Stress Relievers: Planet of the Drums
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MORE THAN A DECADE ago, drum 'n' bass felt like the future. The nervous combination of chopped, skittering snare drums, chest-caving bass lines and ominous-to-ambient samples perfectly captured the anxiety of the modern age.
But what seemed panic-attack revelatory in the early 1990s quickly morphed into TV-commercial friendly. Drum 'n' bass also fell off the radar of music critics.
Just don't tell DJ AK1200 (Dave Minner) that DnB is dead: "I don't think anyone who knows about DJ culture questions whether or not drum 'n' bass is still around."
AK1200 has been spreading the DnB gospel for almost as long as the music's been around, and for the past eight years as part of the Planet of the Drums tour, featuring fellow spinners Dara and Dieselboy along with MC Messinian.
"We play strictly DnB," Minner said. "Sometimes Dieselboy adds a bit of hardcore or even metal in some of his darker sets. ... Some tunes, however, are fusing a bit of dubstep and breaks." But there is no pandering to modern tastes. The PoD dudes are purists — and proud of it.
What makes Planet of the Drums a unique experience is how it takes over a whole club rather than cowering in some tiny corner of a house- or techno-oriented venue.
"Main rooms in clubs, for the most part, are used to the 120 to 140 bpm range; that's the safest tempo for a club to stay," Minner said. (DnB runs 160 to 180 beats per minute.)
"I don't think DnB will ever be as mainstream as other club music," Minner said, but "we draw as many people as the usual house or trance DJ in any given city in the USA."
» 9:30 Club, 815 V St. NW; Sat., 9 p.m., $25; 202-265-0930. (U St.-Cardozo)
Photo courtesy planetofthedrums.com











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