Veröffentlicht
Nov 23, 2011Veröffentlicht
November 2011
- It's starting to feel like I say this with every Rinse FM mix CD, but this one really is a long time coming. There's only been one grime mix—volume seven by Spyro—in the series representing London's premiere underground dance machine. But Elijah & Skilliam, who started the Butterz label in early 2010 and have since earned a regular show on the former pirate, have been—along with partner-in-crime Terror Danjah—some of the most critical figures in bringing grime (particularly instrumental grime) back to the forefront. Rinse: 17 feels like the well-deserved culmination of almost two years of grinding and hard work, a victory lap by two skilled DJs and curators.
Since its early years, grime—from a producers' standpoint, anyway—has always been caught in a bind between its most stripped-back raw bangers and G-funk baiting anthems, a weird sort of tension that can find dubstep-calibre wobbles sharing set time with synth guitar histrionics. Butterz and its cohort of producers—Terror, Royal-T, Swindle, Mr. Mitch—definitely lean towards the latter, but Elijah & Skilliam are no revisionists, and their first official mix CD proudly posits them as an equal to legendary grime DJ Logan Sama in their ability to effortlessly throw together bone-dry aggression with exuberant singsongy melody.
The opening stretch of the mix is typical, beginning with the itchy rave of Royal-T's "Orangeade" before climaxing with tracks like D.O.K.'s "East Coast," Swindle's "Pineapple" and Mr. Mitch's "Centre Court," all Butterz affiliates offering different but likeminded takes on brittle, electronic funk. It's not till the mix crashlands into P Jam's acerbic "Arizona Skyz" that we get a hint of the other side of grime, and even then the duo pull full throttle into Terror Danjah's overlooked "Full Attention"—a no-bullshit pop song coated with those same enthusiastic melodies as the rest of the Butterz-affiliated grime.
Rinse: 17 makes a case for the Butterz clan as musical innovators—the productions from their crew often pull grime to its musical limits. Royal-T indulges the genre's roots with a growing garage obsession on his "Royal Rumble" and fantastic remix of "It's Wiley," while Swindle intertwines both p-funk and even a little bit of prog rock into the mix. The mix also makes a case for Elijah & Skilliam as impeccable DJs, mostly avoiding the grime-plaguing problem of key clashing (a given when you're dealing with flamboyant melodies shooting off in all directions) and folding in occasional outsiders like Bok Bok's "Silo Pass" seamlessly. Like most grime mixes, it doesn't so much peak and valley as much as it trades in smaller, more contained detonations. Beginning big and ending huge, Rinse: 17 is both a victory lap, and—hopefully—a further stepping stone to greater things for two of grime's best DJs, a burgeoning label and a neglected scene.
Tracklist 01. Royal-T - Orangeade VIP
02. D.O.K - East Coast
03. Swindle - Pineapple
04. P Money & Blacks - Boo You feat. Slickman
05. Faze Miyake - Blackberry
06. Wiley - It's Wiley (Royal-T Remix)
07. Mr Mitch - Centre Court
08. Rossi B & Luca - Lost in Limehouse
09. P Jam - Arizona Skyz
10. Terror Danjah - Full Attention feat. Ruby Lee Ryder
11. Royal T - Royal Rumble
12. Spooky - Spartan (Terror Danjah Remix)
13. Teddy - Community Links
14. Swindle feat. Terror Danjah, Rude Kid & Wizzy Wow - Tag
15. Bok Bok - Silo Pass
16. Royal T & Terror Danjah - Music Box
17. Trim - I Am (Preditah Remix)
18. Faze Miyake - Take Off
19. Swindle & Silkie - Unlimited
20. Treble Clef - Ghetto Kyote
21. S-X - Woooo (DJ Q Remix)
22. Royal T - Music Please (TRC Remix)
23. Terror Danjah - Air Bubble (Starkey Remix)
24. Starkey & P Money - Numb
25. TRC - Into Sync
26. Starkey & Trim - This Ain't Me
27. Swindle - Mood Swings VIP