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Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted January 30th, 2011 in Audio

HOLY SHIT TRANCE!!!!! Kind of... more like house tbh...

:D Quite proud of this one, give it a listen!

  • Road Ahead [Trance]
    Road Ahead [Trance] by Dubstop

    Click to listen.

    Score
    5.00 / 5.00
    Type
    Song
    Genre
    Trance
    Popularity
    3 Views

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Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted January 27th, 2011 in Audio

Thought i'd try and incorporate some trance melodics and beats to some dubstep filth, check out how it went!!

  • Murda Sound [Trancestep]
    Murda Sound [Trancestep] by Dubstop

    Click to listen.

    Score
    0 / 5.00
    Type
    Song
    Genre
    Dubstep
    Popularity
    4 Views

Response to: Give Me Your Musicz For A Rave! Posted January 27th, 2011 in Audio

Mix the shit up with a little trancestep!

  • Murda Sound [Trancestep]
    Murda Sound [Trancestep] by Dubstop

    Click to listen.

    Score
    0 / 5.00
    Type
    Song
    Genre
    Dubstep
    Popularity
    3 Views

Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted January 25th, 2011 in Audio

Take a listen if you like Reggae and/or Dubstep!

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Any lyricists? Posted August 1st, 2010 in Audio

I've made a dirty bassline sample, and was wondering if there are any lyricists that can do Grime on newgrounds?

http://soundcloud.com/jahrastafari/merke d

Give it a listen, if anything springs to mind, I'd love to hear it.

Response to: Related to dubstep. Posted July 30th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/30/10 12:01 PM, Nav wrote:
At 7/30/10 08:09 AM, Dubstop wrote: In short, Dubstep derived from Bassline, not Grime. Grime is lyrical, Bassline is musical.
Ah, sorry. I'm not British so sometimes the terminology escapes me. Thanks for clarifying.

Hey no problem man, in the end it can all typically boil down to what got YOU personally into Dubstep. Dubstep has an immense amount of influences it relies on, and that typically has led to it's current 'boom'. People who listen to all different genres of music have heard that' Dubstep is kinda like their generic-genre' and started listening to it.
Dubstep hasn't typically evolved from any form of genre, and I really don't think that the credit for it should go to the British! We've got a little bit to do with it, but we're not the Dubstep fore-fathers by any stretch of the imagination.
Happy to have clarified what Grime is about and such, but as I insist, music eventually boils down to opinion and somebody could very easily step in and correct everything I just said from their own perspective.

Response to: Looking for Parking Game Music Posted July 30th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/30/10 05:14 AM, GolceaVlad wrote: Hey Guys,

I am looking for a car parking game music/soundtrack.
There is no payment in this, but the artist will get a link from the game.

If anybody wishes to share a track with me, drop me a PM or just answer here :) .

Hey, why not check out the Video Game section of the Audio Portal?

I'm sure you'll find something you're keen on and usually the artists at the Audio Portal are more than happy to see their creations put to use!

Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted July 30th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/30/10 02:11 AM, KgZ wrote: Very 90's Videogame in level song! Big influences such as 8bit, Funk, and Latin.

Sounds like Megaman!
http://www.newgrounds.com/audio/listen/3 51638

I gave you a 5/5!

I very much enjoyed the fast bass-heavy 8bit theme you had going on, but I struggled really to see where the Funk and Latin influences came into it. Of course I'm no expert on Funk or Latin so I could have completely missed the ball with this one, but that is not to say that I did not enjoy it.

A lively, upbeat track and I could see it fitting in very nicely with an arcade style game.

Response to: Related to dubstep. Posted July 30th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/30/10 07:46 AM, Nav wrote:
At 7/30/10 06:57 AM, Dubstop wrote: Dubstep came from UK Grime? Now Nav, lets not get silly. Grime is derived from heavy Bassline with a very fast grimey rap over the top.
Uh, yeah. It was the direct precursor. It set the tempo and was basically the genre directly before Dubstep. I don't really know much about the genre itself so I'm not going to embarrass myself by making statements regarding it, but, based on Wikipedia, it seems to be the closest genre to Dubstep... which I don't doubt, considering many Dubstep songs do have rapping over the top.

I'm going to go out on a limb here and launch my almost certainly wrong British oppinion. Bassline (search Jamie Duggan) influenced BOTH Dubstep and Grime. Dubstep is very much like Bassline, but with dirtier, slower bass wobbles and usually more melodic theme. Bassline is usually a very simple, heavy bassline that thumps along to a British 'gangsta' spitting about his life in the ghetto, very similar to Grime which is the same thing only usually a lot faster and more lyrical rather than focusing on the backbeat (which is very often neglected in Grime, leading to my belief that Dubstep cannot possibly derive from Grime). In Grime, you're listening to what the MC has to say. The backbeat is a tool used by the MC to know how fast/slow to rap. Bassline focuses on the heavy sub bass and it's listeners usually listen more to the heavy bass than the nonsensical blabber from the MC producing the track.

In short, Dubstep derived from Bassline, not Grime. Grime is lyrical, Bassline is musical.

Response to: Related to dubstep. Posted July 30th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/29/10 07:53 AM, Nav wrote: Dubstep didn't come from Drum N Bass, it came from UK Garage/Grime.

Dubstep came from UK Grime? Now Nav, lets not get silly. Grime is derived from heavy Bassline with a very fast grimey rap over the top.

Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted July 28th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/28/10 06:18 PM, SBB wrote:
At 7/28/10 06:14 PM, Dubstop wrote:
Haha man just put a review on it :)

Oh and HELLO NEW SIR, I thought your username was interesting so I had high expectations but unfortunately your profile is left void of content

Yes, unfortunatley my portfolio runs dry at the moment, but I'm hoping to get a couple of mixes up soon. Found this website, and particularly it's audio forum when it was mentioned on a local radio station here at about 2am as a 'good source for underground dubstep'. Certainly wasn't a lie, and I can't wait to contribute.

I'm not yet entirely clued up on Music Review etiquette and didn't want to make a bad impression, so I thought I'd just throw a little post up here.

And thanks for your comment about the name. I think I overdid myself a little bit when I came up with it... almost fell comatosed with self-pride.

Response to: Audio Advertisements! Posted July 28th, 2010 in Audio

At 7/27/10 08:19 PM, SteakJohnson wrote: Pretty heavy dubstep
http://www.newgrounds.com/audio/listen/3 51053
(yeah like ppl actually look through songs in the advertisements thread)

Aha, of course people read through the advertisements thread ;)

I listened to your track, very nice, but it could be longer and needs a bit more 'flow'. Try adding a mellow beginning, a drop, ect. so that your song has a mood throughout.

Other than that, the bass was filthy and I'm going to have to scrub myself clean.

Keep producing music!