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WOBBLE - a dubstep documentary

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Uploaded by on Sep 24, 2011

A 10 minute documentary on dubstep arguing whether it's a good or bad thing that the electronic music genre became mainstream.
Made by Corinne Riley & Sam Carr

Category:

Music

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License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 2 dislikes

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Uploader Comments (CorinneRiley)

  • @viciousDUBSTEP rusko - cockney thug , chase and status - eastern jam, skream, noah d - serious, caspa and rusko/the others - Africa, skream- oskillatah

  • What is the name of that background song? The first one?

  • @cnotenesmith Rusko - Cockney Thug

Top Comments

  • great work mate, really informative.

  • Good video. Been around the scene for about 16 months now. Not sure where that puts me. But I appreciate most of the types. Getting really into mellowed stuff right now. Heavy bass less crazy shit going on (skrillex). I hope it stays around. Electronic music in general has sky rocketed in the last year. Have to say dub step is my favorite electronic genre

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All Comments (26)

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  • @CorinneRiley "Africa" is by The Others, just fyi :)

  • I agree'd with the guy talking at the end (in the black shirt and hat) about the commercialism of Dubstep, but at the end he sound very ignorant while talking about Skream, Benga, Artwork and Rusko (The Katy B track was produced by M.M.), These guys are all heavyweights on the dubstep scene and Skream and Benga have been around since the near beginning.

  • @CorinneRiley skream - oskillatah

  • @CorinneRiley Skream- Oskilatah

  • @CorinneRiley Oskilatah

  • @ExoSteeve . . . And this sound is so HUGE. DJs can be rock stars now, because everyone knows about dubstep. Except most of it isn't really dubstep as it began. A lot of people who are in this scene now don't understand the music that it was born of. But it's too late to get butthurt about it now, just leave it alone and let people call their music what they want (Except brostep. It's the dumbest genre name I've heard in my life.)

  • @ExoSteeve No, I don't have a problem with dubstep having grown into different things. But that's just it: They're DIFFERENT things. What some call "brostep" is definitely influenced by dubstep, to an extent. Guys like Vex'd and Distance had a sound similar to "brostep", which was around the time dubstep began to make it to people outside of London. . . I guess they said "hey, let's fuck it up!" And there's nothing wrong with that at all, but it's not necessarily dubstep anymore.

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