You can't keep a good breakbeat down. When the lager-fuelled mid-1990s phenomenon known as Big Beat expired, dazzled to death by one of Norman Cook's irksome Hawaiian shirts, some of its smaller players retreated, regrouped and returned with a purer form of hi-octane breakbeat techno that had no desire to marry a TV presenter. As with Big Beat, the spiritual home of breaks (once known as nu skool breaks to distinguish itself) is Brighton, England. This is where Adam Freeland recorded his landmark Coastal Breaks mix in 1998 and started the Marine Parade label. A mongrel form by nature, breaks has enjoyed fertile crossbreeding with electro, 2-step, jump up and even trance genres, and the open-minded approach of breaks DJs has rapidly gained affection with clubbers worldwide, especially in Australia.
Adam Freeland
Mixing styles ranging from
techno to drum 'n' bass,
Freeland gained popularity
with his 1996 release
"Coastal Breaks."
Freestylers
Crossing the lines of hip-hop
and electronic, the
Freestylers fuse electro
and dancehall into their old
school style.
Freq. Nasty
A dreadlocked Kiwi with a
natty line in urban breaks.
Plump DJs
A huge name on the breaks
scene, Plump DJs, aka Lee
Rous and Andy Gardner, are
natural heirs to Fatboy
Slims crown.
Rabbit in the Moon
Live-focused
Rock/Breakbeat/Trance
trio, formed in Florida by
three guys calling
themselves Bunny, Monk...
Rennie Pilgrem
Breakbeat's shaven-headed
elder statesman and owner
of the key TCR label.
Stanton Warriors
London via Bristol duo who
delight in fusing aggressive
breakbeat, dancehall,
hip-hop and 2-step styles.