Thursday 11 November 2021

Bonkers Part 15

 

By the time Bonkers 15 came out all the DJs who had mixed a Bonkers album to date were the wrong side of 30. This may have been a factor in altering the line up by making all 4 CDs back to back mixes.

Gammer was by factor the youngest big name DJ at this point having only turned 20 that year and he was paired with Dougal. Recon was aged 24 and the other big name DJ to break through in the 21st century and he was paired up with Hixxy. Marc Smith and Neophyte were older and had been around longer than any of the other DJs but they were paired up with Sharkey and Scott Brown respectively.

Although I was still in my 20s myself I was finding myself more drawn towards the more mature sounding house music. Buying this Bonkers album was never even a consideration.

The notable thing about the Hixxy and Recon mix is seeing 2 labels I'd not come across before, Definitive Dance and Electric Euphoria. Turns out they were labels started by UFO and MC Marley respectively so basically music that would have previously been on Raverbaby.

The main question is would this mix have been any different if it was Hixxy by himself and the answer is probably not. It's a mixture of cheesy vocal stuff, hardcore remixes of commercial dance tunes and awful MC tunes courtesy of Storm and Wizzkid who themselves seemed to be the stars of the raves rather than the DJs by this point.

Onto Sharkey and Marc Smith, once again I would say if Sharkey did this on his own it would probably be the same. One thing I recall from around this time is that freeform was popular enough for there to be a freeform event called Freeformation.

It sounds like this was a result of it sounding more and more like regular hardcore and probably only sounds a bit more serious because it follows a Hixxy set. Around mid-way through the set I hear a tune that grabs my attention and surprise surprise its a tune off Next Generation in "Working Up A Sweat" by Ham.

Things did change somewhat when Neophyte joined Scott Brown. Instead of the usual 2/3 hardcore 1/3 gabber it was 100% gabber. This was a positive move in my opinion as whilst hardcore went downhill in the 21st century, gabber didn't. This was mainly because it never really changed.

Finally there was Dougal with Gammer. This was unlikely to alter too much given that many of Dougal's 21st century tunes were done with Gammer. By this time though Gammer now had his own label called Muffin Records for the material he did by himself.

The mix sounds like a Cludland advert from the word go. Having Gammer on the mix does give it a slightly harder edge, but overall it really sums up what I don't like about more modern hardcore music.

This album meant there had now been more Bonkers albums in the 21st century than there had been in the 20th century. It didn't stop there either, but more on that next week.

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