#hiphop
#music
#depression
#british
#capitalistrealism
It seems like an odd thing to say at first but Grime developed out of UK Dance styles like Garage, through artists like the infamous Wiley, who made something amazing, but was distinctly not Garage (as he will repeatedly remind you). It didn’t come from another Hip Hop style, it came from a dance/rave style. It was called Eskibeat, a particularly venomous variant of Urban, Two-Step and Garage beats, primed for rapping.
As UK Rave culture fell back in the Underground after the turn of the millennium, that energy was pushed into something else, and by 2005, Grime was bigger than UK rave. By the time I went to highschool, Grime was in, I don’t recall anyone chatting about Techno. Just Grime, everywhere. Grime was the UK’s Hip Hop movement, and just as with Hip Hop in New York, Grime in the UK seeped deep into the culture. It’s anecdotal to say, but every time someone finds out I am English, all of a sudden it’s “Blud this” and “bruv that’. Grime burned itself onto English identity. The culture that surrounded the likes of Wiley reorganized and restructured youth culture, and gave a voice to a demographic that had been refusing/refused to sit at the table. The same kids making voiceless underground dance music were now writing poetry about life on the streets. It’s a big transition.