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Breakcore: Difference between revisions

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This section will examine the preceding genres that will ultimately lead to breakcore.
This section will examine the preceding genres that will ultimately lead to breakcore.


====Breakbeat & Acid House (1970s-1980s)====  
:: ====Breakbeat & Acid House (1970s-1980s)====  
:: In the late 70s, niggers, such as the honorable DJ Kool Herc, began using samples of drum-breaks (hence, "break-beat") on turntables. This technique would set in motion a long chain of events that'll eventually culminate into what we call Breakcore Today. As Hip-hop attained international acclaim, so did Breakbeat. This also coincided with the fact that as sampling technology advanced, Break-beat became more accessible to produce. All of these factors lead to Breakbeat as a global phenomenon and a cultural mainstay of dance music around the world.   
:: In the late 70s, niggers, such as the honorable DJ Kool Herc, began using samples of drum-breaks (hence, "break-beat") on turntables. This technique would set in motion a long chain of events that'll eventually culminate into ::  what we call Breakcore Today. As Hip-hop attained international acclaim, so did Breakbeat. This also coincided with the fact that as sampling technology advanced, Break-beat became more accessible to produce. All of thesefactors lead to Breakbeat as a global phenomenon and a cultural mainstay of dance music around the world.   


====Breakbeat Hardcore ====
::====Breakbeat Hardcore ====
::
::==== Jungle ====
::
::==== Drum n' Bass ====
::
::==== Hardcore Techno (aka Hardcore) ====
::
::==== Digital Hardcore ====
::Although this genre of music was not a predecessor of Breakcore, it is what first spawned a sound that can be identified as Breakcore.


==== Jungle ====
::====Drill n' Bass/IDM====
 
::As Music Technology became more sophisticated in the mid-90s, so did Drum n' Bass. This lead to artists like Squarepusher and Aphex Twins to push the limits of what's possible with Drum n' Bass and sampler technology. This resulted in a zanier version of Drum n' Bass with ''complex, intricate sequences of chopped breaks.''  
==== Drum n' Bass ====
::====Breakcore====
 
::Ultimately, through the synthesis of Hardcore Techno and Drill n' Bass/IDM, as compelled by experimental electronica labels like Planet Mu and negligible ******influence from Digital Hardcore, Breakcore was brought into form.  
==== Hardcore Techno (aka Hardcore) ====
 
==== Digital Hardcore ====
Although this genre of music was not a predecessor of Breakcore, it is what first spawned a sound that can be identified as Breakcore.
 
====Drill n' Bass/IDM====
 
As Music Technology became more sophisticated in the mid-90s, so did Drum n' Bass. This lead to artists like Squarepusher and Aphex Twins to push the limits of what's possible with Drum n' Bass and sampler technology. This resulted in a zanier version of Drum n' Bass with ''complex, intricate sequences of chopped breaks.''  
====Breakcore====
 
Ultimately, through the synthesis of Hardcore Techno and Drill n' Bass/IDM, as compelled by experimental electronica labels like Planet Mu and negligible ******influence from Digital Hardcore, Breakcore was brought into form.  


=== Breakcore in the Internet Era (2000-2020) ===
=== Breakcore in the Internet Era (2000-2020) ===

Revision as of 07:45, 15 November 2024

Breakcore is a genre of electronic music characterized by it's use of complex, intricate sequences of chopped breaks (this is what breakcore is primarily known for), a wide palette of samples and textures, and hardcore, industrial-sounding elements played at an extremely high tempo (190-300 BPM). What was a once an honorable genre enjoyed by autists, oldtroons, and connoisseurs of electronic music is now co-opted by Foids and Normgroids because a certain Sewerslvt popularized an inoffensive, neutered version of """""""""Breakcore"""""""" that's palatable for normies.

The History of Breakcore

Breakcore emerged out of the underground music scene in the mid-to-late 90s. It is a synthesis of Jungle, IDM, Drum n' Bass, and hardcore techno and a direct evolution of Drill n' Bass.

Timeline of Breakcore

This section will examine the preceding genres that will ultimately lead to breakcore.

====Breakbeat & Acid House (1970s-1980s)====
In the late 70s, niggers, such as the honorable DJ Kool Herc, began using samples of drum-breaks (hence, "break-beat") on turntables. This technique would set in motion a long chain of events that'll eventually culminate into :: what we call Breakcore Today. As Hip-hop attained international acclaim, so did Breakbeat. This also coincided with the fact that as sampling technology advanced, Break-beat became more accessible to produce. All of thesefactors lead to Breakbeat as a global phenomenon and a cultural mainstay of dance music around the world.
====Breakbeat Hardcore ====
==== Jungle ====
==== Drum n' Bass ====
==== Hardcore Techno (aka Hardcore) ====
==== Digital Hardcore ====
Although this genre of music was not a predecessor of Breakcore, it is what first spawned a sound that can be identified as Breakcore.
====Drill n' Bass/IDM====
As Music Technology became more sophisticated in the mid-90s, so did Drum n' Bass. This lead to artists like Squarepusher and Aphex Twins to push the limits of what's possible with Drum n' Bass and sampler technology. This resulted in a zanier version of Drum n' Bass with complex, intricate sequences of chopped breaks.
====Breakcore====
Ultimately, through the synthesis of Hardcore Techno and Drill n' Bass/IDM, as compelled by experimental electronica labels like Planet Mu and negligible ******influence from Digital Hardcore, Breakcore was brought into form.

Breakcore in the Internet Era (2000-2020)

The de-evolution and gentrification of Breakcore (2020s and onward)

Subgenres of Breakcore

Mashcore

Lolicore

Sewerslvt and the gentrification of Breakcore