all you ever heard back then…Big dark warehouse…pulsing beats and no DJ to be found on a giant stage with a bazzilion lights and fireworks. Just some geeky guy in the corner of the warehouse banging out track after track. And no one knew what a single song was…they just lived for the music and the music carried them on a journey in their mind.
THAT my friend was the good times….all this Show Boat garbage DJing where its considered “okay” to do pre set mixes and jump up and down with their arms in the air, chat with people and generally do things that have nothing to do with the music. Its utter garbage.Back to the Dubstep thing…North American Dubstep aka Brostep is a fad…and its already on its way out…The original idea to any style of music will always have a true following…Its pretty much the same with any musical Genre…Rappers like 2pac, Biggy, Snoop Dogg, Dre will always have a following 10-20-50 years from now, but artists like Lil Wayne, Young Jeezy, Chris Brown…no one will ever remember because they didnt do what they did for the love of what they did…they do it for the money…and it really shows in the music. Its the same with any musical Genre. The ones that do what they do for the passion will last…the dick riders and show boaters will eventually die off to be forever forgotten.
June 21, 2012 at 12:13 pm #1006532D-Jam
ParticipantSteelo, post: 22340, member: 1368 wrote: Dubstep won’t disappear but brostep and all the other commercial variants of it will. The mainstream is very fickle and will find something else to like. I feel like its already fading out.
^^^
Pretty much what I would have said.I used to think Electro House was a fad…look how wrong I was. It just keeps changing slightly. The Guetta stuff today is a far cry from Benassi’s Satisfaction back in 2002.
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘The DJ Booth’ is closed to new topics and replies.