In the mid 90s, I trooped to London to experience what drum 'n bass was all about. We stayed with friends in the Peckham area and on one night we drove to the Leisure Lounge. It was raining the way it only rains in London, a sort of "half-rain" and it was late so the only people I saw in the streets were of the 24hour kind. There was a scent of samosas and I observed the multiple layers of the metropolis, the cheap shops on ground level, the billboards of major companies above it, and the expensive apartments and offices at the very top - in true Blade Runner style. Dillinja's "Threshold" played on the car stereo and for me this was a defining moment, these rainy melancholic chords and haunting voices combined with the aggressive beats and enormous bassline were the soundtrack to this city. The music describes the environment, and the person in that environment.
I am sure everyone has had similar experiences and uses these to define what one likes to find in music. The new dBridge album "The Gemini Principle" brought back the feeling of what I love about drum 'n bass. The amalgamation of fierce and sad, of aggressiveness and melancholy. The album however is not a description of London in 1995 however, it is very much 2008, and it is very much dBridge."I've been lucky enough to be a part of jungle/drum 'n bass from its conception, first as a raver then a producer," Darren White aka dBridge responds when I ask him a few questions for this blog. "I've seen it when it's been at it's best and worst and even though it sounds cliche drum 'n bass back in the early nineties was when it was at its most innovative for me. We were being taken seriously as a musical genre, famed musicians were amazed by what we were doing, I don't think we even realized what was going on. I think the tunes back then had a quality that couldn't be denied and to this day they still stand out."
dBridge's departure from Bad Company and the birth of his own imprint Exit Recordings in 2003 already saw him take on a more experimental and musical side of drum 'n bass: "Since I've been going solo I've had this fear of my music not being played by dj's because it didn't seem to conform to some standard that had been established in the scene. I've done loads of tracks over the years that haven't seen the light of day cos I'd finish it and think 'whats the point in giving this out, no one's gonna play it'. I even had some dj's confirm this with comments like 'I love it, I just can't play it'. This frustrated me for a long time, I wasn't sure where I stood anymore,"
He continues: "So I found myself going through old tunes that used to hurt me so much. I had to listen back to what it was I found so good about drum 'n bass and why. Tracks like Krust - Future Unknown; the arrangement and string section in that tune physically pains me, so heart wrenching; Ed Rush and Optical's use of brooding tones and melancholy keys, Matrix's drum patterns, Dillinja's ability to fuse dark and light. These are just some of the things that influenced and inspired me from within drum 'n bass. It was listening back that allowed me to move forward and realize that making DnB and music was never meant to be about pleasing anyone but myself, you can only hope people like and get what it is you're doing.""The Gemini Principle" as an album is a very personal statement about drum 'n bass music as a genre, but the track titles and lyrics, the order of the songs, certainly show more than one meaning behind the music: "I'm a Gemini first off, also I have a running theme through my work which is connections, yin and yang, black and white etc. So The Gemini Principle is based on this theory. I have a statement on the artwork which basically explains it and me. "The Gemini Principle is driven by the compelling need to connect objects with one another to form ever greater links. Their job is to experience a diversity of sensations, thoughts and encounters so that they can create systems or theories of knowledge that are then disseminated to others".
dBridge - "The Gemini Principle" is out on CD and vinyl on 19 May on Exit Recordings.
(all artwork taken from the album, illustrations by Katharine Sanderson)

8 comments:
Really looking forward to getting my hands on this album. I think dbridge's current productions are up there with the classics mentioned in this posts. Sadly this tension/conflict/dialectic is missing in a lot of todays dnb; sadness mixed with hope, light and dark and such things. dnb has has become all to dancefloor functional like darren says.
"We were being taken seriously as a musical genre, famed musicians were amazed by what we were doing, I don't think we even realized what was going on. I think the tunes back then had a quality that couldn't be denied and to this day they still stand out."
These are memories of the future, sounds like dubstep in 2008. Interesting read, thanks for the heads up. (now I will go and translate that interview with you)
it's a beautiful album all right, and crucially it doesn't necessarily sound very "2008" - which i think will keep it in my record bag for quite some time to come...
it's releases like this (and by an encouragingly growing number of musicians) that make me more confident about the future of drum and bass than i have been in quite a number of years to be honest... i just think it's extraordinarily sad that someone as passionate and committed to his craft and his aesthetic vision should have been so totally overshadowed during what could otherwise have been a fertile fruitful period of his career...
either way, i'm crossing all ten fingers and toes that this gets here before the weekend!
Nice post, go D-Bridge! Looking forward to picking up the CD.
One of dnb's most highly-anticipated albums for me... can't wait :)
Very god l. ,the best I have heard in a long time and its going to be my second dnb purchase this year(my frst being sakura/rouge by insta:mental).
Does it make you feel like producing any dnb marty?
Will check this one as well. I've been out of drum n bass loop for years (i haven't heard anything that i like for that long!) so if you are enthousiastic about it i reckon it deserves a good listen... thanks!
Statik.
I purchased the cd yesterday, after scraping all my pocket money together, and caning d bridges myspace page for a few weeks, listening to the album from beginning to end i found myself deeply moved, and lost within it. In my opinion this is not only a spectacular album within Its genre but reaches far beyond...I would hope that this recieves the recognition it deserves, but sadly i fear it will not. Such is the way of the artist; this certainly reveals the depth of the man who put this together. Maximum respect to you sir; I shall be promoting this album to all who have ears and a soul.
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