Four months ago I released my most recent mixtape of original beats:
ANOTHER DAY, ANOTHER PSY-OP.
An hour and thirty four minutes of BADBOOB’s most polished beats arranged and recorded to showcase a potential live set. Dubstep, halftime, neuro, techno, house, ambient, IDM and every genre in between. For me, producing is less about fitting into a box and more about experimenting with a feeling or sound.
Highly inspired by the crossover between hyper glitch, IDM, and experimental bass, the BADBOOB project embraces technical malfunctions, noise, and miscellaneous artifacts. The point of the project is to spend more time writing music and creating beats, and less time learning jargon and drowning in music theory. Coming from the background of a drummer, the focus is distorted chaos, rhythmic intricacies, and tribal meditation. The goal is creating via intuition and trusting one’s gut.
Listening.
The song is all ready written. One only has to listen….
I’ve only been producing steadily for about four years. Still plenty of time to learn and grow as an artist, but I’m proud of my collection of beats thus far, and I’m highly anticipating a future of further refinement. I want to make crazy, fuck you up, glitched out chaos. And the more I produce music, the more I discover myself, my sound, and what I can offer to the world of electronic music.
I don’t want my music to be a cheap knockoff of somebody else. Originality is everything.
Anyway, I hope you enjoy my most recent selection of tracks. And if you’re interested, the Audio-Visual VHS Mixtape is available for sale on my website.
An ode to old manufacturing hubs, dilapidated steel mills, abandoned coal mines, and forgotten tanneries. An attempt to resurrect the influences of my past. Places: Worcester. Pittsburgh. Philadelphia. Athens, Ohio. The Poconos. Cities, towns, locations once bursting with opportunities and approaching horizons only to be shipped overseas for pennies on the dollar.
No denying the impact abandoned infrastructure, bitter winters, and warehouse raves have on my production. I tend to focus on the gritty, raw, and boom bap energy of the east coast compared to the west coast’s sunny day squelches. This EP relates more to The Ford F150 than a Corvette Convertible. Think four wheel drive. Oversized rims. Industrial machinery. Leather hands. Beer belly. Burger King bag. And don’t forget the MAGA hat. The cherry on top.
I wrote the majority of these songs in one day; in fact. NEURO STORM, Red Bull Beatdown, and MADE IN THE USA were produced together in one day after consuming, yes, a Red Bull energy drink. I recorded one of my favorite tracks to date, NEURO STORM, completely caffeinated. I don’t usually drink caffeine. But decided to try it on this rare occasion.
I’m not going to become a regular consumer of Red Bull or energy drinks, or caffeine in general. But honestly I was pleased with the results. Until my anxiety attack around 10 PM. Whoops.
I’m tired of recording crappy beats. The past year I’ve gone to lengths recording as much music as possible and it never seems like enough. I always need better sound design, better arrangement, better mixing, better mastering, better promotion, less social self destruction. It’s not an easy task, becoming a music producer.
I keep hearing it takes seven years or so.
Reflecting on my music journey….
I spent roughly six months playing around with Maschine from Native Instruments. This was after I saw tsuruda, and he dropped internet slaps vol.1. Another key moment… catching Flying Lotus at Moog Festival. Lotus played classics like “Zodiac Shit”, Aphex Twin’s Mt. Saint Michel, and captivated the crowd with recent releases from Little Snake – a game changer in experimental bass music. Somebody was gracious enough to catch the moment I wanted to become a music producer on camera.
After a music festival run and continued practice with Maschine, I moved to Ableton and bought a Microbrute analog synthesizer. I wanted to learn sound design, and continued collecting pedals and synths until realizing I spent the past five-six years accumulating instruments and never writing any music.
I thought collecting a Make Noise 0-Coast, Microbrute, or Drumbrute would capture the sound of G Jones or Bleep Bloop, after all, both mentioned the impact of analog synthesizers on their releases.
As my sound deign skills progressed, I realized the majority of my Ableton music production revolved around sampling and resampling. Which doesn’t require a five hundred dollar synthesizer. In fact, the expensive software synthesizers work great! Or even Vital, which is free. After years of staring at two desks full of equipment, I decided to slim down the studio. Not to mention moving into a cockroach ridden apartment, which helped ease the burden of letting items go.
I sold guitar pedals, synthesizers, drum machines, midi controllers, and began leaning into the “ethos” of production I learned from one of my favorite artists “woulg”.
Learning how to create a bassline from an “amen break”, risers from any sample, percussion from foley. It’s about staying creative and providing NO BARRIERS TO ENTRY. You don’t need a five hundred dollar synthesizer to create worthwhile bass music. You just need copy of Ableton or DAW. Hell, O-Prime Delta uses Audacity to create the wonkiest track’s you’ve ever heard.
It can be off-putting when you scroll upon your favorite producer’s multi-screen, multi-instrument, analog recording equipment while you’re sitting with a MacBook Pro. But honestly. It’s everything you need and more, says Richard Devine himself.
Skrillex, Little Snake, Woulg. Just a few prodigies who changes electronic music with consumer products. An Apple laptop and some headphones.
Gear makes a difference, sure, but so does your technical ability and know how. I’d rather be fluent in my technical skill than fumbling with a new machine all the time. Not to mention, I enjoy woulg’s barrier to entry argument. It’s not “punk rock” to require expensive items when expressing yourself. However, using what you have at your disposal is DIY energy.
Punk energy.
Using nothing but a laptop? Sick. Easy. No wires, cords, maintenance, routing. No more screaming,
“Why won’t this fucking instrument make a sound?”
I skipped a lot of the bullshit moving to a digital setup, and instead of searching empty project files, my time is now spent organizing finished projects. I don’t spend hours jerking off cords and arranging synthesizers. I open my laptop and start making music. Seriously, you should see my beginning Ableton folders. Blank, all of them. I didn’t create shit except when Goldfacemoneywatch asked for album noises.
Then for maybe a week, I’d pull myself together and start making sound effects, only to never open Ableton for the remainder of the year.
2023 was the year I started writing music again.
After only recording two songs in Maschine and eight or so finished tracks in Ableton, I was determined to write an actual discography.
I’ve since released 111 songs.
The trick was selling my hardware synthesizers and learning how to make mud-pies, resampling, and OTT.
I’m going to continue with my limited setup: Headphones and a MacBook Air. I want to show people you don’t need all the fancy gear and equipment. It’s computer music after all.
In absence of raves, my weekends are spent at the Lehigh Valley’s Mahoning Drive-In movie theater, the USA’s oldest drive-in theater premiering vintage favorites, cult classics, and horror masterpieces, often catching films like Cannibal Holocaust, Alien, Scanners, and Chainsaw Hookers: raw, nostalgia trips through distorted, creative genius. Body bags and all.
When I stumbled upon DIGITIST’SDEMONSTRATION OF FORCE, the lurching landscapes, mechanical-infused sound design, consuming growls, and punishing bass lines mirrored the sanctuary of a badass horror movie. Tension, destruction, survival.
Who doesn’t like a good scare?
From the start, Barbarian seizes audiences with ripping textures and demanding progression, transcending listeners through dramatic rhythm shifts, flexing production skills, while offering forward thinking sound design over combinations of dubstep and hardcore. For the UK fans, right? The impressive contrast of genres is masterfully articulated and certain to leave dance floors crumbling.
DIGITIST masters ‘tear out’ dubstep, a sub-genre pioneered by Excision, Zomboy, Midnight Tyrannosaurus, and MARAUDA highlighting heavy metal atmospheres, compressed-brostep bass lines, and chaotic crowds. However, DIGITIST’s authenticity is unquestioned, showcasing originality and blending genres like UK garage on his track ‘Interloper’ after assaulting listeners with dubstep monstrosity ‘Crude Oil’. The EP demonstrates unique experimentation, ethereal ambiance while combatting demonic drops and screeching highs. DIGITIST conducts a symphony from hell.
Cinematic, DEMONSTRATION OF FORCE captivates listeners with seven incendiary tracks. Roughly twenty-five minutes. Replay value?
Like a bowl of pretzels and a tasty beer: “Can you ever eat just one pretzel?” While I typically enjoy the Tipper-sphere of music, the r/spacebass, experimental bass producers, I’ve been returning to my roots: dubstep, particularly because it expresses anger. A forgotten emotion, and especially important to Modern Psychoanalysts – subconsciously rooted anger, the genesis of neurosis.
As a Slipknot, Korn, and Tool fan, I particularly loved dubstep for the ability to thrash, a noticeable difference to glitch hop and house. Isn’t it important we have music to represent these repressed times? The full spectrum of emotion?
Finishing the project with THAW, a drum and bass inspired song, DIGITIST concludes DEMONSTRATION OF FORCE like any decent horror flick: leaving the audience demanding more! DIGITIST possesses a unique sound palette, blending the lines between alien experimentation and the demonic underworld. Inspiration from producer comrade, EXECUTIONER, on tracks like UNCIVILIZED are highlighted, another upcoming producer known for intriguing arrangement, top tier sound design, menacing auras— who deserves increased attention.
Dubstep, riddim, UKG, hardcore, drum and bass: DEMONSTRATION OF FORCE represents a production milestone for producer DIGITIST – a robust, multidimensional listening experience. Not to mention a FULL EP VISUALIZER on the DIGITIST YouTube channel, featuring VHS style distortions, digital tracers, and bad-trip voyeurism. A name to remember in the evolving landscape of dubstep and experimental bass, DIGITIST leads by example!
The artwork alone speaks volumes. Can you judge an EP by its cover? DEMONSTRATION OF FORCE provides the argument.