Blackout dubstep?
First it's dance and Britney brought dance to the scene, but now that the word 'dubstep' is loved amongst deaf listeners, Blackout suddenly is dubstep and she did it first.
The delusion in here is just too ****ing much.
Britney started putting some dubstep into the mainstream scene, but if Sky Ferreira got a good album campaign, sure her album would have been out earlier and than the real pop dubstep pop queen would have been known by the public
There is no dubstep trend right now, so no one really started anything...and LOL @ Beyonce's name getting brought into this. When on EARTH has she made a song utilizing dubstep?
Gerl has no idea about dubstep before. it's all thanks to Legendary Miss Britney Spears...
She also said she heard it in the UK and got to know Chase & Status and that's when it started and Rihanna doesn't have shame to say who she is influenced to do the things she does. MOVE.
she probably wrote one line
that's not making her the inventor of dubstep in mainstream.. maybe her producer..
but everyone here is talking like britney coposed the damn thing.. while b*tch can barely do anything expect dancing.
[IMG]http://i674.photobucket.com/albums/vv102/Heartless_****/Woohoh.gif[/IMG]
This is the dumbest thing I've heard. No one is saying Britney created mainstream dubstep, we're answering the damn ****ing question and saying that Britney included it before Rihanna. Gurl, just stop.
There is no dubstep trend right now, so no one really started anything...and LOL @ Beyonce's name getting brought into this. When on EARTH has she made a song utilizing dubstep?
Apparently Girls utilizes it, I forgot samples count
Britney's borrowings from urban music don't have a safety net of contact book authenticity: There are no "[ft.]"'s on Blackout. When Team Britney requires a dubstep track, for instance, they simply borrow some production tricks and make one. The result is "Freakshow", built around the "wobbler" effect that's a genre standby. A dubstep on the tune, mixing outrage and delight: it still seems to matter when the mainstream borrows underground music, brings it into the wider pop vocabulary. It displays a lot of promise. The production is off the hook: very sparse and bass-heavy, revealing the influence of London-centric electronic-music genre dubstep and Timbo's exotic/skeletal funk techniques.
It obviously wasn't the prime representative of the genre, but Britney was the first mainstream artist to experiment with dubstep and introduce it to mainstream music fans.