DJ SS
Melody Maker, 1995
by Simon Reynolds
1995
was a banner year for DJ SS. 25 year old Leroy Small dropped a bomb-load
of monster tunes-- "Hearing Is
Believing", "The Lighter", "Smoker's Rhythm",
"The Rollidge", "95 Rampage"-- that tore up the hardstep
dancefloor.
Then
again, there's never really been a slow year for SS. He's been at the frontline
of hardcore since 1991, both as
co-founder of Leicester-based hardcore label Formation and as a prolific
tunesmith operating under myriad aliases (Sounds of The Future, International
Rude Boys, Rhythm For Reasons, MA1 and MA2, etc). As Formation's in-house
producer, he's had a hand in all but 5 out of the 65 releases to date.
SS
started DJ-ing at the age of 13, working his way up through school discos,
soul, hip hop, early house, in a "natural progression" that took him
to hardcore rave. "In the rave scene I saw so many hooligans I knew that
were happy and dancing". This rave-revelation co-incided with SS's
alienation from hip hop: the British rap crews weren't really happening, while
"Public Enemy and NWA were preaching the wrong things, harking on about
past crimes against black people, captivating the audience in the wrong way.
Recently I've got back into the more groovy stuff in rap, like Wu Tang Clan,
and I've always had hip hop flavour in my music, with the breakbeats. But I
don't like the gangsta element, that's too like the ragga gunshot thing".
Ragga-jungle is something that Formation have consciously distanced themselves from. "In '94, the ragga thing was big but I wasn't into it. I took the basslines and a stab of ragga vocal but I refused to do a full-on ragga chat over my tracks". SS doesn't like the vibe ragga creates. "Jungle just got too dark, too intimidating. There's been a lot of trouble in the Midlands, shootings. People don't want to worry about treading on someone's toes or giving someone a funny look. It's the promoters' fault, they should bar them kind of people from coming to their clubs, but they're just interested in money. DJ's and producers are to blame too, for putting gunshots in tracks."
Ragga-jungle is something that Formation have consciously distanced themselves from. "In '94, the ragga thing was big but I wasn't into it. I took the basslines and a stab of ragga vocal but I refused to do a full-on ragga chat over my tracks". SS doesn't like the vibe ragga creates. "Jungle just got too dark, too intimidating. There's been a lot of trouble in the Midlands, shootings. People don't want to worry about treading on someone's toes or giving someone a funny look. It's the promoters' fault, they should bar them kind of people from coming to their clubs, but they're just interested in money. DJ's and producers are to blame too, for putting gunshots in tracks."
Definitely
no gunshots, then, but boombastic B-lines, eerily warped vocals, portentous
hunting-horns and shlocky intros of classical music all figure as hallmarks of
SS's style. "Hearing Is Believing Remix" and "Rollers'
Convention", in particular, brilliantly reconciled avant-garde edge with
crowdpleasing groove-power. As such, SS is a prime exponent of 'hardstep',
Grooverider's term for the purist drum & bass style that cuts a middle path
between rudeboy ragga and 'intelligent'. "Hardstep's got no ragga in it,
but people step hard to it," says SS. "See, my only qualms about
intelligent is that musically it's wicked but often it's sounds weak on the
dancefloor. Formation tracks have got to be rolling." As his hardstep
peers, SS gives the nod to Roni Size & Krust, Dillinja, Hype, Andy C, Pascal, and Ray Keith
("his stuff is so simple, but it works!").
That
said, SS is looking for Formation to get more "musical" next year,
with real vocals and songs, as with the forthcoming cover version of
"Free". "People buying
our stuff know what they're getting, we've got a little predictable and it's
time for a change". Okay, but don't get too 'musical', SS, please! Because
right now Formation have hit their stride with a perfect blend of complexity
and minimalism, which can be heard on
Highly Recommended, a compilation that revisits and
drastically remixes highlights from the label's brilliant '95.
"Highly Recommended" is out now on Formation, new
SS tunes "Free" and "Sense of Direction" are set for early
1996 release. SS's remix of DJ Krust's "Set Speed" is out now on V
Recordings.
VARIOUS ARTISTS
HIGHLY RECOMMENDED
Formation
Melody Maker, 1995
by Simon Reynolds
DJ SS, in-house
producer of Leicester 's Formation label, is
one of jungle's
most undersung figures. 1995 was a banner year for both SS
and Formation. They
dominated the drum & bass dancefloor with a series of
killa trax--MA2's "Hearing
Is Believing", Sounds of The Future's "The
Lighter", SS's "Rollidge" and In
Between The Lines' "95 Rampage"--all SS-produced,
and all revisited/revamped on
Highly Recommended.
"Lighter" starts daftly with the rinky-dinky melancholia of
top classical
piano tune "Fur Elise" (better known as
"Theme From 'Love Story'"), then drops
into a ragga-tastic swagger and pummel; the VIP remix
injects a feverish stutter
and stammer into the rude-boy "lighter!!" chant.
The LP mix of "Hearing Is
Believing" adds a squelchy bass-drone that mimics or
maybe even samples "Public
Enemy Number One" from PE's debut album. The original's
portentous
hunting-horn fanfares are timestretched so they wilt and
waver like Salvador
Dali's melting clocks, while the irresistibly surging
bass-flow has been
displaced by a metallic, sproinggg-ing B-line, like a
bouncing, giant-sized ball-
bearing.
The revamp of
"Rollidge" is astonishing; the breakbeats ripple and undulate
like they've been liquidified, and the original's
reversed-diva is slowed and
processed 'til it's like a baritone drowning in the bath.
Even more startling are the voice treatments on "95 Rampage", where the diva-vocal is extruded into a long thin streak of laser-intense light, then a single syllable is isolated and
Even more startling are the voice treatments on "95 Rampage", where the diva-vocal is extruded into a long thin streak of laser-intense light, then a single syllable is isolated and
oscillated into a spasming percussive tattoo.
Less familiar tunes are also given a vicious going-over. Black's awesome VIP Mix of "Black" features some ear-confounding dub-FX--a snatch of MC chatter is shattered into syllables, each
Less familiar tunes are also given a vicious going-over. Black's awesome VIP Mix of "Black" features some ear-confounding dub-FX--a snatch of MC chatter is shattered into syllables, each
of which is scattered through a sonic hall-of-mirrors.
While
'intelligent' drum & bass (Goldie, Photek et al) seduced the ears of
non-junglists and music press readers, Highly Recommended is an essential(ist)
document of where the real action was in jungle '95, i.e.
the purist
strain of drum & bass known as 'hardstep'. This compilation's title says it all.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Scattering of gems from the Formation / SS back pages
Formation tunes feature heavily on this great DB selected-and-mixed compilation of 1994 as one of the UK's Big Five hardcore/jungle labels alongside Moving Shadow, Suburban Base, Reinforced, and Production House
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Scattering of gems from the Formation / SS back pages
Formation tunes feature heavily on this great DB selected-and-mixed compilation of 1994 as one of the UK's Big Five hardcore/jungle labels alongside Moving Shadow, Suburban Base, Reinforced, and Production House
1 comment:
Love that History of our World comp....since I first discovered it I think via Energy Flash probably - good source of great comps that book! But unlike SS, I loved that ragga jungle period. Don't think I have any back in the day mixes/comps only that Rumble in the Jungle retrospective from SoulJazz, which is ace, but can anyone recommend any from the time?
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