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"All My Homies Hate Skrillex" A super documentary about the glory days of Dubstep...

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Comments

  • @shinyisshiny said:
    absolutely.. he put in the work to get where he is.

    i used to see him play as from first to last wayyyy back in the day. now the dude is producing number one singles, and has one of the widest ranges of sounds. Ive seen him do ambient sets, house sets, top 40 sets, dubstep, trap, he does it all, sometimes even all in the same set.

    He must’ve gone to laptop college to learn all of those mad keyboard skillz? ;)

  • Wow, this is an awesome video, @jwmmakerofmusic. Thanks for sharing this.

  • Alrighty, yah if I heard that 2008 Zomby stuff I would have been into it. I only heard of dubstep when it bro’d up.

  • Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

  • edited July 2021

    @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    Art and music are subjective. Ever hear of the musician “Heino”? He has a huge following. Look him up sometime.

  • edited July 2021

    @NeuM said:

    @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    Art and music are subjective. Ever hear of the musician “Heino”? He has a huge following. Look him up sometime.

    YES! Huge fan of Trollstep...

  • edited July 2021

    @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    The tldw of the video is that Skrill gave the audience what it wanted (bangers) and that killed the genre tag being useful for finding the more subdued dark Londony stuff he liked that preceded it.

    Edit: err, unless you mean someone in the thread.

  • edited July 2021

    @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    The video isn't entirely a hit piece on Skrill though. It also goes over the history of Dubstep pretty adeptly. That's mainly why I posted it.

  • @DukeWonder said:
    Hating Skrillex is a very silly thing if you ask me. You may not like his music, but the dude is a fuckin machine and a workhorse. From emo to the high energy dubstep to his work with Diplo, he’s insanely talented.

    For real. Hating on anyone just cause you dislike their art is beyond silly. I know very little about his music, but he seems like an absolutely charming human, and a total music nerd. He's just doing what he enjoys, and it seems like a generation of young folks did too.

    I enjoy Nardwuar interviews, and the one he did with Skrillex is easily one of my favorites.

  • @aleyas said:

    @DukeWonder said:
    Hating Skrillex is a very silly thing if you ask me. You may not like his music, but the dude is a fuckin machine and a workhorse. From emo to the high energy dubstep to his work with Diplo, he’s insanely talented.

    For real. Hating on anyone just cause you dislike their art is beyond silly. I know very little about his music, but he seems like an absolutely charming human, and a total music nerd. He's just doing what he enjoys, and it seems like a generation of young folks did too.

    I enjoy Nardwuar interviews, and the one he did with Skrillex is easily one of my favorites.

    Seems like Skrill also wanted to make a good living so he gave the audience what it wanted.

    I think fans who try to find identity through narrowing their interest to a single genre are far more irritating, not to mention those who try to wall artists within genre tags. I bet most of the pre 2010 artists mentioned in this video probably would not have even wanted to be so narrowly defined as 'dubstep artists'. It was likely just an ingredient that they wanted to play with in the moment and not some identity propellant. The video producer's mindset of trying to cast that which is ephermal in amber is just as much to blame for his own disappointment.

  • I find the influence of the UK smoking ban on the genre to be very interesting.

  • @aleyas said:

    @DukeWonder said:
    Hating Skrillex is a very silly thing if you ask me. You may not like his music, but the dude is a fuckin machine and a workhorse. From emo to the high energy dubstep to his work with Diplo, he’s insanely talented.

    For real. Hating on anyone just cause you dislike their art is beyond silly. I know very little about his music, but he seems like an absolutely charming human, and a total music nerd. He's just doing what he enjoys, and it seems like a generation of young folks did too.

    I enjoy Nardwuar interviews, and the one he did with Skrillex is easily one of my favorites.

    Oh shit I didn’t realize that Nardwuar did a Skrillex interview. Must watch.

    I really enjoyed a video he did with Dillon Francis and Deadmau5. They did one of Deadmau5’s coffee runs together. Three of my top 5 EDM artists all together.

  • On the opposite side of the dubstep spectrum, if you haven’t listened to Bar9 or Russo, I highly recommend it.

  • @AudioGus said:

    @NeuM said:

    @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    Art and music are subjective. Ever hear of the musician “Heino”? He has a huge following. Look him up sometime.

    YES! Huge fan of Trollstep...

    Classic!

  • ive been active in the rave community since 1999, my first rave was DJ tron, deathcore gabber music (15 years old on a head full of acid, do not recommend 😅) I continued on raving through the trance era of early 2000's, to DNB, jungle, Tech House, Electro and French house to the EDM explosion.

    No one brought as much excitement to the rave scene as did skrillex. I remember first hearing his remix of Lady Gaga at an afterhours party and everyone in the room freaking out wtf is this sound?!?!? it wasnt even dubstep, it was an electro house remix. He went from warped tour emo kid to global superstar ushering in a new era of dance music to the masses within a matter of months.

    there are alot of artist that helped bring the EDM explosion and make dance music a thing of the charts and here to stay, even Black Eyed peas and david guetta had a huge part in it, but skrillex changed the game. He brought an entire new generation and audience with him. A gateway drug to the underground for the masses.
    i know so many people that are now techno snobs and only listen to extreme underground artist like Paula Temple etc that came into the scene as newbs through skrill.

    Im in no way discrediting all the artist before skrillex that paved the way, all the 80's house, 90's breaks, cheesy glorious europop and techno etc all performed an important roll in the modern acceptance of dance music, but skrillex was a major turning point for major adoption, I look at it as pre skrillex scene, and post skrillex.

    theres a whole generation of kids making breaks, techno, house, dubstep, trap, trance etc, that were all directly inspired by skrillex.

    Love him or hate him, he was and is an important figure in the dance community, and music industry in general.

  • I remember seeing Bassnectar at a bar (or was it a coffee shop attached to a warehouse? Lol) and a small club in about 2005 before the term "dubstep" was even really a thing. I thought it was the coolest thing ever. Then the dudebros took over and..yeah haha

  • @shinyisshiny

    Everything you're describing is American. Outside America dance music has been a big part of the culture since the 90s, and was far bigger than anything you have in the US even today (except New York). Skrillex isn't even that big of a name outside the US.

    Love him or hate him, he was and is an important figure in the dance community, and music industry in general.

    In America :)

  • @ashh said:
    Did somebody say that they dislike a massively successful artist because they don't make real music? Please return to the playpit and allow the grown ups to have a chat.

    I don't think the music Skrillex makes is very good. I can give you a list of other popular artists who I think are mediocre, along with a list of some equally mediocre unsuccessful artists.

  • @AudioGus said:
    Alrighty, yah if I heard that 2008 Zomby stuff I would have been into it. I only heard of dubstep when it bro’d up.

    That stuff's still around they just don't call it dubstep anymore. Bass music (not to be confused with the 'American' bass music) is one term you'll see, along with post dub-step. Lot of cross over with British rap (grime, drill), drum n' bass and even older kind of garage stuff.

  • Oh awesome, I missed this entirely. I heard he stopped doing music entirely and was teaching drums somewhere. I bought all the early Scorn (saw them when they were a duo), Justin Broadrick (Techno Animal, etc), Kevin Martin stuff when it came out. That stuff still sounds amazing. Kevin Martin's current career seems nothing less than miraculous. Just churning out ridiculously high quality stuff.

  • Went to acid parties before I left school, and even some clubs let me and my friends in, this was back before the the 90’s. Uk has created most of the best music, I don’t hate on anyone these days, love my drum&bass techno dub reggae, music changes, it is what it is
    Some of the music I make, I couldn’t even tell you what genre it falls into
    After the crazy year we have all lived through, and getting too old, just enjoy yourselves and have it large
    Can’t even remember why I even started to type this, the original video posted was interesting, thanks for some of the other videos posted
    Lots of information, had forgotten about tipper, had a recording of him on mini disc years ago
    Please feel free to ignore this

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