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Funky interview with Xlr8r Magazine!

Have a read. It includes interveiws with Geeneus, Cooly G and Scratcha

Peace!

Mutant Funk: Cooly G, Geeneus, and Roska take UK funky and dubstep back to the lab.
Words: Brandon Ivers Photo: Shaun Bloodworth (Full article here)

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“This ‘funky’ thing, it’ll be over in a minute. You can only say something is new once.” If anyone has witnessed a genre come and go, it’s Geeneus. The 30-year-old boss of London’s most influential pirate radio station, Rinse FM, Geeneus started broadcasting 15 years ago with guys like Wiley and Slimzee. They played strictly jungle back then; however, Geeneus is a self-professed “new thing addict” these days. He’s seen the arc of U.K. urban music burn through jungle, garage, and grime.

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“The funky thing came about because girls had stopped dancing in clubs—[grime] was more of a show thing,” says Geeneus. “So people could just dance again, you know? It was 70% females. And now it’s gone the completely opposite way again.”

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Already, in less than a year and half, the style that’s become known as U.K. funky has been banned, un-banned, and re-banned in countless South London clubs. Three generations of producers and DJs have effectively come and gone. And as the music crests toward perhaps a final stage, funky has splintered into a mutant, experimental phase via producers like Cooly G and Roska—right as the rest of the world has only just heard about it.

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