I can remember waiting for Andy C on kiss FM 98/99 and it had been finished that day and it was the world exclusive play!! Nearly wet my pants that day
Ah this takes me back to when Drum N Bass artists possessed a Junglist Soul, awesome drop WOW Genius Drums, Its so good because there was nothing else like it, truly original talented DnB producers Shy and Dillinja man!! This new neuro lot could learn a thing or too about drum pattern manipulation from these oldskool dudes I think!!!!
it was just the fact alot more people used drum breaks back in the day while nowadays its mainly just drums hits, which inherently sounds more synthetic and less organic
To make drum n bass you must sample real drums not shit sample packs. New producers without soul should check out Icke Turner, James Brown, the Winstons etc etc
@@SSC92Bosh it didn't actually. Dillinja remix of Bambaata came out in 1998. That's when I got it ...and rinsed it to pieces. If you notice, this track was released on ebony recordings in 1998 and the re released on digital sound boy recordings.
@@andyp8464 Man I’m getting my years in a mess, really didn’t think i was raving to those in the same era... thought I was a lot older when bambaata dropped.
When it comes to drum and bass most remixes are better than the original. Sometimes the radio stations only play the remix and then 2 decades later I find out that there’s an original version on RU-vid.
Ok so Shy fx sampled rappers delight on the original bambatta but i reckon dilly sampled 'turn the beat around' by Vicky sue robinson. Give it a listen. What da ya think?
you thumb down sonic bambaata? you have no soul. also, it was always fun to reverse mix on my vestax pdxd3's around the second breakdown growl and make the kydz freak back in the year 2000. also, the bass line says, "ewok ewok!" in the dark step part. don't forget it.
I´ve been looking for a version of this that I used to have, "Son Of Bambaata" maybe..? It had a female voice saying "the son of bambaata". Help me out, would ya :)
not the answer you are seeking but you should check out sam binga's treatment of the original, totally different sounding from this. he called it sambaata. it's a smasha in it's own right