Wednesday, November 3, 2010

Womp Womp

Local DJs work to revive dubstep in a city that missed the beat on electronic music.

Jordy Byrd
A shot from the Scion House Party - a dubstep showcase - last January at the Roxy in Hollywood [Photo: Caesar Sebastian]
A shot from the Scion House Party - a dubstep showcase - last January at the Roxy in Hollywood [Photo: Caesar Sebastian]
A shot from the Scion House Party - a dubstep showcase - last January at the Roxy in Hollywood [Photo: Caesar Sebastian]

Spokane's learning how to wobble. To thwack-thwack-thwack. For a little big city with a sampling of every type of music, somehow electronic music never really caught on here.

A few local DJs say it’s still coming — Spokane is just behind the times. And this weekend’s Kan-U-Step dubstep rave is a rare glimpse into electronic music we don’t usually see on local stages.

Dubstep emerged out of London’s speed garage and jungle scene of the early 2000s. Where drum and bass (or jungle) is high tempo and frenetic, dubstep rests closer to lower-tempo house music and trance sounds. The tempo moves at 140 beats per minute (like most music), but the kick and snare drum are moving at half-step, or 70 beats per minute. The result is a slow, dark and seemingly off-tempo mix.

“[In comparison] dubstep winded up sounding half-tempo,” says Matt Broadstreet, aka DJ Valis. “You don’t need to be on anything, you don’t need to be in a manic state of mind to appreciate the music.”

You don’t need drugs, but at first the music makes you feel like you’re slowing being drugged. Imagine you’re in a scene from Alice and Wonderland, walking down a hallway where the door keeps getting further and further away. The floor vibrates under your feet and, just when you’re about to fall over, the beat rips everything open.

And though by no means well-played in Spokane, dubstep has long existed in the collections and consciences of local DJs. Broadstreet started playing dubstep at shows here in the late 1990s.

“No venues were playing the music and it tended to conflict with local audiences,” he says. “They had no idea what we were doing. We were going into places that still played AC/DC and Bob Seger.”

“I’ve always thought Spokane was 10 years behind everything,” says David Grossman, aka DJ Crave. “In general, we need a bigger electronic scene.”

Kay Clifton, known onstage as Quiz or Therian Doors, says he first heard dubstep at a drum-and-bass club about 10 years ago. Clifton says it’s the bass line that defines the genre. He doesn’t see dubstep taking over Spokane anytime soon — but maybe someday.

“I think it will stay in the dark for a while, but Spokane always catches up eventually,” he says.


KAN-U-STEP / Womp Session No. 1 feat. Eprom and Nasty Nasty play with DJ Valis, DJ Crave, DJ Beauflexx and DJ Epidemic • Sat, Nov. 6, 7 pm • $10, advance; $13, door • Stage54 • All-ages • http://www.ticketswest.com • (800) 325-SEAT

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