Talk:Techstep
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
What's difference between techstep and neurofunk? — Anrie Nord 06:33, 30 July 2005 (UTC)
- As I understand it, neurofunk is characterised by extremely precise production and an even more sci-fi feel. It tends not to have growling synths and that sort of thing, instead sounding (obsessively) clean and futuristic. If techstep is industrial + drum & bass, neurofunk is electro + drum & bass. If you want an example of neurofunk, listen to Stakka & Skynet's old stuff on Audio Blueprint or what's possibly my favourite album ever, Source Direct's Controlled Developments, which I've heard described as 'theme music to a sci-fi film done by a paranoid future version of Lalo Schifrin'. Naar 12:59, 24 October 2005 (UTC)
-
- I have published the list of well known techstep and neurofunk albums and mixes on my personal Wikipedia page. Which of them can be referred as examples of neurofunk? Could you recommend more albums in neurofunk genre? — Anrie Nord 12:55, 26 October 2005 (UTC)
-
-
- Of the ones you have listed on your page (that I've listened to; not 2, 4, 5, 11), I would describe the majority of them as neurofunk. Black Science is debatable as, to me, it seems to belong more to the earlier tradition of so-called 'intelligent' or atmospheric drum & bass. Essentially all of Audio Blueprint's output was neurofunk, with releases on the Underfire sub-label more dancefloor-oriented and somewhat closer to techstep. You seem to have covered most of the bases with your list already, but you might check out Black Sun Empire's Driving Insane, Gridlok's Preludes, Matrix's Sleepwalk, pretty much anything by Photek and the Audio Blueprint, Gain Recordings, Nerve Recordings, Subtitles and Underfire back catalogues. Naar 14:12, 27 October 2005 (UTC)
-
Is techstep the same as 2 step?
- No, 2step is a successor of garage, while techstep is a subgenre of drum & bass. See lists of 2step and drum & bass artists for more info. — Anrie Nord 18:19, 9 August 2005 (UTC)
Ok another question that is the same: What is the differance between techstep and dubstep? --Michael Ray 18:53, 11 November 2005 (UTC)
- From what I've been told, dubstep isn't drum and bass at all; it's a subgenre of garage. Listening to the Grime album on Rephlex (which is actually dubstep, not grime, apparently), it doesn't really share the same baseline musical traits as drum and bass; basically, it just doesn't sound like D&B. You'd think the music press would get better at naming things after so much practice, but it doesn't seem to have happened. Naar 17:36, 12 November 2005 (UTC)
im the one who wrote about neurofunk. whoever wrote about techstep is 100% accurate - part of being accurate is being neutral. now its making sence when people read about techstep while clicking on to neurofunk to find out that neurofunk is only a progression of techstep which means by listening to neurofunk, the roots in (dark) techstep are quite evident. i just dont understand why NO U TURN is not mentioned since ed rush, nico, trace and fierce helped to pioneer techstep - in 1995/1996 - and the label is not mentioned while fierce was never was a member of virus but of no u turn only. apart from this, its an accurate article indeed. people can now surf between tech and neuro and obtain real knowledge.
[edit] Why is there no mention of 1995+ techstep output here?
This was when the term first came about. Techstep seems to be in use to describe something a bit different, but related, as this article focuses solely on the late 90s and not the labels and artists that created this sound in '95.
Where is the mention of Trace's releases on Emotif and the Techstepping LP? Ed Rush's No U Turn releases e.g. What's Up?, Mothership etc. Doc Scott's Shadowboxing?
Just a thought!Mrhaste 13:57, 12 September 2006 (UTC)