1988 – Acid House and Techno

HELLO! WELCOME TO THE VERY FIRST IN A LONG LINE OF SECTIONS THAT WILL AIM TO DETAIL IN FULL, THE HISTORY OF BREAKBEAT CULTURE IN JUNGLE AND DRUM AND BASS! 

If you've just bounced here from the 1966 section, you will have heard the original source of many of those analogue, hand crafted, studio recorded drum breaks that we've come to know and love, and tasted some of the cultural influences from across the world. Now let's deep dive into the real history of drum and bass, starting with the very first mutations of the original UK 'RAVE' sound in 1988 and moving forward until the present day. 

And that starts with ACID HOUSE, the staple sound of '87 and '88 and only made possible by this incredible piece of equipment. Why are we telling you this? BECAUSE IT'S IMPORTANT!

As you will see travelling through this pinnacle year, there really wasn't a breakbeat genre to speak of in '88, so we're trying to take a look at records that either provided sounds that were later incorporated into the emerging UK sound, or that were big tunes in their own right across acid raves and the M25 orbital illegals. Illegal raves and free parties (alongside legal venues like the legendary London venues like The Dungeon and Clink Street)

The M25 Orbital Road

UK rave culture was born in this climate and drum and bass would not exist without this formative experience. To not pass a nod of respect to this era would be both disrespectful and factually incorrect. There's a whole heap of material online that does this very well, but we couldn't not at least take a small dive into it on this journey.

Shoehorning so much music into a list of 15 or 20 or 30 tracks is a challenge, but we will do our best to pick key tunes with key elements that provide as accurate a story as we feel is possible within the constraints of lists per year.

If you want to know more, deep dive for yourself. This whole project is meant to be a springboard for the curious mind, and not a debate on those who think they know more, or better. The whole thing is open to interpretation, and this is just ours. More than anything, start at the start and enjoy!

Disclaimer: This is just our interpretation of the chain of events. During this and subsequent sections we're simply trying to tell the story of how the music evolved by actually focusing on and listening to the music itself. 

Disclaimer 2: This whole project from 1988 up to 1995 has its focus mostly on the use of the breakbeat within hardcore, jungle and very early drum and bass. We have provided separate sections for key years so that the listener can also build a picture of what else was happening alongside the breakbeat movement, and beyond.

Disclaimer 3: While a lot of this project has been/will be completed from memory, we also want to give credit to the fine people on the internet who have made such huge efforts to record and preserve the data and information that keeps this thing alive. If that includes you, BIG UP YOURSELVES. We are all in this together and there is no, one, definitive answer.

Disclaimer 4: We not trying to re-write history here. This is for the people who don't know. Not the people who do. However! If you DO know, and you have a better version or some suggestions that I've missed, PLEASE get in touch. 

Flyers courtesy of phatmedia.co.uk

2 Dam Funky - Wag On Wednesdays - 1986

1.Lennie De Ice - We Are I.E - Reel 2 Reel Records

Empathy - State of Mind - The Dungeon - May 1989

There is more than one source on the web that state quite categorically that this track was written in ’88 but not released until 1991. It’s already an exceptional tune, but to think it may have been created in a year when there was next to no (or maybe none, our research will hopefully tell all) tracks in a similar vein is just mind-blowing. So yeah, we’ve stuck it in 1988 where we’re pretty sure it belongs. If we’re wrong, show us the evidence and we’ll move it. THE ORIGINAL BLUEPRINT!

DNB Dojo, an excellent drum and bass website currently taking a hiatus, posted this edited text in a ‘Classic Track’ feature back in 2020. The original text came directly from a comment made by Lennie on a YouTube upload of We Are I.E

“I’m glad this tune has inspired & invoked the feelings and some unforgettable memories. Having that moment together was a magical experience. It [We Are I.E.] was originally made in 1988, but sat on my reel-to-reel as an unfinished skeleton mix; it was heavily an instrumental, but something was missing until 1989 when I got my new Akai S950 sampler and put samples in to complete it in December.

A few months before, Bank Holiday May All dayer, we performed live for Empathy – State of Mind at Dungeon along with Ill Tempo, myself, and Kickski Love. Adamski was also on the bill—he played before us and did well. We played afterwards with less equipment: a drum machine, Juno 106, and MT8 sequencer. We kicked the granny out of it. The whole of the room upstairs kicked off. There was that moment during the performance that the penny dropped. Watching the crowd, we were one, on a mission. While still buzzing from the rave, I then encapsulated that moment in We Are I.E. I had played it a few times on Rave FM, which was the pirate station I was a part of.

I.E. is Latin meaning ‘example,’ [We Are I.E.] meaning “We Are Example of the Future.” This tune was made on a sequencer from the drum machines, programmed and recorded live with no computers involved. If it wasn’t for John at Reel 2 Reel Productions and Mikey at De Underground Records, picking that tune from out of 30 tunes I had to offer them, it might not have been the dance floor anthem it was.

That moment you had? We had it together! There is more to tell but that’s more for the book. I really appreciate you guys for being a part of the music revolution freedom to dance. When we raved under one roof! One sound! We became one. On a mission. Peace.”

RIEP LENNIE DE ICE – AN ARTIST OF UNDENIABLE FORESIGHT AND TALENT

Lennie De Ice - Via Facebook

2.Frankie Bones Presents Bonesbreaks - Vol.2 - Bacardi 151 Beats

 Closely following up with what we think is the original jungle blueprint comes New York City’s Frankie Bones. We haven’t found a whole lot of information that really does justice to what this guy was actually doing back in 1988. Baring in mind that in hip hop was still only really starting to utilise the sampled drum break, Frankie Bones was already speeding them up and adding them to dance tracks. Far out!

3.Frankie Bones Presents Bonesbreaks - Vol.2 - Funky Acid Makossa

Frankie was getting bookings at the end of the 80s to travel over to the UK to play the big illegal parties, and even at this early stage he could see the power of using breaks in a dance music setting. For this we believe he must be placed at the very start of our journey through the history of drum and bass. Without Frankie Bones and his breaks, the UK (and Belgian) rave scenes would have looked very, very different. A true originator without question.

WestWorld - The X Commandments - 1987

4.Black Riot - A Day In The Life

There are a lot of different stories out there about this Todd Terry production, but the one that is most important to us the that it seems to be one of, if not the first track to utilise that classic synth ‘stab’ sound that became synonymous with the UK hardcore sound a few years later. We don’t have the finite details, but what we do know is that for 1988, this was a pretty radical release!

5.Reece - Just Want Another Chance

It’s almost impossible to imagine the landscape of drum and bass music without the prior existence of this record. Keven ‘Reese’ Saunderson (so called because his middle name is Maurice) allegedly created this iconic bass sound on a Casio CZ 5000 by adjusting the patch and oscillators. 

That he did it back in 1988 is also difficult to imagine, given that the sound is still being used over 35 years later. First utilised (in jungle anyway – see our 1993 and1994 jungle sections) to devastating effect by the mighty jungle pioneers Grooverider and Ray Keith back in 1993 and 1994 respectively, this epic bass warble truly changed the face of DNB. A sonic milestone if ever there was one.

6.KLF - What Time Is Love

’88 was a transition year as producers slid from acid house and trance influenced from abroad, into a more homegrown sound. It was the birth of the UK ‘rave’ sound and the KLF smashed down walls with this epic trancer. With more than a hint of Belgian new beat at its core, this was a huge record in ’88. We would say this is pretty much the sound of the M25 orbital parties of that year. Close your eyes and listen!

Spectrum - 1988
Spectrum - 1988

7.Kariya - Let Me Love You For Tonight

Sampled many, many times over and a stone cold classic in it’s own right, this sounds mint even now. Beautiful!

Vision - 1988
Vision - 1988

8.Baby Ford - Oochy Koochy

Baby Ford was a techno Don of the late 80s and early 90s and helped forge a sound that was as hard as nails and jacked like hell. This belter has those early Belgian techno undertones and a wicked acid hook that gets right in your brain. A really Influential British producer.

9.A Guy Called Gerald - Voodoo Ray

There is a whole heap of stories about this track out there, and not all good either, as it seems Gerald lost out in a major way over this one due to financial abuse by the record label owner, but if you just focus on the music all you hear is the mark of a genius. Every element is perfectly positioned. It’s as simple as that. Timeless.

10.M-D-EMM - 1666

As far back as 1988 Mark Ryder (who you will meet later on in subsequent years) was firmly entrenched in underground dance music culture. He teams up with Dave Lee (who also went on to score some massive dance chart hits) and Mike Chill on this impactful release on legendary techno label, Transmat. Stompin.

11.Dream 17 - Annette

Proving that the UK could produce acid house just as well as their American counterparts, Mike Pickering (latterly of M-People) lays down a seriously funky slab of underground rave on this one. The muts nuts.

Rude Warehouse Party - June 1988

12.DJ Doktor Megatrip – Joy

A person of many personas, Genesis P-Orridge was already about to turn 40 when he released this acid stomper via Temple Records. Relentless and full of energy (and sampling ‘Fire’ by Arthur Brown 3 years before The Prodigy) this thing really stomps along. Gallops!

13.101 – Rock To The Beat

The sweet sound of Belgian new beat via Kevin ‘Reese’ Saunderson, but with a bit of added acid. This was a bona fide floor rocker in ’88 and still sounds amazing now. New beat was an ultra important step in the DNB ladder and must never be underestimated. Good Toon!

14.Stakker - Humanoid

Later going on to form one half of the Future Sound Of London and create myriad rave bangers under several other monikers, this ’88 outing from Brian Dougans absolutely destroyed dancefloors with it’s monster hooks and technoid noises. Insane.

Odyssey - August 1988

15.Orbital - Chime

An undisputed M25 rave classic, this band was actually named after the orbital motorway circling around London city, which is where the illegal rave scene had most of it’s biggest, and most infamous parties. The rave scene started from these parties and the history of illegal raves in the UK during the period ’88/’89 is very much worth researching. This epic tune still sounds great even now. A classic in every sense of the word.

16.Dionne - Come Get My Loving

Wow. What a tune. The main vocal hook in this is just sublime, and there’s those mellow but very present stabs just tinkering away in the background too. Canada coming with the cookies once more. Lovely!

17.Unique 3 and The Mad Musician - The Theme

Allegedly the first ever bleep tune, and it still sounds pretty wikked!

Shoom - September 1988

18.808 State - Flow Coma

808 were a pivotal band during the late 80's rave era and produced some of the scenes biggest tunes. This acid banger is a total head mash. Just what acid should be!

19.Two In A Room – Somebody In The House Say Yeah!

An absolute stomper and major tune of the year. That riff tho……….

20. Bomb The Bass - Beat Dis

An acid house classic with a vast array of samples, and hugely important to this list because of the breakbeat at around 3.30 ish. Probably one of the first UK tracks to set a breakbeat in an acid house/dance setting.

21. Raze - Break 4 Love

An absolute MONSTER anthem of the year, and a truly magical piece of dance music. Sensational.

22. Lake Eerie– Sex 4 Daze (I Want It, You Can Get It)

Very naughty acid house. Also that misplaced kick drum spells danger.

23. Double Trouble & Rebel MC– Just Keep Rockin' (Sk'ouse Mix)

Consitently popping up in subsequent sections throughout this entire project, Rebel MC was there from day one. A true pioneer of the movement.

24. Starlight - Numero Uno

An absolute Italo classic and such a vibe!!!!! The sound os summer in '88.

25. Hithouse - Jack To The Sound Of The Underground (Acid Mix)

That bassline though. You can really jack to this belter too. And it's out of Belgium. So FUNKY!

26. Joe Smooth - Promised Land

Okay, so this is a 1987 track, but like the one below, it would have been foolish to miss it out. It's an American house music classic and still gets played even now.

27. Ce Ce Rogers - Someday

The piano riff on this is one of the most iconic melody lines EVER, and is till getting sampled nearly 40 years later. An '87 masterpiece.

28. Pierre's Pfantasy Club - Dream Girl

Back to '88 now for this incredible acid burbler, and a deep excursion into 303 territory.

29. Armando – Confusion's Revenge

Another long, deep dive into the iconic sound of acid house.

30. The Jungle Brothers - I'll House You

Finishing on this most important and influential year in the UK underground rave scene, this undisputed classic out of the USA. This was all over the raves and pirate radio stations and would probably end up on most '88 ravers mix tape these days.

Mousetrap - December 1988
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