For electronic fans or newbies, Nullboy’s “Disconnected” and its EP are adventures

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For listeners uninitiated to dubstep, Nullboy’s new single “Disconnected” is like being blasted into the sky as part of a fireworks display and hearing the explosions from midair.

It is exhilarating.

Nullboy explains that “Disconnected” and the other three tracks on his debut EP, Tritium Heart, are experimental, aimed at “the seasoned dubstep enjoyer.”

“Disconnected” will be released on June 14, Tritium Heart the week after that.

“I would start with an idea and think, ‘How can I turn this on its head and make people be like, “Oh! What the hell?!”’ I played a lot of the songs from the EP at different shows, and it’s really fun to see the reactions.”

The crowds at his shows, remember, would be “seasoned” dubstep enjoyers.

“For me, and I think I can speak for other enjoyers of the genre, you love to be surprised, and you love to jump,” he said.

“And, like, bang your head to stuff.”

That is exactly the experience he seeks from his experimentation, which is not randomly switching sounds, tempos and bass lines. Nullboy’s explicit intent is to take what he calls the Y2K aesthetic in electronic music and “fuse it to dubstep.”

The Y2K aesthetic he speaks of is the electronic music vibe from the ’90s into the early 2000s, especially as represented in the video games from that era.

He has identified a resurgence in interest in that era’s music, television, movie themes and culture in general and in efforts to make it new again.

“There’s a few artists doing it for dubstep, but I’m trying to marry the two because I have a connection to the music of that era through video games, TV and — well, whatever.”

His idea for “Disconnected” begins with a sample from another generation’s electronic signal that a telephone call cannot be completed: “beep-BEEP-BEEP — We’re sorry.”

“So, I started with that sample, and I wanted to highlight parts in the song with silence and that sample and then come back with a hard-hitting bass line.”

The three other songs on Tritium Heart — “Cypher,” “Ash” and the title song “Tritium Heart” — are experimental in the way of “Disconnected.”

Nullboy, an underground producer living and working from Indianapolis, specializes in the dubstep subgenres of riddim and future riddim. When he is getting technical about it, he explains that dubstep is “bass music with a certain tempo,” and riddim and future riddim are simply other “flavors of dubstep,” flavors based on quarter-note rhythms.

“Quarter-note is what you could, essentially, boil it down to, but the bigger artists in the scene, like Subtronics and Svdden Death, make riddim that is very heavy. The riddim I make is a little more technical and inspired by Y2K aesthetics and vibes.”

In his self-bio, talking to hard-core electronic fans, he says that his music takes riddim and blends it with dark techno, house and hardcore to create “a captivating mix of eldritch ethereal elements, corrupted tech, all harmoniously fused with the nostalgic beats and rhythms reminiscent of the Y2K era.”

Pressed to come up with a more descriptive phrase for what he does, he says, “bass music that makes you want to get up and rave.”

The story of how he began in electronic music begins with video games.

“A lot of music that I’ve come to enjoy I discovered through video games. The soundtracks to games are good gateways for people to get into new genres, especially in electronic. There’s a lot of cool stuff out there.”

The Gran Turismo series occupies a special place in his electronic heart.

“The first game came out in, like, ’98, and that game had drum and bass and jungle music, and I became a fan of that racing game and that music,” he said.

Now a professional who puts on shows — dubstep and riddim especially — Nullboy seeks to expand the boundaries of electronic music and dubstep.

“I don’t think it has to be any more complicated than that,” he said. “I would just bring new sounds to it for people to enjoy.”

He has a lot of other music that he plays at shows, but with the debut EP of his recording career, his focus is on the fusion of dubstep and the electronic music of the turn of the century.

“I’m always trying to play more shows, but I’m going to keep pushing this Y2K aesthetic onto dubstep and see what happens.”

For committed fans of electronic or newcomers to the genre, seeing what happens with Nullboy is an exploration worth taking. Connect to him on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

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Crackout Interview

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The Bucks based trio's first album, 'This is Really Neat', was recorded during a 6 week trip to Texas after which they embarked on their first UK headlining tour. Along the way they mastered the art of the three-minute punk rock sizzlers. The new album ‘Oh No' sees a new dawn in the Crackout story. We caught up with founder member Nick to find out more.


M-N: The album was recorded during 2003.....why the long delay in its
release?


Nick: The label were concerned it would be put out too close to Christmas and then it'd get lost amid the slew of 'Best of' releases that always seem to populate the release schedules at that time of year.

M-N: Do you always play as a 3 piece or have you other musicians on stage?

Nick: Just us 3.

M-N: The Robert Smith connection - what appeals about the early Cure records like '17 seconds' and 'disintegration' which obviously have affected your music?

Nick: They have written some beautiful songs.

M-N: Does the association trouble you in anyway?

Nick: Nope, unless persons claim we have deliberately set out to sound like them. A lot of people say Steven sounds like Robert Smith, but I think it has more to do with the fact they're both from the home counties and therefore just have very similar voices. They also both have voices that sound influenced more by jazz singers than your usual rock influences, to my ears anyway: the way they both phrase and their often improvisational approach to treating melody lines is very jazz, rolling up to notes and falling off them, playing around with the rhythm, keeping it loose.

M-N: What's the secret in writing a good catchy 3 minute song?

Nick: Get the La's album.

M-N: Can you explain the chorus of insect song (next single I believe)

Nick: It's a nonsense song. Steven thought it'd be good to write a song about
insects.

M-N: How do you see yourselves as having progressed from the first album and was the follow up a difficult one as in true tradition of the follow up?

Nick: We think we've progressed a great deal, and it appears to be most peoples' opinion too. The difficulty was trying to get rid of the inhibitions of feeling we had to do rock because that's what we did before. Pretty much a whole album was written after the first record and then was scrapped because it was too much like a hard-ish rock band trying to stay that way when they really weren't into that as much anymore. As soon as we let ourselves be ourselves it was easy, and the recording itself was so, so, easy....it helps having a great production team who you're very good friends with. Still we had some feeling of 'we better put a rock bit in here'; for the next album, I think, we will be totally ourselves with no inhibitions whatsoever.

M-N: Crackout is just a great name. Is it termed as in 'the beers' or
'part of the female anatomy in full view'?


Nick: I don't like the name, I suppose it is better than something worse than that though, but not as good as something better. It's nothing to do with cracking out the beers, if it was alcohol based and my way we'd be called
'Get The Flutes Out I Have A Nice Spot Of Bubbly In The Fridge.' And female anatomy ... no.

M-N: Conversely, something more imaginative than 'oh no' could have been better?

Nick: Now I have to disagree again - I like the album title. We used a lyric as the title for the first album, and so we did it again this time, and 'Oh No!' is repeated at the end of the first track on it. The choice was a bit inspired by the cheeky Blue Note album titles from the 1950/60s - like 'Good Gracious!', 'Finger Poppin!', 'Wahoo!', 'Hey There!', 'Into Somethin!', 'Out to Lunch!', etc. The use of exclamation marks is imperative.

M-N: What sort of music are you into to at the moment?

Nick: As a band we're listening to Paul Simon, XTC, Bill Evans, Dexy's Midnight Runners, Bill Frisell, Frank Sinatra, Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Wayne Shorter, the La's, et al.

M-N: What's your proudest musical moment to date?

Nick: When our press agent and booking agent were at the studio having a just finished 'Oh No!' played to them and receiving their responses. Suffice to say they were pleasantly surprised, and we had a fine magnum of Tattinger in the fridge too which definitely made it a better moment, maybe not prouder, but better without a shadow of a doubt.

M-N: Are you playing any of the summer festivals?

Nick: Good question. One would hope so.

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