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Planet-Mu Footwork / Juke Tour Apr 2011

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Littlebig & Planet Mu are proud to announce the Juke / Footwork Tour in April 2011...

To those that don’t know, 'footwork' is a hyper rhythmic, abstract dance music, pitched around 160bpm, that largely consists of a template of cut-up samples and phrases that are twisted into repetitive rhythms & shapes, to offbeat, syncopated drum machine patterns and pumping sub-bass lines.

Until now, bar a few low key vinyl 12”s and local mix cds plus tracks posted on sites like youtube and imeem, 'footwork' has remained very local to Chicago. Although it's an evolution from the dominant form of house music in Chicago since the mid 90’s - ‘Juke’ or ‘Ghetto house’, it’s a splinter scene you won’t hear on local radio. Instead, the scene is based around competitive dances in vacant warehouses, karate gyms and youtube where you will find DJs providing the soundtrack for a circle of spectators surrounding combatants or ‘footworkers’ battling each other with their legs, using the particular style of high-speed, combat-dancing that Chicago has created in isolation.

The music on this compilation covers a spectrum of the music producers, from RP Boo, whose track ‘Baby Come On’ in the late 90’s is regarded as the first footwork release, to established producers who have come through the Ghetto house scene such as DJ Roc, DJ Spinn, Traxman, DJ Clent and DJ Rashad. To contrast, as well as the established DJs, Planet Mu have picked a number of young producers whose music is less known, and whose exposure has come more through using social networking sites and youtube than through the established networks of the local footworking scene. These producers are DJ Nate, DJ Diamond, DJ Elmoe, Tha Pope, DJ Killa E, DJ Lil Rome, Yung Tellem & DJ Trouble.

Footwork is a utilitarian music, and although the tracks here have around the same tempo, different producers have singular styles. In reflection to the dancing it inspires, the rough, aggressive exterior of the music, with its dark themes and terms of combat, gives way to an incredible gracefulness at times, often combining intricate double-time abstracted drums with lush textures and choppy abstract sounds and a distinct way of salvaging popular music past and present and putting it to good use by cutting it up into futuristic, angular shapes.

First time listeners may find the music bewildering, but the way the music utilizes recognizable features in unrecognizable ways is extraordinary: film themes spread over the top of drums give the music a liquid grace, techno gives it a frantic darkness, hip hop samples at half-speed create futuristic funk templates and freshen up stale breaks and chipmunked r&b samples often give the music a hallucinatory, otherworldly feel.

Contact > marcus{at}littlebig.org.uk

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Permalink | November 30, 2010