Generally, gentrification works in UK towns and cities like this… - Creatives (artists, writers) live in cheaper, more deprived areas in cities and towns (because they can't afford affluent areas) - Creatives make that area ‘cool’ through cultural production (painting, street art, music) - Once the area has become 'cool’ the suits and gents start to buy into the area - The area goes through changes, largely development of penthouses, cost of living increases, rent goes up, bars, cafes, food places - Creatives then move to cheaper areas, or smaller towns as they cannot afford to live in the area anymore
So true worked in London for a good 20 years and seen it happen in Clapham, Fulham and lately hackney, bow, and even Stratford trendies then bankers then the coffee shops and burger joints always the way it goes!
@@graazoor yeah? If it's meant to be an intimate view of roots up n comers of the scene but instead they give recognition nepotistic style to posh kids who studied music then moved to Bristol to ride off the hype of the bristol scene it's a bit different ennit?
I've visited Bristol and followed the scene for years. Great City. Big shout out to all those dark music masters like Massive Attack, Portishead, Tricky, Krust, Pinch, Allflaws
That's because Boiler room is ran by the same people. How else can you afford to work for 17k a year without Mummy and Daddy giving you a load of cash every month lol
i'd be interested to see some recognition for the people out on a limb making music in whack little towns and the countryside , for the love of it . great can come from anywhere
38 years old and live in Bristol and always have. I respect what these kids are doing, but don't try and dress it up with a nice boiler room doc shooting a few moody slow mos in stokes croft. I was there for drive by, full cycle nights, deep.and dark, safe house, karanga plus all the smaller more niche experimental nights.....remember level, creation, arc bar and the thekla pre renovation? The fact is, I came to the party late. The truly amazing days were before I was raving. This lot seem to be very middle class and yeah as a lot of people have noted where are the bristolians?
Grew up in Somerset and went to many gigs/nights out in Bristol. I didn't really appreciate how good the music and creativity vibes were in Bristol until I moved to Newcastle. 👍
Fair play there were some good producers in this, but my god this does not represent Bristol. Some of the people In this were mad pretentious which really isn’t what the real Bristol is about. Also not one mention of blue mountain or Lakota!?
gentrification in process... just like Berlin, that culture will be devoured by the housing market. now adays Berlin is too expensive to experiment in. experimental ideas pushed outward, replaced by mainstream culture engineers. forced to either comply or dissolve.
YES YES YES. this doc is everything. thanks so much for highlighting a sound and a series of producers/DJ's which are so thrilling and invaluable to my listening experiences! BIIIIG ups!
As a born and bred bristolian/somerset babber myself, there’s no mention of interviews with local legends like joker, Addison grove, hyetal, pinch, sepia, cartridge, koan sound, jakes, batu, kahn, appleblim, phaeleh, peveralist, buggsy or gemmy? More of them please 👍
The Bristol music scene is currently underground from the gentrification of our homes, clubs, pubs, squats and music. This short uni drop out documentary represents the mainstream....
@@johnclapp8412 they should have interviewed the drum n bass legends of bristol or king aggi who was shottin crack nd shottin guns on his door step when these lot parents were studying social economics in uni hes now a bristol rapper there r much much more I guarantee u no1 from Bristol would relate 2 this
@@gitbackmymushh06 King Aggi is a Bristol legend but i'm not sure why you want him featured on a documentary about experimental music? The whole doc is about a small corner of music being made not a definitive history of music in the city.
The Briz music scheme has three foundations, Dub, DNB & House music. Only one of these was talked about on this vid. So many people getting it wrong when it comes to "Bristol's sound" its criminal.
Electronic Music Explorations, a great glimpse into the techno scene. Electronic music gives us a way to quantify more electronic music into a new paradigm.
I heard a lot of blips and blops and hypnotic computerised sounds but nothing that could be construed as music, or anything creative or innovative. There were quite a lot of adverts in this and for once I was pleased - they were the best bits.
19.48 Is “having a conversation” the new way of saying let’s get a load of Garys and get minced to some of that mad shite down town ? Buzzing for my next conversation wink wink
Well this completely patronised our city, we love music, not leftist hipster tendencies... not all of us do £500 of ket and then go back to daddy’s flat in Redcliffe which he bought for me to “find” myself in Bristol.
You love ‘your’ city so much you use the Birmingham area code as your name on UA-cam? Whilst I’m here can you point me in the direction of some good right wing music? You seem to be alluding to its existence in your original post 🤔
The original comment is dumb, and doesn’t bare any resemblance to the truth. Who do you think they should have featured in a documentary about experimental in Bristol?
@@davetaylor264 these lot even admit themselves they aren't from bristol the music scene in bristol is similar 2 early 2000s l8 90s east london with a lot of dnb ukg grime bassline these lot really really arent bristol maybe upper stokes Croft not bristol
Noods!? 1020 has by far done way more for the scene and upcoming talent in Bristol, are way more open minded and give far more opportunities for learning djs and marginalised communities. Boiler room once again proving how out of touch they are these days, giving voice to what looks trendy, this. aint. Bristol
Noods been around for a bit, so of course going to have established djs, where 1020 is really new, thus able to offer upcoming talent, some spots. Plus there is tons of overlap of peeps playing between both stations, and all pretty supportive of the same sounds across a million sub-genres. Don't think it's a competition, fam
I'd even venture to even say the 2 are the same. Same exact web design, tons of overlap (gonna heavy stress that one) similar design work. And it's not a competition, listen to both.
Sad that Marvin and his council side with developers and close down decades old music venues to keep their rich property developer buddies happy and richer. No allegations of back handers being made at all, let's just be clear on that. Allllllllll allegedly.
Didn’t find anyone interesting. My main issue with the ‘scene’ in Bristol is ketamine zombies. Drugs drugs drugs. Doing and talking about drugs. End off. Sad and depressing
@@dimwit3006 Oh in clubs there's so many of them, I used to be one of them, haven't done anything since 2 years and honestly while rave time was such a good time of my life, it was also so dark seeing people getting lost in key holes and me myself getting very wasted one or two nights...
there is a Time Dance night in mexico city almost every 2months or so since a year and its such a pleasure to listen all kinds of sounds out of genres respect to all ya
I'm born in bristol. I can honestly say this city is sugar coated to the max. People are weird, fake and on drugs. This is not the bristol I remember. If you want real people and a good music party scene live in Manchester, and if you support multiculturalism to. Trust me manny is way better than bristol, cheaper, bigger, better.
not really enough about the normal Bristolian joining with the constant presence of diverse cultures in oppressed areas making collectives/soundsystems/venues. You could of looked at real heart of Bristol in St.Pauls or Stokescroft and focused on the diverse range of ravers and creators that are from this place or love playing this place!
Why should they? That's a dying part of Bristol culture. Bristol used to be a haven and new home for families like mine moving in from places like Jamaica, Somalia and Poland etc etc. But that was the past sadly. Inner Bristol neighbourhoods where I grew up, today are just for typical upper class, white hippy types who's parents will bankroll them to live in this city. Lets face it, these rich white kiddos from the home counties are now the new face of Bristol's culture sadly.
this is not representative of bristol at all. Not one accent. Not one mention of Drum & Bass music. not one mention of Trip Hop music. load of rubbish.
Generally, gentrification works in UK towns and cities like this…
- Creatives (artists, writers) live in cheaper, more deprived areas in cities and towns (because they can't afford affluent areas)
- Creatives make that area ‘cool’ through cultural production (painting, street art, music)
- Once the area has become 'cool’ the suits and gents start to buy into the area
- The area goes through changes, largely development of penthouses, cost of living increases, rent goes up, bars, cafes, food places
- Creatives then move to cheaper areas, or smaller towns as they cannot afford to live in the area anymore
Andrew Baker correct
Same most places except it's not a cycle that's a simplification and it's wrong.
Adam agree it’s not a cycle, comment edited.
Adam what’s wrong or right?
So true worked in London for a good 20 years and seen it happen in Clapham, Fulham and lately hackney, bow, and even Stratford trendies then bankers then the coffee shops and burger joints always the way it goes!
I don't think I heard one Bristol accent
PREACH... watching this as a Bristolian who studied Creative Music Tech at Bath Spa Uni like most the people in this video.
audioglass I was thinking the same thing!!
It’s like that in Manchester aswell these days once a place gets cool the gentrifiers take over
does it matter? not heard this scene before, but it excited me about music again
@@graazoor yeah? If it's meant to be an intimate view of roots up n comers of the scene but instead they give recognition nepotistic style to posh kids who studied music then moved to Bristol to ride off the hype of the bristol scene it's a bit different ennit?
I've visited Bristol and followed the scene for years. Great City.
Big shout out to all those dark music masters like
Massive Attack, Portishead, Tricky, Krust, Pinch, Allflaws
Links to all artists and labels featured for further investigation:
Alex Digard Tape Echo tape-echo.com/
Bad Tracking facebook.com/Bad-Tracking-416000448922767/
Batu / Timedance facebook.com/BatuMusic/
Boofy soundcloud.com/boofy
Bruce instagram.com/snapsofbruce/
Burden Imprint burdenimprint.bandcamp.com/music
Chris Farrell / Idle Hands idlehandsbristol.com/
Danielle soundcloud.com/danielle_dj
E B U nocorner.bandcamp.com/album/hinge
Franco Franco & Kinlaw avonterrorcorps.bandcamp.com/album/mezzi-umani-mezze-macchine
Giant Swan giantswan.bandcamp.com/
Hi5ghost soundcloud.com/hi5ghost
Hodge instagram.com/hodgebristol/?hl=en
Jabu facebook.com/jabubristol/
Kahn soundcloud.com/kahn
Livity Sound livitysound.bandcamp.com/
Lizzy / Proverb instagram.com/lizzyblizzyb/?hl=en
Manonmars youngechorecords.bandcamp.com/album/manonmars
Max Kelan Pearce facebook.com/maxkelanpearcevids/
Mix Nights mix-nights.com/
Neek www.bandulurecords.com/
Noods Radio noodsradio.com/
Ossia ossia.bandcamp.com/
Rewind Forward rwdfwd.com/
Relapse Records facebook.com/RelapseRecords/
Saffron saffronmusic.co.uk/
Sunun soundcloud.com/bls-4
Tectonic soundcloud.com/tectonic-recordings
Young Echo youngechorecords.bandcamp.com/
Where are the Bristolians? All I saw was private school kids from London
Truss
That's because Boiler room is ran by the same people. How else can you afford to work for 17k a year without Mummy and Daddy giving you a load of cash every month lol
We're slowly being pushed out by people who don't want to be in London and heard Bristol is a bit edgy in the guardian.
Umm no only about two people in this are from London
@@Nadoone They are ALL home counties accent, all luvvies. Not a single local accent amongst them. May as well be about Guildford.
i'd be interested to see some recognition for the people out on a limb making music in whack little towns and the countryside , for the love of it . great can come from anywhere
jp j YES
Slowthai
Completely agree but also you would be interested to know a lot of people in this documentary including myself are from small countryside towns
@@KelanUKJust out of curiosity, what's your favourite music gear brand? is it Beeeeeeh-ringheer?
😂 i'm so sorry...couldnt resist ! 😂
Hey I'm that, please check out my music(:
I can't say it's my bag of music, but at the end of the day it's all about the vibe and having a good night.
Bristol has some of the greatest nightclubs in the world plus great brewers doing amazing craft beer.
38 years old and live in Bristol and always have. I respect what these kids are doing, but don't try and dress it up with a nice boiler room doc shooting a few moody slow mos in stokes croft. I was there for drive by, full cycle nights, deep.and dark, safe house, karanga plus all the smaller more niche experimental nights.....remember level, creation, arc bar and the thekla pre renovation? The fact is, I came to the party late. The truly amazing days were before I was raving. This lot seem to be very middle class and yeah as a lot of people have noted where are the bristolians?
dantheman81811 👀 init!!!
Agreed, all south eastern home counties accents. Not a single local accent amongst them. Real people please!
Arc bar was class!
Bristol..... keeping it strictly London
Bristol now is what London was around 2005-2010
Andrew Baker you only have to post the wisdom once...not on every comment thread
Literally about 2 people from London in this video, most of the people are from small towns
@@KelanUK Yep. Small home counties towns, like St. Alban's. Not a single local accent here.
@@michaelwildsmith4446 They are all home counties accents. London, "init". Not Bristol at all.
Grew up in Somerset and went to many gigs/nights out in Bristol. I didn't really appreciate how good the music and creativity vibes were in Bristol until I moved to Newcastle. 👍
Same here, grew up in both Easton and Shepton Mallet yes boss!
Very supportive, open minded and friendly as long as your like us.
having run nights in bristol I can confirm you're so right, you need to be in with the click to get support, its really trendy.
Putting it out there: Aphex twin started in Penryn
I bet they all have south eastern accents there too 😂
Fair play there were some good producers in this, but my god this does not represent Bristol. Some of the people In this were mad pretentious which really isn’t what the real Bristol is about. Also not one mention of blue mountain or Lakota!?
Do they have lots of experimental nights at those clubs?
Nadoone Jajaja yeah all sorts of DnB, phytrance, Tek, and a really sick vibe
The ending was like an episode Nathan Barley
Remember back in the days when there was this huge warehouse in Saint Vincents trading estate called chemical records. I’ m nostalgic now ☹️.
18:40 littering
gentrification in process... just like Berlin, that culture will be devoured by the housing market. now adays Berlin is too expensive to experiment in. experimental ideas pushed outward, replaced by mainstream culture engineers. forced to either comply or dissolve.
Where would you say is the creative hotspot in Germany then since Berlin is gentrified?
@@James-ip8xs nice try yuppie
a sad state of affairs.
So good to discover Massive Attack from this documentary. LOVING THEIR MUSIC!!!
like an episode of Nathan Barley
Registered in the cook island
the vocalist about 18 minutes in reminds me of noel fielding's character
YES YES YES. this doc is everything. thanks so much for highlighting a sound and a series of producers/DJ's which are so thrilling and invaluable to my listening experiences! BIIIIG ups!
shout out to Smith and Mighty...
is this a mistake in description?
i couldn't find this track in google "E B U - Slivver - NoCorner - 2019"
Buce is a National Treasure and should be preserved for future generations, Any doubters should watch his boiler room set at dekmantle 2019
Which “Bristol” is this??
Only thing I rated was seeing Bandulu 💯 - ShoutOut 2 Ghost & Boofy!!
As a born and bred bristolian/somerset babber myself, there’s no mention of interviews with local legends like joker, Addison grove, hyetal, pinch, sepia, cartridge, koan sound, jakes, batu, kahn, appleblim, phaeleh, peveralist, buggsy or gemmy? More of them please 👍
The Bristol music scene is currently underground from the gentrification of our homes, clubs, pubs, squats and music. This short uni drop out documentary represents the mainstream....
What Bristol artists do you think they should have featured to be a true representation in your opinion?
Also would be up for hearing some underground Bristol artists
@@johnclapp8412 they should have interviewed the drum n bass legends of bristol or king aggi who was shottin crack nd shottin guns on his door step when these lot parents were studying social economics in uni hes now a bristol rapper there r much much more I guarantee u no1 from Bristol would relate 2 this
@@gitbackmymushh06 King Aggi is a Bristol legend but i'm not sure why you want him featured on a documentary about experimental music? The whole doc is about a small corner of music being made not a definitive history of music in the city.
CLASSIC.
i force myself into the bath to brain-storm too due to hyper activity.
love it
Whens next fight in st Paul then ??
The Briz music scheme has three foundations, Dub, DNB & House music. Only one of these was talked about on this vid. So many people getting it wrong when it comes to "Bristol's sound" its criminal.
trust me
Jazz
Bucket list for sure
Electronic Music Explorations, a great glimpse into the techno scene. Electronic music gives us a way to quantify more electronic music into a new paradigm.
I heard a lot of blips and blops and hypnotic computerised sounds but nothing that could be construed as music, or anything creative or innovative. There were quite a lot of adverts in this and for once I was pleased - they were the best bits.
Wheres the tek and breakcore?
Init
love this, love bristol, up the gas
alex brown up the City
Nope UTG
12:10 rah mazza no one has ever done a party line b4
Bristol = Pretentiousness heart of the UK
Sadly I can't disagree
19.48
Is “having a conversation” the new way of saying let’s get a load of Garys and get minced to some of that mad shite down town ?
Buzzing for my next conversation wink wink
been watching that nitelife vid for time so proper gassed for this to come out
Well this completely patronised our city, we love music, not leftist hipster tendencies... not all of us do £500 of ket and then go back to daddy’s flat in Redcliffe which he bought for me to “find” myself in Bristol.
You love ‘your’ city so much you use the Birmingham area code as your name on UA-cam? Whilst I’m here can you point me in the direction of some good right wing music? You seem to be alluding to its existence in your original post 🤔
The original comment is dumb, and doesn’t bare any resemblance to the truth. Who do you think they should have featured in a documentary about experimental in Bristol?
So people like Boofy and Kahn aren’t from Bristol? I’ll ask again, what artists in your opinion should have been featured?
THIS AINT BRISTOL
this aint bristol ... trust
how?
@@davetaylor264 these lot even admit themselves they aren't from bristol the music scene in bristol is similar 2 early 2000s l8 90s east london with a lot of dnb ukg grime bassline these lot really really arent bristol maybe upper stokes Croft not bristol
Noods!? 1020 has by far done way more for the scene and upcoming talent in Bristol, are way more open minded and give far more opportunities for learning djs and marginalised communities. Boiler room once again proving how out of touch they are these days, giving voice to what looks trendy, this. aint. Bristol
real talk
lol
@@charlieharrison4659 you do the Satsuma show on Noods so obviously Bias lol
Noods been around for a bit, so of course going to have established djs, where 1020 is really new, thus able to offer upcoming talent, some spots. Plus there is tons of overlap of peeps playing between both stations, and all pretty supportive of the same sounds across a million sub-genres. Don't think it's a competition, fam
I'd even venture to even say the 2 are the same. Same exact web design, tons of overlap (gonna heavy stress that one) similar design work. And it's not a competition, listen to both.
I feel a bit sad seeing this being 'explained' on Boiler Room
Not Bristol. Utter bollocks.
**sits and watches whole video and see not 1 Bristol music artist I know 🙄🙄” 🤷🏼♀️
bet your into some reyt shite
Which Bristol artists do you think they should have featured?
Charlie Harrison Haaaaaaaaaa
Charlie Harrison what is reyt
Massive
Anyone can say to me what track is at 15:21 ?
Really can’t recognize
Audiogame Official tracks listed in credits,
Track ID at 2:39?
Pinch - qawwali
Sad that Marvin and his council side with developers and close down decades old music venues to keep their rich property developer buddies happy and richer. No allegations of back handers being made at all, let's just be clear on that. Allllllllll allegedly.
I Love Bristol.
Dubstep will eat itself yet DnB LIVES ETERNAL!
My hometown, St Pauls/Montpelier raised.
Didn’t find anyone interesting. My main issue with the ‘scene’ in Bristol is ketamine zombies. Drugs drugs drugs. Doing and talking about drugs. End off. Sad and depressing
There are less ketheads than it seems, atleast in clubs
@@dimwit3006 Oh in clubs there's so many of them, I used to be one of them, haven't done anything since 2 years and honestly while rave time was such a good time of my life, it was also so dark seeing people getting lost in key holes and me myself getting very wasted one or two nights...
there is a Time Dance night in mexico city almost every 2months or so since a year and its such a pleasure to listen all kinds of sounds out of genres respect to all ya
man i have to move there
4:28 trackkk
Too much musical art come out of bristol.
what a fuckin dope of an opening track haha pev is surely what i identify the sound of bristol as in terms of techno and dance music
Melts
1:32 thelem sound
I'm born in bristol. I can honestly say this city is sugar coated to the max. People are weird, fake and on drugs. This is not the bristol I remember.
If you want real people and a good music party scene live in Manchester, and if you support multiculturalism to. Trust me manny is way better than bristol, cheaper, bigger, better.
Shite! Wheres the wurzels mashup ark at eeeeeee!
how did my man make a Bristol music doc and not cover the dnb scene
I'd love to see a doc about current Bristol DnB but this one doesn't claim to be about that. Not sure why everyone things it should be?
sick
this is 30% Bristol, if that
and what about Shackleton my dudes??
He doesn't live in Bristol?
The cities all over south england/wales have a changed dynamic...uni kids
Bristolians have always thought they were cool but I see the place with a stale music scene. All Hip Hop and D&B. A bit backwards for many years
How is this about hip hop and d&b lol the majority of people in the comments are complaining that it's anything but that
amazing doc
heh I'm in this a few times :)
👏👏👏
lovely. interesting.
wish we got a snippet from kahn & neek but beggers cant be choosers
Lol was waiting for this too, can't imagine they weren't reached out to
Some of this music may be creative but is outright bizarre like everyone's crazy and mental
Siiiicccckkk.. WOOOOOOHOHOHOHOHOHOHOHBRISTOL LUV!
No Julio? 😤😤
great film of great movement
Im being told by hipsters that ‘its not about being a hipster’ in Bristol.
'influencer' 'mainstream-ification' 'keeping things IRL' jesus christ
1:13
This comment section is hilarious
Top cringe
Ok ! There is a whole diversity of sounds (not) but don't be ungreatful, people know about Bristol because of MA and Portishead
not really enough about the normal Bristolian joining with the constant presence of diverse cultures in oppressed areas making collectives/soundsystems/venues. You could of looked at real heart of Bristol in St.Pauls or Stokescroft and focused on the diverse range of ravers and creators that are from this place or love playing this place!
Why should they? That's a dying part of Bristol culture. Bristol used to be a haven and new home for families like mine moving in from places like Jamaica, Somalia and Poland etc etc. But that was the past sadly. Inner Bristol neighbourhoods where I grew up, today are just for typical upper class, white hippy types who's parents will bankroll them to live in this city. Lets face it, these rich white kiddos from the home counties are now the new face of Bristol's culture sadly.
I'm pretty new to Bristol what collectives/soundsystems/venues should I check out once corona is over?
Safe yeah safe
Keep Bristol eco friendly and don’t throw fucking balloons in the sky
добавьте субтитры
so uhh do you like whitehouse
woah GG LIVES
Big up
This film achieves the almost impossible feat of making Bristol appear to be populated entirely by wankers.
It's difficult to remember it isn't
Who are these london hipsters
I'm weird and I make music.
Bristol is a bowl. A bowl of Muesli, once you take out all the fruits and nuts all you're left with is flakes.
Non of the cool kids want to play with me
Bristol no1 sound 1
Yet another video about creatives that don’t represent Bristol at all.... such a shame.
I tried to keep an open mind but it was hard finishing. I really tried.
this is not representative of bristol at all. Not one accent. Not one mention of Drum & Bass music. not one mention of Trip Hop music. load of rubbish.
NOODS RADIO
looool this is very questionable