Discovered this track 'cause its breakbeat was sampled and used in Technical Itch - Touch The Darkness.
For Breakcore artists to check out, Venetian Snares is probably the best one to start with. Pretty big discography and also more on the IDM side of the spectrum.
Igorrr is another good one, especially if you’re into Rock/Metal type stuff since their music heavily fuses Metal and Breakcore. There’s also Alec Empire’s album “The Destroyer,” which is what I’ve usually seen credited as being the first Breakcore album (though from what I’ve heard, Alec has become a bit of a right-wing shithead in recent years, so probably try not to give him any money if you’re gonna listen to it).
I guess the simplest way to think about it is that if stuff like Jungle & DnB are Punk Rock, then Breakcore is Hardcore Punk Rock. So yeah, more abrasive, more extreme, more chaotic & experimental, faster tempos, etc.
Breakbeat is a fairly context dependent term when it’s being used to describe musical genres tbh. It can be used as an umbrella term for any type of music that uses sampled drum breaks. I.e. Hip-Hop, Jungle, DnB, Breakcore, Big Beat, etc. are all Breakbeat genres. However, it can also be used to describe a specific sub-section of breakbeat music, usually stuff that’s more on the downtempo & midtempo side of the spectrum that doesn’t neatly fit into other genres.
Not that familiar artists who make generic Breakbeat, but I think The Chemical Brothers and The Prodigy were/are both big artists for that type of music. You could also check out The Glitch Mob’s latest album Ctrl Alt Reality, which is somewhere in between generic Breakbeat and Breakbeat Hardcore.
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Here’s the next part in the sub-genre intro series, hope y’all enjoy o7
Also, here’s some demos for an album I’m working on:
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Second part of the sub-genre intro guide series I’m working on, coving Techstep & Neurofunk this time. Next part will probably either cover Atmo Jungle/DnB or Jungle Tekno & Happy Hardcore. Hope y’all enjoy o7.
Yeah. I was actually listening to Ed Rush & Optical’s album “Wormhole” for the very first time the other day, and while it’s pretty tame by the standards set by stuff that came after it, I couldn’t help but think of how wild it must have been to go from stuff like Dred Bass, Ricky, Terrorist, Maximum Style, etc. to Wormhole in only 3-4 years.
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Here’s what I’ve been mainly working on for the past 2 weeks, first video in a series I’m working on to follow up from the genre guide video I made a while back. Hope y’all enjoy o7
Also, here’s a Techstep/Neurofunk track I uploaded 4 weeks ago if anyone’s interested:
Sometime last year or earlier this year, someone in the Jungle subreddit posted a section of a 1992/93 1993 issue of some underground rave music magazine from the UK, specifically a section that contained an interview with Pascal & Sponge (who were producing Breakbeat Hardcore/Jungle songs together as Johnny Jungle at the time). The interview was pretty short and not that interesting in the grand scheme of things, but the one thing that stuck with me from it was a brief line from Pascal complaining that the Amen Break was overused lol.
Which is pretty incredible when you consider the historical context. IIRC the first breakbeat to be sampled & used in a song was the Apache Break all the way back in 1980. By contrast, the Amen break wasn’t first used until 1986, and only 6-7 years later it had exploded in popularity to the point that some people were already starting to get tired of it. And in the 30 years since then, it’s continued to grow in popularity to the point that most casual fans of Breakbeat, old skool Hip-Hop, Jungle, DnB, Breakcore, IDM, etc. are at least somewhat familiar with it & it’s history. The Apache Break is still easily within the top 5 when it comes to most sampled breakbeats of all time, and it has nowhere near the same level of casual recognition. Even second most sampled breakbeat, the Think Break, doesn’t come close to the Amen on that front.
Edit: Here’s the interview, and the relevant quote:
Q: Do you prefer the music of today or the stuff that was around a year ago and what do you see as the future of rave music?
A: I do prefer the music of today. I’m not sure about what the way ahead is though. I do think that everyone should stop using that Amen break because if anything is going to kill hardcore it will be that. People are going to get very tired of it. There are loads of breaks out there, it’s just that most people are too lazy to look and find them. Havibg [sic] said that I do think that the Amen breakbeat is the same for Hardcore as the bass drum is to House.
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New best of 2023 mix, mainly featuring Hardcore, Darkcore & Jungle Tekno, hope y’all enjoy o7
Also uploaded a couple new tracks since the last mix I posted:
“Welcome To Metropolis” is part of idea I had to make a fake video game OST inspired by (and frequently sampling from) 90s FPS games, though I’m also not exactly trying very hard to make all the songs work as a FPS soundtrack tbh, so the “OST” part is more of a loose thematic framing device.
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New best of 2023 mix, this time for Breakbeat Hardcore, Jungle & Jungle Tekno in the 140-160 bpm range. Hope y’all enjoy o7
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Finally back with part 2 of the best of 2023 series, hope y’all enjoy o7
Also posted a new track last week:
It’s a free DL on SoundCloud, or pay what you want on Bandcamp.
The inclusion of the “Close Encounters” samples is kinda funny tbh, 'cause the whole reason I even had them was to make a bootleg remix of Siamese Minds - Killer Instinct. I started working on that bootleg around 3-4 weeks before I started on Cyberia '94, but haven’t finished it yet. Then when working on Cyberia '94, I had completed the two sections before & after the ambient section with the Closer Encounters samples, but transitioning directly between them didn’t sound right.
So that whole section came about just 'cause I decided to bridge those two sections by switching into something completely different for a bit. And the thing I decided to switch into is basically just a rough recreation of a section of the intro for the Killer Instinct bootleg I’m working on (minus the drums & bass), which worked surprisingly well lol.
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Here’s the first of my 2023 Jungle mega-mixes. Hope y’all enjoy o7
Would’ve liked to have made this back in December, but I had ear surgery to repair a hole in my eardrum that’s I’ve had since I was very young, which made it a bit difficult to do music related things for a few weeks. Also didn’t help that my headphones broke a week after the surgery, and I didn’t get around to replacing them until mid January lol.
I did make a couple new tunes last month though if anyone’s interested:
Someone else had actually uploaded this track to YT a while back. Then about 4-5 years ago it just disappeared for some reason and no one re-uploaded it until this channel did 6 months ago (which tbf, it’s a vinyl only release from 1995, so you can basically only get it through discogs nowadays). Don’t remember how many views the original upload had, but judging by similarly old Jungle videos, I think it would probably be closer to 10k at this point if it hadn’t been taken down.
Not 100% sure, but I think it’s the Think Break. Sounds a bit weird, so likely timestretched and/or repitched. Also probably has a low pass filter over it in order to cut out the two extremely loud & high pitched peaks in the 10-20 kHz range that are coming from the shaker, 'cause those will start hurt your ears if you don’t tone them down at all lol.
This conflict has gotten me interested in learning more about the early history of Islam & how it expanded to become the dominant religious force in the middle east, but one thing I’ve inadvertently learned along the way is that Amman, the capitol city of Jordan, used to be named Philadelphia until the 630s AD. The city was originally the capitol city of the Ammonite Kingdom, but was renamed to Philadelphia after the Macedonians conquered the region, and then renamed again to Amman once the Muslims conquered it.
(I guess this is all just to say that I never really realized that Philadelphia was a Greek name and/or that I never realized that there were other cities named Philadelphia before the one in the US lol)
I tried search for it for a bit last night, but it either happened more recently than I remember (I was thinking it was sometime between 2016-2020), or it’s just been lost in the noise of all the threats Israel & Hezbollah have thrown out at one another over the years. It’s kinda frustrating looking for it, 'cause searching up anything along the lines of “Hezbollah threatens Netanyahu” just returns a bunch of articles about Netanyahu threatening Hezbollah.
Hezbollah definitely has spies deep enough within the Israeli government to at least be able to get an idea of what Israel’s planning to do.
The recruitment of espionage agents in Israel for Hezbollah is associated mainly with the Arab population in Israel, including former Member of Knesset Azmi Bishara, who was suspected of supplying various intelligence information to Hezbollah during the Second Lebanon War in 2006; an IDF officer of Bedouin origin at the rank of lieutenant colonel who supplied intelligence information to Hezbollah early in the 2000s; and ordinary residents in various areas of Israel (Kulick, 2009). However, there are not only agents from minority Arab or Bedouin groups, but also Jewish agents who have supplied intelligence information to Hezbollah as part of drug deals (see below, Criminal case 36/03 State of Israel vs. Said ben Jamil Kahmouz).
The information that the agents in Israel have supplied to Hezbollah is diverse, including the location of critical civilian and military infrastructure, orders of battle, border points, and information on IDF weapons. In addition, Hezbollah has sought to gather social information on diverse issues, including political rivalries, government systems, social struggles, social trends, and more, in order to identify strengths and weaknesses of Israeli society, military vulnerabilities, and future targets, and even in order to understand the mood in the country (Zeitoun et al., 2021; Kulick, 2009). The Israeli agents were recruited into Hezbollah service based on various motivations, including ideological and economic reasons (Kulick, 2009).
Also IIRC, a few years back they posted a photo they took of Benjamin Netanyahu in his office (from the outside looking in, probably from an adjacent building), with the message basically being that they’re deep enough inside to potentially assassinate him while he’s at work.
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Newest installment in the sub-genre intro series, hope y’all enjoy o7
Next video will probably be on Breakbeat Hardcore, planning on doing a single megamix that starts around 135 bpm and works its way up to around 165 bpm.