Talk:Broken beat
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[edit] Moved from article
The following was moved from the article:
- Listening:
- projectVIBE Internet Radio ([1])
- Brokenbeat Radio ([2])
- Milk Audio ([3])
- Nuwave Radio ([4])
- Gilles Peterson ([5])
- Compost Records([6])
- Universal Vibes ([7])
- Futureboogie ([8])
- Beyondjazz Radio ([9])
Hagbard Celine 12:05, 25 November 2005 (UTC)
[edit] Get High
Would ATB's "Get High", from the album Dedicated, fall into this genre? The Jade Knight 20:16, 3 March 2006 (UTC)
i'm pretty sure that atb is BREAKBEAT (think bt or crystal method) which is really different stuff.
[edit] "Brokenbeat" or" broken beat"?
Why is the conjoined version, "brokenbeat", used? Google has 1,910,000 vs. 64,400 results against it. The Omniverse forum has also similar proportions of both versions usage. I guess it should be changed.
Plus, in this sentence: "One might also hear echos of Disco, 80's Rn'B (Shalimar, Prince), early Electronica (Kraftwerk), Hip-Hop (Planet Rock), 80s New Wave (Depeche Mode, New Order), House and Techno in Brokenbeat." is it correct that genre names are capitalized?
Plus, it's a shame that as I'm writing this, there's no article about Mark de Clive-Lowe. : )
83.20.162.94 22:33, 13 June 2006 (UTC)
Moreover, in interviews published on the broken'beat radio website, they consistently use the "broken beat" form.
83.20.173.205 17:53, 17 August 2006 (UTC)
there's also no specific mention of orin "afronaught" walters in the article--he's one of the primary "bugz in the attic" crew--he and phil asher (an affiliate of the "broken beat" scene) both come from house backgrounds.
- My google search gives 1,360,000 to 156,000. Either way, though, it seems clear that "broken beat" is the more common. The Jade Knight 06:49, 30 October 2006 (UTC)
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- Google and other search engines don't provide the answer because there will be repeat pages in any search. In other words google my have a million results from five websites - in theory. Best to look at what other organisations say, and the BBC's 1Xtra refers to broken beat [14]. As far as I'm aware, the music is derived from a beat that is broken - so I reckon it's correct as it is. If there's no article on Mark De Clive Lowe - fine start one. Escaper7 15:08, 30 October 2006 (UTC)