UK hard house

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

UK hard house or simply hard house is a style of electronic dance music[1] music that emerged in the early 1990s and is synonymous with its association to Trade club and the associated DJs there that created the style.[2][3] It often features a speedy tempo (around 150 BPM), offbeat bass stabs,[4] hoovers, horns[4] and crowd cheering samples.[4] It usually contains a break in the middle of the track without drum. UK hard house often uses a long and sharp string note to create suspense. Most of the time, the drops are introduced by a drum roll.

Origins[]

Hard house has its immediate roots primarily in Belgian and German techno, American disco-sample based house music, handbag house and early trance.

UK producer and label owner John Truelove was quoted as saying of hard house's origins: "I would say that tunes such as XVX’s “Tremorra Del Terra” and Interactive’s “Amok” (essentially the same tune) were absolutely defining moments. Early German Trance led directly to what Daz Saund and Trevor Rockcliffe were playing at Trade"[5]

Tony De Vit was one of the key DJs to codify and popularise the hard house sound (earlier often referred to as 'hardbag'), taking inspiration from his early visits to Trade in the early '90s — where he soon became a resident DJ.

Hard house clubbing brands[]

Certain brands have reached legendary status with die-hard hard house fans, such as Birmingham based and the record label Tidy Trax who also branched out in the early 2000s into putting on club events, including the Tidy Weekender 3 day events. Clubbers are known to travel cross-country to some parties. The venues associated with certain brands are almost the stuff of legend themselves and are remembered fondly and given almost cult status by veteran ravers. For example:

The Tidy Boys[]

The Tidy brand began in 1995, when Amadeus Mozart and Andy Pickles formed the record label known as Tidy Trax, with its first release was The Handbaggers - "U Found Out", sampling Minnesota R&B band The Jets 1986 release "Crush on You", which peaked at number 55 in the UK Singles Chart.[6]

Releasing music under the pseudonyms: The Handbaggers and Hyperlogic, Amadeus Mozart and Andy Pickles did not officially use the name The Tidy Boys until 1999.

The Tidy brand is known for putting on large-scale events, most notably The Tidy Weekenders. The brand struggled in the late 2000s to keep going financially with dwindling sales (through its Tidy record label) and poor attendance figures to events. During the mid-2010s, however, the brand has had a huge resurgence and revitalized the UK hard house scene putting on huge events across the UK has been possible due to the fans being able to reconnect with the brand through official Facebook page and growing social media presence.

Tidy is known for their sell-out club nights and one-off events such as TDV20 – a 20-year memorial event of the death of Tony De Vit – one of the original pioneers of hard house. Also known for hosting "The Tidy Weekender"; three-day parties which were held from Friday to Sunday at Pontins resorts in Prestatyn, Camber Sands and Southport.[7]

Notable events:

  • Tidy XX Anniversary - 26 September 2015 at The Institute, Birmingham
  • Tidy 21 Weekender - 20–22 May 2016 at Pontins resort, Southport.
  • Tidy at The Church - 9 December 2017 at The Church Venue, Leeds
  • Tidy Seaside Special - 17–18 August 2018 at The Basement, Newquay
  • Tony De Vit 20 Memorial Event - 29 September 2018 at 02 Academy, Birmingham
  • Tidy Opera House Reunion - 28 September 2019 at 02 Academy, Bournemouth
  • Tidy 25 Weekender - 9–11 July 2021 at Pontins resort, Prestatyn.

Storm[8][]

Launched in 2000, Storm regularly attracted up to 2000 clubbers in its heyday, and people came from as far as Bournemouth, Edinburgh and Belfast. The remoteness of Coalville made the venue tricky to get to, as there were no buses there which run on a Sunday and no local train station, meaning that the majority of clubbers who made it to Storm each week were usually die-hard ravers and for this reason, the brand and the venue had a cult following and very quickly reached legendary status amongst hard house fans.

Sundissential and Sundissential North[9][]

Originally held at Pulse in Birmingham, the sheer popularity of the weekly Midlands-based, self-styled "Most Outrageous Club in the World" saw it quickly set up its second base in Leeds – firstly, at Club Uropa from 1998 till 2000 and then Evolution from 2000 till 2005. Known for its cult following by fans who would wear elaborate and often home-made outfits, largely made from red and yellow fluff. Several controversial and tragic incidents kept Sundissential firmly at the forefront of the hard house scene, with several deaths of clubbers,[10] as well as the antics of the promoter, Paul Madden a.k.a. "Madders" which created gossip amongst fans online on Leeds based clubbing forums, biscuitmonsters.com and 4clubbers.net and kept the brand firmly in the spotlight until the doors closed in 2005. In 2016, the brand was relaunched under new management and began putting on events again in Leeds, at the Mint Club and at Church.[11]

Frantic[]

One of London's most popular and frequent hard house nights, Frantic was launched in 1997 by then-history teacher Will Paterson, who wanted to create a night based purely on the harder sounds that formed part of the night at clubs like Sunnyside Up and The Garage at Heaven.

“I started Frantic as I wanted to go to a night for clubbers like me that preferred the ferocious hoover led sounds of Tony De Vit rather than the softer hardbag sounds" he said in a 2005 article. I didn’t see why the night couldn’t be tough from the beginning and knew loads of clubbers who felt the same. I got into hard house by accident.”

Frantic would go on to host hundreds of events, including regular sold-out shows at the 4500-capacity Brixton Academy.

Fish! and Superfish![12][]

From the mid-1990s to early 2000s, club nights included Fish!, Superfish!, and Warriors at Turnmills.

Hard house and hard NRG artists and DJs at these venues included Captain Tinrib, D.F.Q., Ben Javlin, Steve Thomas, Steve Hill, Rubec, Simon Eve, Pete Wardman, Dave Randall, Johnnie "RR" Fierce, Karim, Chris "Drum Head" Edwards, and Weirdo.

Other venues were the Soundshaft nightclub (next to Heaven in Charing Cross) and The Fridge in Brixton.

Sin:ergy[]

Manchester's longest-running hard house club night, launched in October 2000 and ran every Friday at The Phoenix until 2003. In 2003 Sin:ergy moved to a monthly event at club North (under Afflecks Place). With the tag line was... "All Nations, All Persuasions" Sin:ergy and welcomed anyone and everyone, it was a place all about the music no matter what the colour of your skin or sexual orientation. Sin:ergy welcomed artists such as; Tidy Boys, Karim, RR Fierce, Sterling Moss, Ilogik, Lab 4 and many more and boasted Paul Glazby and Ian M as resident DJs.

Originally founded by Jeremy Couzins and joined by Stuart Moir in late 2000. In 2003 Stuart founded spinoff night PureFilth! and Sinergy was later sold to Lord K who still owns the brand.

PureFilth![]

PureFilth! was a hard dance club based in Manchester for clubbers who liked there music extra hard, the night was setup and run by Stuart Moir (an original Sin:ergy promoter). PureFilth! started as a monthly Thursday night @ Club Phoenix and quickly progressed to a monthly Saturday which we moved to The Park Nightclub, Manchester and a monthly student night (Thursday) at Scubar, Manchester.

PureFilth! was the only club night in the north and one of the first in the UK that solely concentrated on the harder side of house, in its day PureFilth! had a hardcore following putting on events packed with DJs with the 1st birthday being a highlight of many people clubbing history... 14 hours, 2 venues and 20 artists including; Captain Tinrib LIVE, Paul Glazby, Energy UK DJs, Ben Stevens, Nik Denton, JP & Jukesy, Tim Clewz and many more.

PureFilth! also co-promoted nights throughout the country in conjunction with Insomniacz (Corporation, Sheffield), Rush (Club 414, London), Toast (Manchester), Native (Manchester), Detox (Boat Party in Durham), Ground Zero (Keely Uni), Binary (Manchester), Embrace (Liverpool), amongst other nights in Birmingham, Leeds, etc.

Resurrection[]

Resurrection is one of hard house's rising stars and is Manchester's newest Hard House and Hard Trance club night brought to you by the people behind the legendary club nights Sin:ergy and heavy-hitters PureFilth! Launched in May 2019, Resurrection 1 had an all-star lineup featuring Rob Tissera, Ilogik, Dynamic Intervention, JP & Jukesy, Tim Clewz, Casper, Little Miss Natalie, Frank Farrell and resident DJs. In December 2019 was Resurrection 2 featuring Lab 4 LIVE, Defective Audio, Eufex, Jon Hemming, Joe Longbottom, Bass Jumper, Jodie Rose and many more.

During the COVID-19 pandemic, Resurrection have been keeping everyone entertained with their 6x LOCKDOWN Digital Raves, 2x massive 4PLAY events featuring... GoodGreef, Xstatic, We Love Hardhouse in December 2020 and Storm, Reactivate and Hard Trance Europe in March 2021 and their weekly SPOTLIGHT show (every Sunday 6-8pm) all live on globalhardhouse.com

Subgenres and derivatives[]

Scouse house[]

Scouse house[13][14] (originally known as bouncy hard house or bouncy house[14][15]), also known as UK bounce,[13] donk,[13][15] or more recently as hard bounce, is a style of UK hard house which first emerged around 1999. Unlike other hard house genres, it features an upbeat, energetic sound and heavily focuses on the 'pipe' sample as an offbeat bassline, which usually represents a 'donk' sound. In recent years, hard bounce has come to refer as style far less uplifting trance orientated than the original Scouse house genre, which also utilizes the same sample but takes a slightly more commercial approach.

Pumping house[]

Pumping house[16] (or bumping) is an intermediate term and a local variant of the early scouse house scene, which was popular Russia and Spain in the late 1990s to early 2000s. The genre takes start when the Dutch duo Klubbheads invented so called bamboo-bass in the track Ultimate Seduction - "A Walking Nightmare (Klubbheads GP Mix)" in 1997. Years later the genre gave the birth to Britain's donk scene and Spain scene poky.[17] Pumping house is used as an interchangeable term for scouse house in Russia, Spain and Poland.

Hardbass[]

Hardbass (Russian: хардбасс) is a development of pumping house, originated in Russia in the early 2000s.

Hard NRG[]

Hard NRG is a genre that emerged from trance and UK hard house that gained popularity on the rave scenes. The genre is distinguished by the offbeat bass patterns that were inspired from Hi-NRG, which were added over darker and more anthemic trance beats and synths. Through lacking the trance melodies it has more of a rhythmic structure.

Confusion[]

Hard house is similar to, but distinct from hardstyle. Confusion can sometimes arise as some club nights and events will play both hardstyle and hard house. This may be because hardstyle is quite well known across western Europe, whereas hard house has only ever had a limited audience outside of the UK and South Africa, so there is more new music being released in the hardstyle scene[citation needed].

References[]

  1. ^ Ishkur (2005). "Ishkur's guide to Electronic Music". Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  2. ^ Gerstner, David A. (2012). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Queer Culture. Routledge. p. 154. ISBN 9781136761812.
  3. ^ Skruff, Jonty. "Mark Kavanagh- Ireland's Hardest DJ on Ending Up in U2's Gutter (interview)". trackitdown.net. Track it Down online webzine, June 3, 2011. Retrieved 21 October 2016.
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Ishkur (2005). "Stupid house". Retrieved September 17, 2014.
  5. ^ "HarderFaster". HarderFaster.net. Retrieved 2021-03-02.
  6. ^ "Official Tidy Page". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  7. ^ "Review: Tidy Weekender - Hard House is Dead? | Ibiza Spotlight". Ibiza Spotlight. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  8. ^ "Storm". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  9. ^ "Sundissential". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  10. ^ "The Ecstasy, the agony, and the culpability". The Independent. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  11. ^ "Sundissential North returns to Leeds!!". moreonthedoor.com. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  12. ^ "About Us - The Tinrib Story". Tinrib Digital⚓. Retrieved 2019-03-21.
  13. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Clubbers' Decktionary: Scouse House aka Donk, UK Bounce, NRG". The List. 2012-08-22. Retrieved 2020-05-12.
  14. ^ Jump up to: a b "Scouse House Juno Download". Juno Download. Retrieved 2020-05-12.
  15. ^ Jump up to: a b "8 music things we'd like to see make a comeback - BBC Music". Bbc.co.uk. 2018-01-08. Retrieved 2020-05-12.
  16. ^ Yegorov, Oleg (2017-12-22). "Russian hard bass: How a musical monstrosity went viral". Rbth.com. Retrieved 2020-05-12.
  17. ^ "Welcome To Russia's Hard Bass Scene". Vice.com. Retrieved 2020-09-05.
Retrieved from ""