Showing posts with label Calvertron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Calvertron. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 February 2011

Pure Jams

Nothing to say, these are all sooper dooper jams.  I neglected the dubstep this week so there are a few serious dub gems in here.  I put the team on my back.

Sweet, melodic dubber with some great sounding vocal parts.

Hardcore dubstep song, real tough and grimey.

Electro-house gold.  Also older, but this song is one of the hardest out there right now, when it drops there is no way you will still be in your seat.

#1 dubstep song on Beatport going on about a week, it seems once again that Calvertron is incapable of making a bad track.  Wub.

Seriously tough dubstep song.  Tinie Tempah (of "Miami 2 Ibiza" fame) kills it once again on this track. Add the unbeatable voice of Ellie Goulding and the terrifying yet awesome style of Bare Noize, and what you get is arguably the best dubstep track released this year.

Wednesday, 5 January 2011

Year of the Wub

I'm telling you right meow that dubstep is going to make big moves in the coming year, a lot of great dubstep tracks have already been re-worked as mainstream rap tracks by artists like Chris Webby & Sam Adams.  Dubstep also has the ability to rework practically any song from any genre into some kind of wubby remix.  Big things are coming for the wub.  Here are some big dub tunes to enjoy in the meantime...

Chris Webby - Raising the Bar
Chris Webby spits some nice lines over Mt. Eden's "Sierra Leone" dubstep song on this track off his Underclassmen mixtape.  Great example of what rap beats could be looking like in the not too distant future.

Future vs. Calvertron - Bring the Bass Back (Calvertron Dubstep Remix)
Fuego.  Remix of a house song that got the job done on it's own, but Calvertron does a great job translating the original in a dubstep banger,  and I do mean banger.

Nero - Innocence (Split Second Remix)
Continuing with the aforementioned theme of dubstep songs making sick rap beats, I present this super sweet remix of Nero's "Innocence", with Split Second's verses combining perfectly with Nero's beat to make a great rap tune.