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Armand Van Helden is widely regarded as the pioneer behind the modern speed garage sound. He is reported to have said that he wished to combine the jungle and the garage sounds as his aim a couple of years back, and in 1996 several remixes came out including his mix of "Spin Spin Sugar" by Sneaker Pimps with heavy basslines and more timestretching than in the average garage track. But at this stage this would have been classed as more experimental house than "speed garage", a term which I only heard for the first time in the late spring of 1997.
It was probably people like Double 99 who first defined the speed garage genre as it is today when they released "Ripgroove", who turned the experimental Van Helden remix sound into something more accessible by both the jungle posse and the garage crew. Keeping it simple and catchy is the aim of a lot of speed garage producers over the last year or so, and "Ripgroove" succeeds to do this through the instantly recognisable bassline and the beats; plus the now obligatory gunshots and "badboy" timestretched vocals.
"Gunman" by 187 Lockdown is another speed garage success following arguably the same formula; skippy, garage beats (this time even with a breakbeat feel to them) with the hard bassline. But in this track the tune comes in the form of a chime type sound which is anything but cheesy but gives the tune it's own individual character.
Like hardcore, and jungle after it, as soon as the commercial house producers of this world caught on to what was going on speed garage was the next target for "chart busting". However, a lot of the tracks which some may regard as commercial speed garage rip offs I actually think are rather good.
Nobody can deny that although the sound may have been copied and the beats may not be as garage like, the Loop Da Loop remix of "Something Going On" is very popular in clubs and is hardly "commercial" in the traditional sense of the word. I think personally that this mix is a successful attempt to access the speed garage formula, combine it with "havin' it" house music and in doing so address a much wider club audience who want to listen to more uplifting music. It may not be as pioneering and ground breaking as the music of Double 99 and 187 Lockdown for the garage fraternity but if it wasn't for remixes such as this I doubt speed garage would be the musical force it is today.
Another track I quite like is "Oh Boy" by Fabulous Baker Boys; again, a more commercial, house edge is evident, but it does not override the track and it works well both in clubs and on your home stereo or mixing desk.
What I personally don't like about the speed garage thing being popular is the so called "speed garage" albums appearing in the shops which have all the trademark tracks you would already have as a fan (Ripgroove, Gunman, etc) with tracks which are clearly not speed garage, such as Josh Wink, Sash, Quicksilver etc. This is damaging to the scene to some extent when people think speed garage has sold out or confuse it with house, meaning people who are not really into it think they are, go to a night and find no Sash, Quicksilver etc. being played.
This year will make or break the speed garage genre. The tracks could either do what hardcore did in 1992 and become too commercial forcing producers back underground to find a new style, or as with jungle in 1994, the commercial producers could fail to break the style and it could progress undamaged into 1999.
Whilst Armand Van Helden pioneered the speed garage style in America, speed garage has now a very British feel to it with the hard breakbeats finding their way in and the gunshots and timestretching in a less experimental and more "in your face" British jungle style. We will see what happens. In the mean time check out Frantik's JVS tracks to see where the speed garage style will go into 1998.