Thursday, September 1, 2011

Purple People Producers



Now that the dubstep wave has swept through the US at full speed for a few years now, the harder styles --which still remain most popular-- have settled in, which has paved the way for other low-end dubstep styles to gain recognition and further integration. These styles were typically less popular with the massive domination of mid-ranged rave anthems. They became increasingly less so after some producers started feeling marginalized in a way, and began to avoid the dubstep label altogether. Although still embracing the “space/bass/pace” ethos dubstep originally nurtured, these artists moved the label of their experimental bass music into a vague, eclectic, and temporary realm. DSF awards had classed it even so basic as “120-140 BPM”. Regardless of this dichotomy the scene on the whole is healthier for of it. That's because those alternative styles which had remained in the bass-heavy 140-area are without a doubt still dubstep. No matter how you want to slice it up and label things… it’s all still dubstep. DnB, Grime, UK Funky, Moombahton and Techno have all become factors at play as well, but that doesn’t mean dubstep’s influence should go unacknowledged simply because it’s so obviously penetrating within EDM today.

So then, before going off topic I was alluding to dubstep's appeal beyond it’s original scope. It’s infiltrated itself from the commercial ends all the way to the left-field underground; well beyond more than just ravers and party people too. This inevitably led to an ‘acquired taste’ for bass-weighted material for the masses. It created a familiarity with the sound that was not readily available to break through in the earlier stages of the global distribution of sonic pressure. Instead, over the 5+ years since, the scene has been clouded by those dominant dance-floor decimators. But now that these harder styles have settled-in, those sub-sets are rising in notoriety enough to breakout on their own.

On a cultural take --which this blog is about-- I think it’s good having producers come through being well-rounded, and mixing various related styles and genres. This positive diversification gets further enhanced if these producers also bring multi-dimensional selections to their DJ sets as well. It would be a huge plus for the scene in general, which harbors the heavier mid-ranged wobble disproportionally, (for better or for worse depends on perspective). One of these sub-styles was the “purple” sound, which I had reviewed last month via an 805 loke, Toro 43’s EP release. As previously posted, “purple” is what I defined as, (via Rebel-Elite Toro 43 feature):

["Anyone unaware of a difference, these are just my words but I believe they sum it up well: The concept of “purple” comes from the heavy synth-laded production work, labeled such to purposefully differentiate it from dubstep. The color term is because the synths are rich, 'colorful' textures. Personally, I refer to it as "purple" not "purple dubstep" as some rightly can. Besides the obvious dubstep traits, and those additional grime attributes, I also associated it with Wonky; (think Scotland’s Hudson Mohawke and Rustie). With purple, you can hear the color in it. Whereas dubstep in it’s original (now muddled) concept, was classed in a dark, black-voided spatial ethos. Purple was meant to counter that idea, and create synthetic light in the extended space created by the patterns of production that dubstep was spearheading at the time."]

So as you can tell it’s hardly a new sound having gone 2008 and strong. But in regards to a proper execution of these characteristics on west-coast productions… they always came few-and-far between. Whereas Toro 43 has pushed this for a while now… he’s also not recognized in other areas of production in the dubstep scene (yet his Moombahton is kicking off right now though!). Other, more-recognized producers on the south-coast have started coming through. I view these bass-producers as exhibiting a wider painter’s palate for their musical canvases. Over the past couple weeks I’ve noticed it being embraced by a few select in the LA-area. And when I mention west-coast bass, don’t get it twisted with the ease-vibed bass music that came from glitch; that which is being facilitated by Do-Lab type crews. What I’m on is 140-bass still though, rooted in the original dubplate culture, dubstep and jungle both derive from.

Lavanda Summa by Toro 43

One of these producers is the extremely diverse Ashtrobot. He just broke out heavily in the LA bass scene last year, and just a few months ago produced a few hip-hop tracks for Kendrick Lamar, further propelling himself upward in the industry. Ashtrobot has not shied away from the purple qualities either. He just gave out a free tune sampling the ASAP Rocky’s “Purple Swag” vocals. Coming heavy nonetheless, the synth textures in the tune separate the sound from the overtly intense rave wobbles --which you should know, the producer also throws down relentlessly.

PURPLE SWAG ASAP ROCKY -ASHTROBOT FLIP by ASHTROBOT

Another producer-DJ is Direct Feed, an old-school selecta representing the LA-area for years as Dotcom. Direct Feed has of late been pounding out everything from DnB, to Moombahton, and Dubstep… and everything in between like Drumstep, Moombahcore and now, “purple”. As I mentioned earlier, if these diverse productions can also be played in tandem with various, eclectic DJ selections, the entire bass scene will benefit immensely. Direct Feed is just that guy. I’ve had the opportunity to MC a few of his sets, and was always impressed by his selection and technical ability. He creates a crowd-pleasing edifice as a 6ft+ producer towering behind the decks. Earlier this week he made his first “purple” experiment, and put it out to the public. A remix of one of his favorite tunes at the moment, The Weekend’s “Rolling Stone”. This one came off ultra-chill, on some deep vibezing shit. Basslines massage the mental, over the sexy vocals one you always get from The Weekend.

The Weekend - Rolling Stone (Direct Feed's purple edit) by Direct Feed

Direct Feed had relayed to me that he and had become keen on the sound through Ashtrobot, a neighbor of his in Long Beach. It seems while the rest of LA drives through smoggy grey skies, the LBC is blazing up the beach to purple sunsets. Must be that weed thang. Lemon season all the time. Wish I had more to share, but I think it’s still nascent as far as productions, on the south-coast. I think it’s because the glitch-style, developed on the west-coast and BC, has become its alternate for those more-subtle bass vibes. Regardless, I hope these artists continue to push this purple sound. It’s been far too long coming. P.E.A.C.E.