Elements of Bass: An Interview
by Michael Thomas
photos by unknown
St Louis, MO - Taking up the web reigns and leading the
Midwest DnB scene into greatness, Ryan Renfro (Source Code)
and Randy Mars (MC Precision) are inking up coasts, promoters,
booking agencies, and artists on a whole new level It was
recently that I had an opportunity to speak with them. Here's
what they had to say.
You both have been involved in the drum
and bass scene for long time now. What first got you guys
started with Electronic Dance Music and the drum and bass
aspect of things?
Ryan: I was introduced to electronic music through Amiga
MOD files back in about 1994. Basically MOD files were the
mp3's of the old skool. Composers from around the world
would come together with all these crazy acid and hardcore
tracks. I had around 1300 MOD tunes in my prime, which was
around 100 or more floppy disks of audio. From there I really
got interested in breakbeat sounds around the US release
of "Prodigy - The Prodigy Experience". Tunes like
Jericho, Hyperspeed, Out of Space, and others really got
into my head and drove my interest in electronic sounds.
At the time most of my friends were into metal or hip-hop
so I was really on my own. It wasn't till about 1997/1998
that my full interest in Drum and Bass really took off.
It all really happened with a rather funny story, I had
melted a crate of about 100 hip-hop, hardcore, techno, misc
vinyl’s and decided from that day the only tunes I'd
buy were dnb/jungle vinyls. From that day till this I only
own dnb vinyls.
Randy:
Well leaving the 80's there wasn't really too much on the
plate yet, electronic wise. While listening to hip-hop and
metal, rock and classic rock have always been and will always
be enjoyable for me; I was ready for something new. I played
acoustic drums and always had an ear for percussion, so
as music started to slowly change more to electronic music,
I was influenced. Ministry was a band that really influenced
me to seek out and hear more. And by the time Prodigy was
starting to surface, Drum and Bass was starting to leak
out through rich new breaks, and then it was on. I remember
going to raves in the early 90's, the techno got on my last
nerve, but the trip hop/acid jazz kinda styles would always
catch my ear. It still amazes me how much DnB has evolved
over the past 10 years, all the different styles and forms
Have you always been into drum and bass
or did you start off more involved in another genre?
Ryan: I've really always been into most anything breakbeat
or unique sounding. My 3 loves now are drum and bass, hip-hop,
and dancehall. So really anything with a fat bassline, rugged
breaks, of ill rhythm gets my ear. I've never really been
into any other electronic music genre besides acid techno
way back when.
Randy: Like I said it started with acoustic drums. I schooled
to learn jazz and blues, but later got more into rock, using
the same funky beats. As years passed I started to get more
into the vocal aspect of music, as I have been writing songs
and poetry since practically a seed. I started rapping to
old hip hop tracks, finding the instrumentals and freestyling.
I wrote hip hop lyrics, but nothing mainstream. It wasn't
until about 1996-1997 I started to write to DnB and realize
how much more exciting and challenging it was. After a few
years passed, and I had been in a hip-hop group, I decided
it was about time to go for Drum and Bass. Seemingly hooked
for life I still can’t get enough of it.
How did the both of you meet?
Ryan: I met Precision through a mutual friend, Gary aka
Jinxx. We actually met during a party when everyone was
just dj'n, mc'n, and chillin. From there another mutual
friend from England, Q-Trax, really started working on music
with Randy. Q-Trax and I were basically shadows of each
other at the time, so the 3 of us really formed a unique
bond. Since then Q has headed back to the UK so we are holding
it down till he's back.
Randy: There was a party at Gary’s (Jinxx) house.
I had just met Gary not long before, and so we were all
kicking it there. That's the first time I had ever seen
or met Ryan. There were three or four Dj's and a few MC's
in the house so we were all getting musically acquainted
fast. And like Ryan stated before.... then came Matt (Q-Trax)
from England. I hooked him up with a cash job moving loads
from trucks on the side. From then on Ryan and I became
great friends
What first sparked your interest in forming
a drum and bass website?
Ryan: Well most of St. Louis had been hanging out on a
yahoo group/egroup like message board for a long time. It
filled the need, but some of us felt that we needed to really
expand outward and try and work with other people in the
Midwest. At first the goal was small, have a place to post
events/news and talk on a message board. After 3 years it
quickly expanded into everything from an internet radio
station, to club nights, to one off events, and tons of
other wastes of internet time.
Randy:
All there was at the time was puny little yahoo groups and
other cheesy communities with very little music and info
available. Ryan being the main man with computers mentioned
it once and the rest of the crew (union crew at the time),
stood fast to help in any possible way. We all contributed
any way we could. www.mw-dnb.com was overwhelming with all
the traffic, huge database and net radio. It brought so
many together, and opened opportunity to meet and compose
with many other artist's/DJ's/producers.
What were your expectations, if any, with
the first website, mw-dnb.com? Also, did you think the first
site would pick up as much as it did?
Ryan: We never really expected to have the thousands and
thousands of members we made. In fact I originally imagined
somewhere from 500-2500 people, that mile marker was passed
the 4th month the site was up. 3 years later we had around
40,000 registered users and nearly 1 terabyte in bandwidth
a month. To say the least the site really did max out and
went beyond what any of us thought it would be. For the
most part it really took its own direction and we followed
the lead of the fans.
Randy: Expectations were very low. We wanted it up solely
for the purpose of staying in touch with each other, sharing
our produced tracks, and booking to play out. Mw-dnb took
off and climbed faster than any site I have ever heard of.
It was getting over a million hits a month in its prime.
Went a lot further than any of us imagined! But then again,
Ryan was the man behind the site, a fully knowledgeable
braniac with computers and design and the right man for
the job without a doubt.
When mw-dnb.com ended its 4 year run
many people missed its presence and the support and connections
throughout the Midwest defiantly fell. Since the return
of the site under its new name elementsofbass.com that support
is once again on the rise. Did ever think your site would
have held the scene together as much as it did?
Ryan: We were all sad to hear that the impact mw-dnb made
when it left. Towards the end of the sites life things were
actually picking up. However due to costs, time, and other
personal reasons we knew the site needed to either change
or go away. So it did both. After a 6 month breather, we
returned with our new site based on our old ethics. We hope
to reinvent ourselves and offer a stable platform from which
talents from the Midwest and around the world can gather,
communicate, exchange sounds, and make new connections.
Randy: At first no, not to the extent that it did. It wasn't
till after the first 6 months or so when we were starting
to see how valuable the site was for all us Midwest heads.
Elementsofbass.com is not only a continuation of mw-dnb.com,
but a fresh site dedicated to our 4 years and running internet
radio show, "Elements Of Bass”.
What prompted you both to start the site
back up? And why did you decide on the new name?
Ryan: Well after mw-dnb went down I ended up returning
back to St. Louis from Memphis, TN. I had been living there
for about a year and a half and developed a really kick
ass piece of software.
To make a long story short, this software allowed us to
quickly redevelop and expand on our own ideas and directions
rather than the directions of a pre-developed content management
package. We wanted to bring some of the newer popular technologies
available widely on the internet to our site such as podcasts,
news feeds, and other interesting features. We also knew
that no one else was currently doing these things we wanted
to do. We knew the site had to be called Elements of Bass
simply because of the radio shows creators would be the
staff of this new site. Elements of Bass is really a statement
about the founders and drum and bass itself. This expansive
sound covers almost every element of every other type of
music from funk to punk - and our radio show and website
reflect that. We registered the domain, figured out what
we wanted to offer, in what order we wanted to offer it
and from there it's history in the making.
Randy: Ryan’s new technology and constant elevation
of software and web design knowledge brought the question
"Why not put a site with a forum for archiving the
past Elements Of Bass shows? It came out of Ryan's mouth
after he was explaining this new software for developing
websites. From there the site went up quicker than ever.
The new name is a no-brainer. For going on four years now
our radio show has been known as Elements Of Bass. We had
been putting that on flyers to parties we would play, and
built a name. Even after mw-dnb closed I refused to let
go of the weekly broadcast. I moved the show back to pfradio.com,
which showed us nothing but support and respect, and later
on to destroyer.net. The whole time still we had the same
show name. So we simply "HAD TO" go with elementsofbass.com.
What are your expectations for the new
site? And how have things being going so far?
Ryan:
My expectations for the site are rather minimal. I feel
after the massive mw-dnb site that even if EOB doesn't grow
to that magnitude, that at least we have the more dedicated
and interesting heads hanging out and contributing to our
community. I know that we will all help new people gain
interest and knowledge in these sounds.
We have actually had a great kick off with lots of old and
fresh faces joining up daily. We have kept a consistent
stream of mix sets and show archives each week to keep the
audiophiles leeching. Like anything else the site is just
starting to build its momentum, strength, fan base, and
functionality.
Randy: Supplying support to all our friends, fans, and
connections with Midwest drum and bass. Keeping the huge
rotation of many different DnB Dj's on our show, locally
and out of town, providing the freshest tunes and talent
from all the most dedicated artists in the region.
Things have been set off as we planned. Everything is in
place for one of the most successful and longest running
DnB weekly broadcast's ever. With over 35 different guest
Dj's a year, an experienced crew, and trustworthy site staff
things can only get better.
What’s in store for elementsofbass.com
in the future? And are you guys planning on doing events
again?
Ryan: I really feel the future writes itself. I can tell
you that some of the really cool things coming up will be
aimed at producers. We plan on launching the sickest producer
area to EVER touchdown on the net. Once it's launched we
will be doing a massive campaign to promote it out to all
the old and new producers alike. We will also have various
headliners touching down to perform live broadcasts for
the weekly radio show and archived sets. The next upcoming
talent is Robot Death Squad (Moving Shadow) on March 5th.
As far as events this has been talked about. I know for
sure we won't be doing any weeklies. We have discussed one
off events and a monthly night for a while now. If we did
start another series of events I'd imagine they would be
a call back to the old days of DnB/Hip-Hop in combination.
We really felt that the presence of both of these breakbeat
sounds made for a great atmosphere. We have also thought
about another Midwest meet up that would be a outdoor weekend
long gathering. Other than that you can always catch our
founding crew performing around the Midwest.
Randy: Just know that elementsofbass.com has no planned
future. Between us, the music, and the people that surround
us will determine where we go. Be on the lookout for some
bigger names to play on the show, and for the site to grow
with time. There are many ideas floating through our minds
now for this year and next. The site will only get bigger,
this you can be sure of.
Weekly events I would have to say we are going to leave
alone. We may set up more DnB bbq’s that has been
talked about. I'm more for playing the events and not setting
them up. We have some good contacts that set up events/club
weeklies - in St. Louis, Columbia, Chicago, and Kansas City.
We leave the events to the promoters for the most part.
As a member and moderator of the site
I have to say things look great. I’m happy to see
the family back together again and I know your presence
is felt all over the USA. I thank the both of you for your
hard work and taking the time to sit down with me and ask
you some questions. Is there anything else either of you
would like to add or anything we didn’t cover that
you’d like to discuss?
Ryan:
I just want to say to anyone reading this that if they haven't
checked out drum and bass they really should. Drop all the
stereotypes you've heard and embrace the widely expansive
sounds of the genre. I know bottom line that it has something
for everyone. If you are a drum and bass fan, you should
really check out the site and join up, some of your friends
are most likely already posting. Respect goes out to all
the heads that strive everyday to live by their own rules
and walk to the beat of their own drum. Big Up's to phocas.net!
Randy: To all the fans and supporters of Drum and Bass:
Keep strong with your love of the music and contribute in
any way you can to keep it alive. And to those who are new
to DnB, take the time to expand your knowledge of new and
old styles. Go out and see the big names when they come
through, and find out more with elementsofbass.com and destroyer.net.
For more information, just visit ElementsofBass.com