Ah! 1993. What a fabulous year for drum and bass. The summer of 1992 was a peak year for the rave scene, with massive raves garnering massive crowds and massive tunes tearing down sound systems all over the UK, but by the winter of that same year the mood had changed.
The influence of Belgium and it’s screeching synths slowly faded away, alongside those huge piano riffs that seemed to dominate every other tune, and in their place came something deeper and darker. The was a greater focus on drum programming and layering, and the combination of bass and drums came to the forefront.
None of this happened over night of course, and ’93 was also where the very first seeds of both the the happy hardcore and liquid (intelligent drum and bass) movements were sown, but as ever, we’re looking at the roots of jungle (that is, the style of music from ’94/’95 – not the overriding descriptor for the entire movement. To us, the production style of true jungle was the sound that emerged in those two key years. Not everyone will agree, but each to their own. We’re heading towards our interpretation of that sound as we progress through these lists).
This intentional move by producers to veer towards something with depth and integrity helped develop the jungle sound of the following year. As always, cramming 30 tracks into one list covering 12 months is one heck of a challenge, so yes, there are some stone cold classics in here, but also some less obvious choices picked to help give a rounded view of the changes taking place during this important but often overlooked year in our musical history.
1. Smith Inc - Palamino
What better way to start this absolutely essential year in the history of drum and bass music. As well as having the second coolest name in the scene next to Grooverider, Simon 'Bassline' Smith was also fast becoming one of the best and most musically inventive producers in the entire movement.
This simply stunning track shows why. If ever there was a track to express the term 'roller' in '93 this has to be it. Dark and moody yet also weirdly uplifting, Palamino just had to be top of the list. In a league of its own.
2. LTJ Bukem - Atlantis
Speaking of highly inventive producers, LTJ Bukem is another one that deserves a gold medal for services to drum and bass. The true essence of pure jungle, that is Amens (or similar breaks edited for maximum effect) a mixture of undulating 808's (often played out in a pattern similar to a reggae bassline) and synth pads and vocals that haunt in their (often) simplicity, is captured here with grace and panache only seen in a handful of other tracks of the year. He was the master of fitting parts of the musical jigsaw together in a way that was musical, inventive, emotive and passionate. There is a reason LTJ Bukem is hailed as one of the most important producers in the drum and bass timeline, and this is possibly the finest example. This is the start of what went on to become 'intelligent drum and bass' right here, and set the style far apart from roughneck jungle. Untouchable.
3. LTJ Bukem - Music
Bukem's other undisputed masterpiece from '93 was this slab of sublime breakbeat ingenuity. Like his DJ sets, his compositions were long, drawn out, masterful, unrushed and perfect. There is no darkness here to speak of, but the essence of jungle (the bouncing 808's and the edited breaks) is here on full display, and this also of course gave his sidekick, the one and only MC Conrad such vast space to express his lyrics that they became a duo unlike any other. Simply stunning.
4.Origin Unknown - Valley Of The Shadows
Of all of the records released in '93 this one has to be in the top five most played ever since. We wonder if Ram Records label boss Andy C had any idea the longevity of this track would be so immense? Probably not is the answer. Yet this thing just refuses to go down, and no wonder. The musical epitome of simplicity and yet every single ingredient (and there aren't many when you break it down) cause pure devastation to every sound system it passes through. The jungle revolution starts here.
5.Dr Krome & Mr Time - The Slammer
Before we head further into jungle territory it is vitally important of course to remember that 'hardcore' didn't just vanish overnight, and there was still a strong vein running through the centre of rave culture for the whole of 1993. This eventually turned into happy jungle which morphed into happy hardcore, and this incredible piece by Krome & Time is a classic example of what happened when piano and breaks collided in the aftermath of the '92 overdose. Pure class and excellently produced.
6.Engineers Without Fears - Spiritual Aura
Aston Harvey was behind more ground breaking records than one might understand (our previous years bare witness to this), and this simply epic piece of music (written by DJ Rap) is no exception. Music this good is hard to describe at times, but save for that goosebump creating pad/vocal refrain this is hard as nails, in your face drum and bass, with those simply unforgettable snare fills that were THE BEST THING EVER to dance to! Another very important record in the jungle story, and an interesting foray into the emerging 'intelligent drum and bass' sound.
7.DJ Solo - Darkage
Wow. THIS is at the very root of junglism. With a hardcore overtone but also with one foot firmly in the jungle, this thing was one of the best tracks Production House put out in '93. The breakbeat selection, and the way they interspersed with each other is just pure jungle fire. Darkage indeed. Essential.
8.Ed Rush - Bludclot Artattack
The very essence of 'Darkside Hardcore' and created way before Ed Rush became the international public figure in drum and bass that he is today, the ingenuity shines through in droves. If anybody ever wanted to pick just one track to encapsulate the term 'Darkside' this would as good as any. It's just ridiculous. And the way those breaks pushed right back in the mix tease you at the start before boxing you around the ears! Ooof! This was also very early doors for No U-Turn, who went on to become a scene defining label in later years. Sinister!
9.Bizzy B & D.Lux - Take A Deep Breath
Bizzy B was such an essential figure during the early days of the movement. He pushed every boundary going and really pushed the perception of what could be achieved behind the desk without fear. The results were off the chart pieces of musical madness with more than a tiny hint of genius. He is certainly one producer who never lost his 'ardkore and we salute Bizzy B to the maximum. A proper junglist soldier with no mistake. Just listen to this thing! Here he teams up with D.Lux for this whopper. Relentless!
10.DJ Tango - Future Followers
Two years after this Formation Records would quite literally go on to define the jungle sound in just a handful of records, but in '93 they were pushing the darkside sound HARD. DJ Tango was simply a master of the genre and this wikked tune shows him at his best. With every element required in perfect proportion, and LOADS OF BASS, this was one of many Tango tunes we could have included. Tango sadly passed away some time ago, but his legacy will live on forever with the stunning, scene defining music he created. Highly influential. RIEP Tango.
11.4 Horsemen Of The Apocalypse - Drowning In Her
This never, ever fails to give us Goosebumps. This is so perfectly crafted that there is NOTHING anybody could possibly change, yet remarkably it got a remix a while later that was also FLIPPIN BRILLIANT! Anyway, break this down into its component parts and what you have here is a jungle masterpiece. There are elements of darkside, elements (as small as they are - of hardcore), there are oodles of junglism and drum and bass and a shit load of brilliance. Simply superb.
12.Jo - R-Type
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZkOfbn2TP0