Sunday, 24 June 2012

Mixes from The Meteor at Glade Festival


So as the dust settles from the crash landing of glitch hop into the UK at Glade Festival last weekend, here are the first of the sets from The Meteor. Tune into Glitch.FM from 10pm-12am every Wednesday to hear more live sets, guest mixes and fresh tunes from the artists who played.


Jump music kickstarted the festival on Thursday night. If you've missed them here's some awesome promo mixes from Septic Insurgent and Hungry Man:


Alongside Head of State and Sweet Jesus, Your Niece completes the trio of Uppercut residents who made and hosted The Meteor. Massive thanks to them, Lowri and everyone else who worked so hard to make this such a special weekend. Here's Your Niece's gangsta set from Friday night after Ben Samples:


UK Glitch Hop editor Morbidly Obese Midget warmed up for Shamic Technology on Saturday afternoon. Thank you so much to everyone who came down and bounced the underfloor bass with us!

Stay tuned for more from The Meteor...

Tuesday, 12 June 2012

Glitch Hop has landed at Glade Festival!


Since its first appearance at Glastonbury in 2000, Glade’s been a home to innovation in electronic dance music, with new sounds and styles emerging every year. The new kid on the block for 2012 is The Meteor – a hollow in the woods featuring a custom-built wooden platform stuffed with under-floor bass-bins under the eaves of a DJ booth-cum-pulpit from outer-space. The line-up is a mouth-watering cross section of lazer crunk, drumstep and glitch hop – or whatever else you want to label the synth-soaked, sample-laden infusion of mid-tempo breaks, IDM, hip-hop and dubstep that will be taking your legs out from under you this June. For ease of reference, we’ll lump it all under the banner of glitch-hop – more of a production style that a genre that’s been gaining momentum in the US for the last five years and is now opening ears from the UK, Hungary and France to Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and Mexico.

One of the first DJs to champion this sound in the UK was Secret Garden Party favourite Your Niece, who’s been blasting audiences with lazer-bass since a notorious set in the Master Bedroom at the 2007 Bacchanalia Ball. Your Niece, Head of State and Sweet Jesus recently launched London’s first regular glitch-hop night, Uppercut, and are now set to take Glade by storm with The Meteor. They’re the ones you need to say thank you to when you see them.

Of course, like most new departures in electronic music, glitch-hop has its roots in the UK. Glade Festival favourites Autechre, Amon Tobin and Aphex Twin/AFX all pioneered the aesthetics of glitchy digital music, and for the first half of the naughties many breaks and drum and bass producers turned their hand to down-tempo and mid-tempo productions inspired by IDM and electronica. Among them were AMB, Danny Breaks and a bloke called Dave Tipper.

In 2001 Mike Wallis (one half of Crunch, with Tipper) and Sam Ashwell (one half of Vent) founded a label called Colony Productions to release their mid-tempo experiments. Mike and Dave named one of their 2002 tracks ‘Bit Hop’, in reference to the digital beats and bleeps they were making. Tipper continued to develop the sound on his own label Tippermusic, establishing himself world-wide as one of the leading proponents of what was to become known as glitch-hop, a style he brought to Inspiralled at Glade Festival in both 2006 and 2007.

This year Colony Productions co-founders Vent headline the label showcase on The Meteor alongside Mouldy Soul aka. Richard Carrigan - a young producer who’s been dominating the Addictech glitch hop charts in the last six months alongside Tipper and New Zealand producer Opiuo. Mouldy Soul credits his own glitch-hop epiphany to seeing Aussie glitch pioneer Spoonbill play in Inspiralled at Glade in 2009.

By 2004, on the other side of the pond a long-haired bass-freak from San Francisco calling himself Bassnectar had started making his own brand of ‘omni-tempo maximalism’ – a mash up of breaks, hip hop and other styles, which focused on the psychedelic potential of the bass. Having toured the UK with Freq Nasty in 2006, he returned home to tirelessly promote this bottom-heavy sound across the United States. Co-produced with Kraddy, his belly-dancing inspired 100bpm banger Snakecharmer became the soundtrack to Burning Man that year, and pointed the way to the current domination of glitch-hop and whomp on The Playa. While Lorin will always wear the crown, one of the most talented US producers to follow in his ground-shaking wake has been Ben Samples whose 2010 album Chose Your Own Adventure and subsequent releases showcase a diversity of genre-defying deep bass. We can’t wait to hear what he does to our Funktion1 speakers.

A second glitch-hop milestone back in 2004 was ‘Crying over Pros for No Reason’ - a ground-breaking album of glitchy hip-hop influenced electronica - released on UK label Planet Mu by a young L.A. producer called edIT. By 2007 he’d teamed up with fellow West Coast laptop DJs Ooah, Kraddy and Boreta to form The Glitch Mob – a glitch-hop supergroup whose G-funk drenched, crunk heavy remixes of STS9, The White Stripes and 2pac / Dr Dre went a long way to popularising the genre worldwide. In 2010, they toured a live version of their debut album Drink the Sea, which brought a US brand of glitch-hop to the UK in a major way for the first time, inspiring many young producers to try a live approach themselves, including Zen Death Squad and Beat3.

Zen Death Squad’s own debut EP on Made it Glitch saw heavy support in the US and a West Coast tour last autumn, while Beat3 have been showcasing their own blend of DJ and live production skills across the UK. Zen Death Squad are back in 2012 with an eagerly anticipated second EP revealing a more mature evolution in their sound – to be previewed in the Skanky Panky showcase at Glade!

Inspired by noises coming out of the US, party breaks producer William Breakspear teamed up with glitch-hop DJ Buddha from SixAM to form Skanky Panky Records in Liverpool in 2009. Bringing the upbeat bounce, their Skanky Panky EP series has launched the careers of internationally acclaimed producers such as K+Lab from New Zealand, Jmej from Canada and Sedge Warbler from South Africa.

Always one step ahead of the pack, Freq Nasty recently moved to L.A. to develop his own ear-bending, booty-shaking blend of glitch, breaks, dubstep, raga, drumstep and moombahton, which he’s bringing back to the Glade Stage this year. We're also very lucky to have San Francisco legend, Pretty Lights, over for the Glade Stage this year. In his own soulful way he's probably done as much as anyone to popularise glitchy hip hop. Recently he's been exploring a more organic approach to his production, building all of his music up from analogue sounds and samples.

Another UK producer to crack the US scene on his own terms was Glasgow producer Akira Kiteshi, whose anime-lazer drenched dubstep was featured on the seminal Acid Crunk Vol.2 compilation. His debut album, Industrial Avenue, which spans glitch-hop, future garage and electro-disco came out on Afterglo in March and he’s already been described (rather unfairly) as ‘a Scottish Skrillex’ by Boomkat and a ‘crazed genius’ by Huw Stephens on Radio 1.

Around the same time as Bassnectar and edIT began bomb the bass in a big way, other hip-hop producers in LA started experimenting with intelligent jazz-infused beats. The hotbed of innovation was, and still is, a club called the Low End Theory, where young UK dubstep producers such as Skream, Benga and Joker were also invited to showcase their 140bpm grooves early on. Alongside Gaslamp Killer and Flying Lotus, one of the stalwarts of the scene was Kutmah - who in 2010 was shockingly incarnated by US authorities under immigration charges and deported to the UK. The silver lining is that he’s here for Glade this year. Aren’t you lucky?

While all this has been happening, the rest of the UK has been wondering what to do ‘post-dubstep’. A group of beats producers in Brighton have just been getting on with it, creating the south coast’s equivalent of the Low End Theory – Donky Pitch – and launching a synth-heavy retro dancefloor-beat mutation they’ve decided to call ‘Skweee’ (tongues firmly planted in cheeks). After a string of acclaimed EPs on Stuff, Ramp and Planet Mu, their most prolific resident Slugabed was recently signed to independent powerhouse Ninja Tune. He’s just released his first full length album, Time Team, to rave reviews on Drowned in Sound and the BBC.

With a fresh breed of producers on Robox Neotech, Earnest Endeavours, Senseless Records and Jump Music showcasing even fresher directions on The Meteor this summer, 2012 is the year that glitch-hop crash lands back into Britain with a crunk.

*This post is an extended version of some copy that Morbidly Obese Midget wrote for the Glade Festival website.*

Glade Festival set times and highlights


How sick is this looking? Pretty much all day Friday and Saturday night looking mouth wateringly good on The Meteor. If we don't see you then, come find us at 3pm Saturday for the UK Glitch Hop meet-up during Morbidly Obese' Midget's set. Can't wait!

THURSDAY 14 JUNE

METEOR STAGE
7pm-1pm Jump Records Showcase

FRIDAY 15 JUNE 

LIQUID STAGE
2pm Kursa

GLADE STAGE
3.30pm Freq Nasty 
9pm Pretty Lights

METEOR STAGE
3pm William Breakspear ft. Georgina Upton
4pm Memory9
5pm SixAM
6pm Zen Death Squad
8pm Colony Mike
9pm Mouldy Soul
10pmKrossbow
11pm VENT
12am Culprate
1am Akira Kiteshi
2am Samples
3am Your Niece



RABBIT HOLE
7pm Coda



OVERKILL
8pm Si Begg


VAUDEVILLE RAVE
2am JFB
3am Dutty Moonshine

SATURDAY 16 JUNE


METEOR STAGE

3pm Morbidly Obese Midget
4pm Shamanic Technology


12am Kutmah
2am Head of State
3am Sweet Jesus
4am Beat3



LIQUID STAGE
3pm Nimbus



SUNDAY 17 JUNE


METEOR STAGE
3pm Donk Pitch Showcase: Grinel 
3.40pm Boss Kite
5pm Ghost Mutt
6pm Slugabed
7-10pm Robox Neotech Showcase



Sunday, 27 May 2012

Glade Festival ticket competition + The Meteor

Not long now 'til Glade Festival! Taking place from 14 - 17 June 2012, it really is the electronic dance music event of the summer. The big excitement this year is The Meteor - a bass filled crater in the woods completely dedicated to glitch hop and all it's myriad variations! 


For your chance to win a pair of tickets to the Festival courtesy of UK Glitch Hop, just tag yourself into this photo by Wednesday 30 May and listen into the Colony Productions show on Glitch.FM from 10pm-12 that night to see if you've won.

https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=306915162727940&set=a.306915079394615.71804.178763668876424&type=3&theater
Click here to enter


Then watch this video about how it's all coming together, thanks to the hard work of The Head of State, Andy Ellis, and the rest of the Uppercut Crew:



The line-up pretty much reads as 'the best of UK Glitch Hop', including our Glitch.FM residents Your Niece, Mouldy Soul, William Breakspear and Colony Productions!

Presented by Uppercut:
Akira Kiteshi
Samples
Culprate
Tom Encore
Irk and Moneyshot

Earnest Endeavours Presents:
B. Bravo
Kutmah
Darkhouse Fam
Patchwork Pirates

Skanky Panky Records Presents:
Memory9
Zen Death Squad
SixAM
William Breakspear ft. Georgina Upton
Hosted by MC SAS

Donky Pitch Presents:
Slugabed
Ghost Mutt
Boss Kite
Grinel

Senseless Records Presents:
Mak & Pasteman
Murlo
Sarantis Wildsystem
Sasquatch
Ghosttown

Colony Productions Presents:
Vent
Mouldy Soul
Krossbow

Robox Neotech Presents:

Doshy
Stagga
Lakritze
Monky

Jump Music Presents:
Hungry Man
Wascal
Septic Insurgent
Harky & Cosmo

Plus:
Mike Hulme
Beat3
Shamanic Technology
DJ Shookz
Mr Jack
Oz Pinnock
Ben in Rome
Mike Gill
D’Vinci

RESIDENTS:
The Head of State
Sweet Jesus
Your Niece

We can't wait!

Friday, 4 May 2012

April round up: Da Choons

RELEASES

Slugabed's long awaited début Time Team is out today through Ninja Tune with the single Sex landing a few weeks back. He's really been at the forefront of an off kilter hip hop sound for a few years now and this could be the release that sees him get the props he deserves.

KURSA's Machinate EP came out through Adapted, showing his heavy and playful side in equal measure. From what we've seen of the names lined up to do the remixes they're gonna be jaw dropping

Remember that badass Sedge Warbler album? So do all the sick monkeys that have remixed it, including SixAM, Jiffster and Cut la Roc

Donky Pitch's Keyboard Kid 206 was featured on The Guardian new band of the Day, just in time for this tasty little EP

FREEBIES

SixAM has given away a banger of track to get you liking his new Soundcloud. Remixes offer a nice twist too. What are you waiting for?

Mouldy Soul lets Snoop abuse his teapot

KURSA gives you a free neuro-boner
The Beat Dweebs got caught up in Cash For Flapjacks scandal with Spinforth over at GhettoFunk.co.uk

Freq Nasty comes home for Secret Garden Party this summer. Shame he's not bringing Knight Riderz with him

Pistol Shrimp come back with a funked up club classic

Koan Sound gave Kasabian a working over

Wolfie Razzmatazz delivers another genie-arse Opiuo swing mash up

Glitch Mob inspired beats from Bath via INFINITY

TEASERS

Skanky Panky Boss William Breakspear's been getting us wet for his debut album at the end of May with a series of collaborations and a very welcome refix of an old classic. They're not released until September though - that is a tease!(bastad)

Mouldy Soul's remixed AMB. Just don't keylock it when you mix it or he'll batter you with his bass dildo

KURSA has been a busy man and it's all sounding delicious
Bobby Tank was also picked up as Guardian new band of the Day. He continues to prolifically make noise like this. "it's an eargasmic onrush of everything"
The leg-end that is Si Begg has a new track on an Enig'matik, due in just a couple of weeks called "Painting Pictures On Silence v2" Compiled by label boss Sun In Aquarius who's done some pretty tasty Tipper remixes lately
Bristol producer SPenghead gives us a taster of his début EP out this month
Dephicit teased us with a work in progress a while back, but we weren't prepared for how funky it would end up

Beat3 gonna knock you out
This is a very funky mid-tempo taster from electro producer DivKid
-Butler Reeves- who seems to be better know for his swing turns his hand to arcade lazer laced glitch step to great effect in this track

Klem in Brighton has finished his first track and it's a chilled out bass and glitch beauty. Looking forward to more like this

This is a pretty lush downtempo glitch number from Mykus

Beautiful downtempo from Lhasa Mencur
To finish off - this the first track from Son of Glitch's new live project. Be interested to see what their set-up is!

Saturday, 28 April 2012

UK Glitch Hop on Glitch.FM #9 - Dephicit interview

Our Glitch.FM guest mix last week came from Exeter's Dephicit. Here's the lowdown on where he gets his glitch, bass in Exeter and plans for the summer. If you want a clean download of the mixtape with full tracklist, it's at the bottom. Might as well have a read on the way...



 

Please introduce yourself.... 


This is James Stafford aka Dephicit aka 1 half of Critical Cuts.


 

How would you describe your particular style of bass music?


Chunky funky slimey basslines and beats with as much glitchy/synthy interest as I can squeeze in.
My style is pretty warped from all the genres I've been listening to on the dance music scene for the last 5/6 years. I've found taking the best bits out of different genres really helps to stay away from categorisation and keeps the originality flowing. From dubstep to psytrance, I've found theres always something positive to take away incorporate into your own music.


What first turned you onto bass / glitch / lazer music?

Any particular artists or tracks?
I think the first track that drew my attention away from dubstep was when a friend showed me Bassnectars ''heads up'' and from there I went on to discover another american guy called Subvert. These guys tracks had the heavy basslines I knew could destroy a dancefloor but were fast enough and funky enough to shun the dubstep critics. From then on Opiuo and Tipper seemed to appear out of know-where and to be honest I found it hard to find anything else of that tempo that I felt could stand up to them In my sets. But the last couple of years has been awesome for the scene, especially in the U.K, (big ups U.K glitch hop) and the freshness coming out of the tracks is consistently inspiring and keeping me glued to my soundcloud!



What's the scene like where you are?


The scene in Devon is fuking awesome, I'm mainly based in Exeter and the quality and diverstity of the nights is amazing. If you wanna get your smile on & knees up theres electro swing nights (Cabaret Volitare) , if you wanna get your hood up and skank on you’ve got the deep dubstep nights (The Deep End), weve got the ghettofunk/Hip Hop & Glitch hop nights put on by Riddim Fruit head honcho 'Hidden Riddim' and Totnes's 'Flywalker' and if you just wanna get your rave on we’ve got the infamous 'Onelion' nights where I started Djing 2/3 years ago, (big ups Subindex)
I thoroughly recommend getting involved if your ever down here, good vibes and pumping tunes all the way.


You've got a radio show with Barely Legit aka. Dodgey Style. How did that come about and how can we get ours ears on it?


Seb, (Dodgey Style) is a DJ genius and one of the few people that was into glitch hop in exeter when I started producing it. We have very similar tastes and this lead us to form 'Critical Cuts'. You can find us here... Critical Cuts

 

Where do you like to play the most?

I like to bust it out anywhere where people are gunna be lovin the tunes, Its wikid playing to a home crowd in exeter as people know what to accept and Its always sick to get positive feedback, but I also love the challenge of playing sumwhere new, where potentially they have'nt come across the sound before and need to be... educated :)
 Festivals are always a winner, the ultimate vibes that they create are always a wikid platform for funky dirty beats and bass.


What's the craziest gig you've ever played?


A pretty mental set was in Bristol for 'Big:Large' at the black swan. It was a sell out crowd in the main room and from talking to people before I played the vast majority had not really heard glitch hop before, so it was sick to see everybody quickly warming to it and losing there nut towards the end.

Who's inspiring you most at the moment?

Thats a big question, but if I had name a few, Bad Tango and all the Broken Robot crew, Koan Sounds tracks are just ridiculous, Digital Rust, Dj Alias & Smoke Sign (who featured in the mix) Griz, obviously Opiuo and Tipper...

But its the UK Glitch Hop scene thats inspiring me the most, homebrew talent like Mouldy Soul and Breakspear, SixAM and all the others who have been at it for years and are really pushing the sound in the right direction.


Who are you looking out for in 2012?

Staunch has been getting my juices goin, Looking forward to seeing what they can come up with.
 Bad Tango and Mouldy Soul are good friends of mine and are absolute machines at tearing out the goods, watch that space.

I played a word up remix from 'Olmec 'forthcoming on his Motley Bass EP in the mix, he's another one to watch out for.
 Dj Alias (NZ) whos working on a remix for my EP is also bringing out the killa vibe, watch out for his first EP landing on our shores soon.
Local Deep Dubstep talent like Skeptix and Pulsar are also ones Ive gotta mention.


When can we expect to hear a Dephicit EP? 


In 2-3 months I will be releasing the Lazer Crack EP with various remix's and originals from some awesome talent, so watch out for that on Riddim Fruit Records.



Where can we see you play next?

Riddim Fruit vs Cabaret Volitare @ The Cavern (Exeter) - June 1st
Supporting the Funk Hunters @ the Angel (Exeter) - June 2nd

Secret Garden Party festival - 20th July
Big:Large 2 @ The Black Swan (Bristol) - 21st July
Standon Calling Festival - 4th August
Aeon Festival (@ Crediton near Exeter) 25th August



Glitch FM Mix Tracklist


Eardible - Audible Pancakes (Unreleased)

Staunch - Busted up – Out now

Digital Rust - Chocolate Sauce – Out now

Haywire - Mindchamber – Out now

Shimi Sonic - Follow up (Dephicit remix) – Out now

Dephicit - Clef Residue (Forthcoming)

Dephicit - Lazer Crack (Forthcoming)
DJ Alias & B - San Francisco Bay (Forthcoming)

K lab ft Sacha Vee - Need to know (Audio Infunction Remix) (Forthcoming)

Olmec - Word up (Forthcoming)

DJ Alias - Empire Ft I.T (Forthcoming)
Obscinity - Funkology (Forthcoming)

K lab ft Sacha Vee - Need to know (DJ Alias remix) (Forthcoming)

Smoke Sign - Sub Minimal Message (Forthcoming)

Morbidly Obese Midget will be hosting guest mixes from Kursa, Nimbus and DJ Primer on Glitch.FM from 10pm BST Wednesday 2 May. See you in the chatroom www.glitch.fm/chat

Friday, 6 April 2012

March Round Up: Da Choons

Better late than never, here's our round of the best UK Glitch Hop tunes from the last month. If you'd like to be considered next time, make sure you add your tunes to the UK Glitch Hop group on soundcloud. 


Releases

KURSA's Machinate EP shot it's way to the top of the glitch hop chart on Beatport this month

This flilthy number from Culprate got a lot of love this month. Check the funk on the outro

The Shimi Sonic remix EP finally dropped on Riddim Fruit with lush summertime versions by Mouldy Soul and Dephicit

Freebies


Bristol's Aspects returned with much fanfare and glitchy production from Glasgow's Akira Kiteshi

More in the huge tune plus rap vocal vein, Foreign Beggars took on Koan Sound to full effect

A classic remix from Beat3 who smashed it at Uppercut and will be back on home turf for Donkey Punch in Bournemouth next month. Wohaa!

Truly epic track from SixAM. Bad mother indeed. Check out their new Soundcloud page while you're at it

In case you haven't had enough KURSA, get yer penguins on WonKay


Competition for symbols in names plus new genres ENIG!NE Altman Construct Corporate Identity Hop. Chilled glitchiness.Oriental vibe

More chilled beats from Brighton courtesy of Drowzy

Teasers 

It's good to see Tipper riding high. He's been touring hard round the US and Canada all month and at time of writing the mental maze that is Puzzle Dust had 31,000 plays and 1200 likes on Soundcloud. We've had a sneak listen to the full EP and it's properly heavy this time. Just you wait!


Breakspear's massive swinging remix of K-Lab's McFly on Empathy hits the digital shelves around 21 April

1 Staying with Skanky Panky, SixAM have somehow made this Sedge Warbler tune sound even better! Full remix EP later in month

Mouldy Soul has given us a taster of two lip-smacking new tunes in time for summer and he's due to be touring the US in May

More Kursa and Mouldy Soul - Mustard Tiger remixes coming soon on Adapted

The man behind Beta Birmingham, TerrorByte's been prolific this month, and it's not at all scary

Tantalising peek at a new track from Shamanic Technology. If you're a label, snap this man up quick!

Nice lazer-splurge-step from Stagga and Monky in Cardiff

Drake's been in the UK this month, so thought we'd share this glitchy remix from London producer Lokane, plus a fresh Shlomo instrumental

Wave back he's drowning previews his new EP with a wonky Dead Prez re-rub. Yorkshire reprazents!

Playful glitch from Dublin's 7AR. Not strictly speaking UK, but we'll claim him

And a Panoptical Allusion to play you out