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It seems that dubstep has gained some kind of popularity in recent years.
However, I have hard time understanding what dubstep actually is.
It's some kind of electronic music, that's clear of course. But what makes
it distinctive from other forms of electronic music, and why has it gained
so much popularity?
Also its popularity seems to be (at least in some part) more like an
internet meme.
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Am 28.07.2012 12:00, schrieb Warp:
> It seems that dubstep has gained some kind of popularity in recent years.
> However, I have hard time understanding what dubstep actually is.
>
> It's some kind of electronic music, that's clear of course. But what makes
> it distinctive from other forms of electronic music, and why has it gained
> so much popularity?
>
> Also its popularity seems to be (at least in some part) more like an
> internet meme.
I thought it was a kind of "dancing" style.
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On 7/28/2012 8:53, clipka wrote:
> Am 28.07.2012 12:00, schrieb Warp:
>> It seems that dubstep has gained some kind of popularity in recent years.
>> However, I have hard time understanding what dubstep actually is.
>>
>> It's some kind of electronic music, that's clear of course. But what makes
>> it distinctive from other forms of electronic music, and why has it gained
>> so much popularity?
>>
>> Also its popularity seems to be (at least in some part) more like an
>> internet meme.
>
> I thought it was a kind of "dancing" style.
One tends to dance dubstep to music known as dubstep. It has to have a
particular rhythm, and convey particular emotions, for the two to go
together. Imagine dancing dubstep to Beethoven's sixth symphony.
--
Darren New, San Diego CA, USA (PST)
"Oh no! We're out of code juice!"
"Don't panic. There's beans and filters
in the cabinet."
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On 7/28/2012 11:41 AM, Darren New wrote:
>
> One tends to dance dubstep to music known as dubstep. It has to have a
> particular rhythm, and convey particular emotions, for the two to go
> together. Imagine dancing dubstep to Beethoven's sixth symphony.
>
The style aren't quite as different, but dancing charleston style to
Daft Punk seems to work surprising well:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90TzDXjWTdo
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On 28/07/2012 11:00 AM, Warp wrote:
> It seems that dubstep has gained some kind of popularity in recent years.
> However, I have hard time understanding what dubstep actually is.
According to my encounters with Soundcloud, "dubstep" is where you have
a short melodic intro, followed by ten minutes of achromatic grinding
and pulsing which sounds like a broken synth.
No, I have no idea why it's popular.
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