Amazing Ed Rush still killing it. I first sae him and DJ Trace back in the late 90s flip Jungle on its head with Tech Step which is now refered to as Neuro. Still going strong. Love it!! Optical always brings that heat as well.
@@jcsquared1111 Techstep spawned what we later called neurofunk, sure. But today's neurofunk is soooo much different than tech step used to be. I would even argue it's still neurofunk. Modern neuro in most cases is a big room full on neuro without much funk to it. Big room neuro, euro neuro, brostepificated neuro, however you wanna describe it. The bigger European neuro scene got, the louder and screechier neuro became. It's all good, it's what makes audiences go bonkers on festivals. It's not funky anymore though ;)
@@oskar_oskarewicz See I literally remember when Ed Rush , and DJ Trace first brought Tech Step to the states. It was totally diff sounding, gone was all the hip hop, the Funk it was truly crazy. Then followed up by Renegade Hardware and Early Bad Company pre Ram days had their Renegade Hardware Sampler mix tape. Cant even get over that was over 25 years ago. Ed Rush, Optical still going strong
@@jcsquared1111 That's cool man. I got into dnb around 2000, so I also remember the evolution of tech step and emerging of let's call it a second/new school wave of neurofunk in mid 00s. But that's not my point :) My point is modern day neurofunk is not neurofunk anymore, it's just neuro :) And it's so detached from OG techstep vibewise. Just like most of the European liquidfunk is just liquid. The bigroom/festival equivalents. I live in Poland, I'v experienced this "evolution" first hand attending Let It Roll fests yearly. As mentioned before, it's all good, it's a natural progression of things. Not really my cup of tea anymore, that's why I might sound bit diminishing towards this whole thing ;) Cheers!