
Art Official, Jnr Ranks, Selecta KB & Don Luchito
Where: Good Luck Bar - Basement, 126 Cuba Mall
When: Friday 10:00pm 30th May 2008 - 3:00am
Price: $5 on the door
Come to GOOD LUCK BAR, FRIDAY 30 MAY, for SOUND THE ALARM - the first session in a series of NZ-wide sound-clashes - this time to witness two of the heavyweights of the Aotearoa soundsystem scene, ART OFFICIAL (NEWTOWN SOUND) & JNR RANKS (MORE FIRE), go head to head for a strictly 45 shoot-out!
You be the judge as the two selectors bring out only their tuffest reggae, roots, dancehall and bashment, to claim the title of A-1 sound!
Support by SELECTA KB, with your host for the night, DON LUCHITO.
10pm kick-off, $5 on the door.
Round Times:
10 - 12am: Selecta K
12am: Clash kick-off
Round One: Intro (15 min sets)
Round Two: Contemporary Roots (15 min sets)
Round Three: Bashment (15 min sets)
Round Four: Tune fi tune
WHAT IS SOUND CLASH??
[quote from: Norman C. Stolzoff, 'Dancehall Culture in Jamaica,' 2000]
Each
set will take a turn playing for a mutually specified time. Early in
the dance, it is usually agreed, the selectors play hour-long sets;
then, they shift to thirty-minute segments, and eventually to
fifteen-minute rounds. As the dance moves into the morning hours, the
segments become shorter and shorter. And, if the sounds are
particularly well-matched and the clashing intense, they will finally
reach the climactic round called "dub fi dub" or "tune fi tune," which
is a "sudden death" knock-out round. During this stage of the clash,
the selectors rely on their dub plate specials, which are custom
records with a genre of tunes designed to big-up the sound system they
were recorded for or to deride the rival sound system. During the dub
fi dub, each special is played in an attempt to kill or lock off the
other sound, to literally make them stop playing. The crowd's response
is the final judge of which system is victorious.
Unlike
juggling, where the selector attempts to create a smooth flow of time,
clashing puctuates time to create heightened moments. The
"introduction" of the tune by the selector is all-important in building
up the crowd's anticipation about what is to follow. Ultimately, a
selector is aiming to draw a "forward" or a "rewind," which occurs when
the audience's exuberant response to a song signals that the selector
must lift the needle off the platter and play the tune again from the
beginning. While no one actually keeps track of how many forwards a
sound gets during its segment, it is clear to everyone in the hall,
except for the rival sound system and diehard loyalists, whether a set
has a scored a weak, lukewarm, or red-hot round. Getting the dance to
"mash up" (go wild with enthusiasm) is part of the process of winning a
clash.
Comments
Mek sure this gets recorded!!!
Killa dat muthat f@#$a!!!
Both of you! haha
audio please : )
Yes! Record fi audio seyah!
Dubplates fi gwan!
serious 45 business! love to hear audio too! Dancehall Don represent!
Yes Crew: audio will be locked! Big up Spin Zero!
Bo bo Big Up Art Official, there be no soundboy in dis town can beat his sound.
Yes kings. lucky im not represent HAHA, good luck both of u. DANCEHALL DONS a legends. good luck both of u , will be amazing.
Check Audio section for recording - up now!
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