Various - Renegade Selector Presents Jungle Renegades Volume 1 - Re-Animate Recordings - Jungle
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Out of Stock |
Track ListingA1 DJ Nut Nut Special DedicationA2 Ganja Kru, The Computerised Cops (Pascals Remix) B1 Nookie Celebrate Life B2 Skool Of Hard Knocks Everybody B3 Cool Hand Flex Must Feel C1 Code 071 A London Sumtin' (Tek 9 Remix) C2 L Double Little Rollers 1 D1 Wax Doctor Kid Caprice D2 Hopa&Bones So Sweet D3 Interrogator, The Awareness E1 Prizna Fire E2 Foul Play Stepper F1 Doc Scott Far Away F2 Higher Sense Cold Fresh Air F3 Dillinja You Don't Know G1 MA2 Hearing Is Believing G2 Cool Hand Flex Melody Madness H1 Bizzy B 16 Track Ting H2 Alex Reece Basic Principles H3 DJ SS Rollidge Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+) Sleeve Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+) |
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| Artist | Various | ||
| Title | Renegade Selector Presents Jungle Renegades Volume 1 | ||
| Label | Re-Animate Recordings | ||
| Catalogue | ANIMATE 3 LP | ||
| Format | Vinyl 4 x Double Album | ||
| Released | 1995 | ||
| Genre | Jungle |
Other Titles by Various
• True Faith The First Phase • Lazy DJs • Fierce Dance Cuts No. 1 • Serious Beats 1 • Vox Populi: First Choice Sampler 1993 Volume 1 • Betta Breaks & Beats Volume 1 • March 88 Previews • Regrooves Volume Two • Soul Daze • The Guitar Dance EP • There's A Movement Underground • Points In Time 007 • 20 Flash Back Greats Of The Sixties • A Perfecto Summer • Action Trax 2 •
Information on the Jungle Genre
Oldschool Jungle is the name given to a style of electronic music that incorporates influences from genres including breakbeat hardcore, techno, and reggae/dub/dancehall. There is significant debate as to whether Jungle is a separate genre from Drum and Bass as some use the terms interchangeably. Drum and Bass started to separate musically from Jungle in the mid to late 1990s, in which there is a fuzzy period where it is harder to distinguish the difference between the two genres. There is much politics attached to labelling different tracks as a specific genre.In the summer of 1992, a Thursday night club in London called "Rage" was changing in response to the commercialization of the rave scene (see breakbeat hardcore). Resident DJs Fabio and Grooverider; amongst others, began to take the Hardcore sound to a new level. The speed of the music increased from 120bpm to 145bpm, whilst more ragga and dancehall elements were brought in and techno, disco and house influences were decreased.
Eventually the music became too fast and difficult to be mixed with more traditional rave music, creating a division with the other popular electronic genres. When it lost the four-on-the-floor beat, and created percussive elements solely from raw, 'chopped up' breakbeats, the old-skool ravers would complain that it had "gone all jungle-techno".
The club 'Rage' finally shut its doors in 1993, but the new legion of "Junglists" had evolved, changing dancing styles for the faster music, enjoying the off-beat rhythms and with less reliance on the chemical stimulation of the rave era.
Subgenres of Jungle include:
* Darkcore; instrumental jungle with a dark and more minimal focus (1993-today),
* Hardcore Jungle; a subgenre which has a large influence from the early 1990s Rave scene. Typically, melodic stabs and pitched up vocals feature heavily (1993-1995).
* Intelligent jungle; a more ambient sound, focusing on mood, synthesis and production methods (1993-today).
* Indian jungle (a fusion of ragga jungle drum and bass and indian drums/sounds)1993-1995.
* Ragga Jungle; more Jamaican-Reggae influenced styles and lyrics (circa 1990-today), which often features an MC who recites dancehall-style lyrics
The fast tempos (150 to 170 bpm) breakbeats, other heavily syncopated percussive loops, samples and synthesized effects makes up the easily recognizable form of Jungle. Producers create the drum patterns featured; sometimes completely off-beat, by cutting apart breakbeats most notably the Amen break. Long, computer generated pitch shifted snare rolls are also common in Oldschool jungle.
Jungle producers incorporated classic Jamaican/Caribbean sound-system culture production-methods. The slower, deep basslines and simple melodies (which are directly descended from dub, reggae and dancehall) accentuated the overall production and hence gave Jungle its 'rolling' quality.
Jungle today
Today the term "Jungle" is mostly used as a synonym for Drum and Bass (See Jungle vs. drum and bass). There is a dissenting viewpoint which asserts that Jungle exists distinctive to Drum & Bass, despite the progressive changes brought by the interpretations of emerging artists throughout the late 90s, (some examples being Reprazent, Ed Rush, LTJ Bukem, Potential Bad Boy, Digital, Total Science, Goldie and Optical).
There is certainly a thriving underground movement producing and developing tracks in the style of a decade ago and some original (though currently mainstream drum & bass) jungle producers have noticed this new enthusiasm for the original sound. The North American ragga-jungle revival in 2001 saw many new names emerge to carry the torch. Krinjah, RCola and Chopstick Dubplate pushed things forward with junglized refixes of classic reggae tunes often produced with re-voicings done by the original singers.
Shy FX, creator of "Original Nuttah" with UK Apache, has recently launched the Digital Sound Boy label, and Canadian imprint JungleXpeditions features songs with the structure and production values of modern drum & bass but with ragga vocals and multiple reggae and oldskool elements from an international roster of newschool producers. It should be noted that ragga vocals and oldskool elements have always featured in the works of drum & bass producers and labels, particularly True Playaz and the last three years has seen a resurgence of vocalized productions.
There is also been an eastern eurpean, jungle orientated, underground movement with clotheing fashions similar to the UK's 90s Rave scene. Most notably countries such as Bulgaria are beginning an oldskool jungle revival.
Data from the Discogs music database. Submit a Release.

