Genre
drum and bass
Top Drum and bass Artists
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About Drum and bass
Drum and bass is a high-velocity, bass-forward music culture that grew out of the UK’s late-1980s and early-1990s underground scenes. Born from breakbeat hardcore and the jungle explosion, it codified those frenzied, break-driven rhythms into a tighter, more studio-focused sound. Early pioneers chopped and reassembled sampled breaks—often the infamous Amen break—at blistering tempos, pushing kick and snare patterns into a relentless pocket that sits somewhere between rhythm and propulsion. The tempo typically hovers around 165 to 180 beats per minute, yet the feel can swing from paranoic techno-tightness to liquid, almost musical warmth.
In its first wave, drum and bass was a hustle and a culture as much as a genre. Pirates and late-night radio shows in London, Bristol, and beyond fed a rapid exchange of ideas, dubplates, and new subgenres. By the mid-1990s, it had split into tracks and subcultures that could carry different moods: dark, techy bangers; rolling, bass-forward tracks; and later, more melodic, jazzy, and atmospheric expressions. The period around 1995–1997 is often cited as a golden era, when labels and clubs codified the sound and the scene spread across Britain and into mainland Europe.
Several artists became emblematic ambassadors. Goldie’s Timeless era fused hard-hitting breakbeats with lush, orchestral touches and cinematic production, elevating drum and bass into mainstream visibility. LTJ Bukem popularized a more expansive, “liquid funk” approach—bright, jazzy, and richly textured—through his Logical Progression collective and releases. Roni Size & Reprazent brought drum and bass to the Mercury Prize stage in 1997 with New Forms, a crossover success that demonstrated the genre’s depth and accessibility. Andy C (as part of Ram Records) helped define the genre’s drum programming and relentless energy, while Noisia, Dillinja, and Bad Company pushed darker, more technical directions (neurofunk and techstep). Pendulum later brought a stadium-friendly, rock-tinged variant to a global audience, expanding drum and bass beyond club spaces.
The genre’s sonic palette is broad. Neurofunk emphasizes precise, muscular basslines and sci-fi textures. Liquid funk leans into soulful melodies, jazzy samples, and smoother bass. Jump up returns to a playful, bouncy groove. Techstep emphasizes machine-like percussion and darker atmospheres. Across these currents, core traits endure: kinetic, infectious breakbeats; heavy sub-bass that shapes the room; tends to emphasize DJ-driven, club-ready energy, and a culture of relentless experimentation in production.
Globally, drum and bass remains strongest in the United Kingdom and Ireland, with vibrant scenes across the Netherlands, Germany, France, and the broader Europe. Japan has long maintained a dedicated following, with a dense club culture and labels that push both heavy and melodic forms. In the United States and Canada, a loyal community keeps clubs, radio shows, and festivals thriving, while Australia’s scene thrives around festivals and intimate venues. Let It Roll (Czech Republic) is one of the massive European gatherings that showcases the genre’s international reach. Drum and bass today is a mosaic—tight, technical, and emotionally expressive—continuing to reinvent itself while staying true to its ruthless, rolling heartbeat.
In its first wave, drum and bass was a hustle and a culture as much as a genre. Pirates and late-night radio shows in London, Bristol, and beyond fed a rapid exchange of ideas, dubplates, and new subgenres. By the mid-1990s, it had split into tracks and subcultures that could carry different moods: dark, techy bangers; rolling, bass-forward tracks; and later, more melodic, jazzy, and atmospheric expressions. The period around 1995–1997 is often cited as a golden era, when labels and clubs codified the sound and the scene spread across Britain and into mainland Europe.
Several artists became emblematic ambassadors. Goldie’s Timeless era fused hard-hitting breakbeats with lush, orchestral touches and cinematic production, elevating drum and bass into mainstream visibility. LTJ Bukem popularized a more expansive, “liquid funk” approach—bright, jazzy, and richly textured—through his Logical Progression collective and releases. Roni Size & Reprazent brought drum and bass to the Mercury Prize stage in 1997 with New Forms, a crossover success that demonstrated the genre’s depth and accessibility. Andy C (as part of Ram Records) helped define the genre’s drum programming and relentless energy, while Noisia, Dillinja, and Bad Company pushed darker, more technical directions (neurofunk and techstep). Pendulum later brought a stadium-friendly, rock-tinged variant to a global audience, expanding drum and bass beyond club spaces.
The genre’s sonic palette is broad. Neurofunk emphasizes precise, muscular basslines and sci-fi textures. Liquid funk leans into soulful melodies, jazzy samples, and smoother bass. Jump up returns to a playful, bouncy groove. Techstep emphasizes machine-like percussion and darker atmospheres. Across these currents, core traits endure: kinetic, infectious breakbeats; heavy sub-bass that shapes the room; tends to emphasize DJ-driven, club-ready energy, and a culture of relentless experimentation in production.
Globally, drum and bass remains strongest in the United Kingdom and Ireland, with vibrant scenes across the Netherlands, Germany, France, and the broader Europe. Japan has long maintained a dedicated following, with a dense club culture and labels that push both heavy and melodic forms. In the United States and Canada, a loyal community keeps clubs, radio shows, and festivals thriving, while Australia’s scene thrives around festivals and intimate venues. Let It Roll (Czech Republic) is one of the massive European gatherings that showcases the genre’s international reach. Drum and bass today is a mosaic—tight, technical, and emotionally expressive—continuing to reinvent itself while staying true to its ruthless, rolling heartbeat.