Home 2023 Forums The DJ Booth Dubstep as the new norm

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 49 total)
  • Author
    Posts
  • #51
    Phil Morse
    Keymaster

    Here in southern Spain they’ve always loved their breakbeat, and I’d have thought the leap to dubstep wouldn’t be too much, but you don’t hear dubstep coming from cars and I don’t know anywhere locally that plays it. Plus I got told off for playing some really mellow Falty DL at a gig the other month. So round here, I’d say not.

    #91
    DjSpekz
    Member

    I have started to hear it more and more now also. I hand it over to David Guetta, Afrojack and others for working with mainstream artist on songs.

    #100
    Digitall DJ
    Member

    Dubstep is definitely breaking into the mainstream here in the UK, with special nights now becoming more common.
    I don’t DJ it myself – am I the only one who finds it really hard to dance to?!!

    #110
    SCHIES
    Member

    Yeah I’ve noticed it becoming a lot more popular in my area too, I’m from Jersey (yeah I know haha) and everywhere you go all you hear is either electro/progressive house or dubstep. I didnt really know much about dubstep though until a friend of mine made me listen to skrillrex and once I heard that drop that was it for me haha.

    #112
    DjSpekz
    Member

    @Schies, same here. Skrillex was my gate into dubstep. Those drops are amazing

    #116
    Ivyquake
    Member

    I met this kid “DJ Aleve” he got me into dubstep. Then we went to see MartyParty and Inxision, My eyes were bleeding after the show, that’s how loud it was.

    #117
    DJ eengenious
    Participant

    Music in general is gravitating toward EDM – incorporating elements of House, Electro, and Dubstep. The new Britney Spears album is a great example. Beyonce’s new song was produced by Diplo, and take Jason DeRulo’s song “Don’t Wanna Go Home” which samples a classic house track, “Show Me Love”

    So yeah, definitely seems like that’s where we’re headed. I personally didn’t use to like Dubstep at all, but over the past few months, I’ve really gotten into it. I try to incorporate it into my mix throughout the night, and the reaction from the crowd is always great. It’s still niche, but will definitely pick up as more and more mainstream artists incorporate it in their music.

    Favorite artists are Skrillex and Nero. Skrillex especially, he’s a true visionary.

    #122
    DJ GRE
    Member

    Yeah I had an over complicated explanation when a friend asked me why Dubstep was everywhere. Basically I said that since David Guetta started making club hits other artists wanted to work with newer djs and hipper djs to produce their songs which led to those djs wanting to produce with some of their more underground sounds and yeah it’s slowly starting to filter through pop music and just get under the mainstreams skin.

    @djspekz yeah those drops are freakin’ insane, dropping his tunes peak banger hour people just go nuts!

    #1000324
    DJ eengenious
    Participant

    Dubstep – the only genre where a nerd can be a rockstar lol

    #131

    Yeah Dubstep has made a massive impact everywhere. You even hear people like Chris Brown singing and rapping over dubstep beats. I like some of it….but whats strange is alot of people hate it…..For example some of the lecturers at the music school i used to work for didnt like it. Mainly this was because its not really that musical.

    Plus if you are like me and you are either learning to produce or produce regularly you will know that it is relatively simple and easy to make. Get a synth with 2 or 3 oscillators drop the pitch on one detune the other 2,add a filter LFO it and done you got a dubstep bassline!

    Like most genres….it has good and bad bits…..I think however that it will just be a fad that will slowly die away soon once people get bored of the simple structure it has.

    #133
    DjSpekz
    Member

    DJ EENGENIOUS, post: 112 wrote: Dubstep – the only genre where a nerd can be a rockstar lol

    This might be my future signature haha

    #190
    D-Jam
    Participant

    Dubstep has been hit or miss in Chicago from what I’ve seen. I’ve seen some guys try to do whole nights, but they’re generally weeknight events at smaller underground spots. I’ve seen some of the more mainstream places play some dubstep, but it’s usually more “dubstep” remixes of pop tunes, or an occasional crowd-pleasing tone of it in between rap music sets.

    I think many can get into the stuff that’s more light-sounding and has vocals. I don’t know about the harder darker stuff.

    #204
    DJ Crysix
    Member

    I live in Toronto, Canada and it seems Dubstep hasn’t really made that big of an impact here. I’ve gotten few of my friends into it and now they really listen to it. I havn’t done any public gigs yet but I have mixed Dubstep and love Dubstep either Filthy or Chilled

    I can definitely see Dubstep growing it’s populraity in the future but I believe it will grow the fastest in the UK

    #288
    mailman
    Member

    Was out last night and the first thing me and my mates heard when we walked into the club was this massive dubstep drop. Really surprised me because the dj’s whole set (probably 30mins from after we got there) was all dubstep, first time i’d been to a club with a full dubstep set. As the night progressed however it obviously headed back into the main house/electro favourites but was still a really surprising and enjoyable warm up set.

    I’m a big fan of the genre on a whole, although its important to understand the difference between dubstep and ‘brostep’ when talking about it.

    #1000352
    Digitall DJ
    Member

    I said on one of these threads that I find it difficult to pigeon hole music into genre, and I am proving this – I would have Skrillex down as Electro! I said above that I don’t DJ dubstep, but maybe I do – I’ve been playing Rock’n’Roll for about 6 months!
    When does electro become dubstep?

Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 49 total)
  • The forum ‘The DJ Booth’ is closed to new topics and replies.