An extensive and intricate piece on the resurgence of UK garage, by Gabriel Szatan for Resident Advisor
A lot to take in
Came away wondering just a couple of things
- how big is this scene, or scenes multiple?
- it wasn't clear to me, from reading it, if anyone was doing anything new with either the UKG 4-to-floor classic sound or the 2step template...
if it's just a reiteration of those sounds, then it might well be highly enjoyable (sometimes I find myself in agreement with young Jess Harvell, who once declared that speed garage was his absolute favorite sound to dance to - to which I'd add only that 2-step, while more formally radical and interesting to the ear, felt a lot tricksier on the moving-and-grooving side... basically you have to be a much better dancer than I ever was to do it justice)
but (and you know what's coming) a replay would be somewhat letting down the original push-things-forward, mutational spirit that led to UKG and 2step coming into being in the first place
from which light, the title of Szatan's piece rings ironic: Like A Battle: The Push For UK Garage's Future
still - as recombinant repro-antique biznis goes, this choon (via Rudewhy at Dissensus) is really good
whereas this is sort of the ghost of Ghost
freezeframing that darkgarridge moment before Horsepower Productions galloped up a historical cul de sac
lived it once mate! didn't love it that much even then (gimme the rude 'n' cheesy any day... the silly novelty tracks)
yeah as a general principle sort of thing -
even the most bandwagon-jumping, mercenary-minded, shamelessly derivative track from 97/98/99/2000 has more spiritual-philosophical-ontological integrity (for want of a better word)
than
the most scholarly, meticulous, well-informed and well-intended reproduction-antique effort from now
because the former are participating (even if exploitatively) in a real-time wave of innovation as it unfolds, rather than going back and freezeframing that moving moment
which is why you (meaning me obviously) can get a buzz off of a shoddy third-division tune from backintheday, that you simply can't get from the most immaculate recreation
the buzz of historicity, of something happening for the first time, trapped in amber?
i do believe so
this principle applies to everything
the other garage revival (punk)
but also digi-dub, Detroit-venerators, you name it
Still I expect I will wade my way through many of the names and labels mentioned in the Gabriel S piece, when I have a mo
CCRU fans clearly, if erratic spellers!
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